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Vicki Vellios Briner / For The ciTizens’ Voice
Suspended Luzerne County Transportation Authority executive director Stanley Strelish pleaded guilty to five felony counts in the ‘ghost rider’ scandal on Thursday in Dauphin County court in Harrisburg.
GHOST PLEA An emotional Stanley Strelish pleads guilty for his role in the LCTA ridership scandal. Page 5
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
2 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Today’s ForecasT
Mostly cloudy today with a little rain. Winds west‑south‑ west 7‑14 mph. Becoming partly cloudy tonight.
74 48 WILKES-BARRE EXTENDED FORECAST
Average normal highs/lows for the week: 62/42: Clouds giv‑ ing way to some sun tomorrow. Winds north 6‑12 mph. Sunshine and patchy clouds Sunday. Winds southwest 4‑8 mph. Pleasantly warm Monday with plenty of sunshine.
SATURDAY
62
39
Clouds breaking Last year: 62/39
SUNDAY
68
46
Mostly sunny; nice 61/44
MONDAY
73
54
Sunny and pleasant 64/36
TUESDAY
69
WEDNESDAY
45
Spotty showers 64/54
71
Rain
49
77/63
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Complete weather data on page 39
INsIDE toDay’s VoIcE Penguins preview Coaches Sullivan, Leach excited for return to Providence. page 29
INDEX
Project delayed PennDOT announces a delay in the temporary closure of Route 315 in Pittston. page 6
Studying elephants
Almanac 39 Advice 16 Birthdays 17 Business A4 Warren ruda / The CiTizens’ VoiCe Classifieds A6-B8 officials with denisco Kindler group led tours of a mobile showroom containing various security Comics 20-23 items, including brass keys and bulletproof doors. Editorial 14-15 Horoscope 23 National A1 Public Notices A6 Puzzles 22-23 Sports 28 Television 16
In wake of Oregon shooting, local schools, companies talk security
obItuarIEs
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Scientists hope better understanding of cancer in elephants can benefit humans. page a1
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By Denise Allabaugh staff Writer KINGSTON — In the wake of the recent shootings at an Oregon college, representatives from a Kingston business talked to officials from local schools and companies Thursday about how they could make their buildings safer. Officials from Denisco Kindler Group, sales people representing the largest global supplier of lock and door security solutions ASSA ABLOY, led tours of a mobile showroom filled with products ranging from brass keys to bulletproof doors to fullblown high-tech security systems. Tony Denisco, company principal, said the interest in security has become more heightened after the recent incident at Umpqua Community College in Oregon, where a gunman killed nine people and wounded nine more. “Our job is to slow the
intruder down. If we can do that, we can save some lives,” Denisco said. “If the right hardware is on the doors, it will slow people down.” Depending on what security items people choose, the price could be $150 to $300 to secure an opening to $25,000 to secure 25 to 50 doors, Denisco said. Typically, schools get grants to make security improvements, he said. Phil Kindler, partner and director of sales, recommended schools at least have a patented key system that cannot be duplicated to secure the buildings. Software limits when the key could work and the system controls who can get into a school, he said. He also showed classroom doors that can lock from the inside or outside and allow teachers to secure a classroom. If an intruder is in the school, the key will lock the outside of the door. Representatives from Wyo-
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‘Our job is to slow the intruder down. If we can do that, we can save some lives. If the right hardware is on the doors, it will slow people down.’ TOny DenIscO Denisco Kindler Group
school also runs regular drills to practice and refine safety and security protocols to maintain high levels of security on campus.” Recent school shootings have opened a lot of eyes to look at opportunities for prevention that will not cost a fortune, said Ken Bulford, architectural consultant. He said the security business today has evolved from mechanical keys to high-tech access control. A standard mechanical key gives any holder 24-7 access to a building, while access control limits people. “Typical access control could cost thousands of dollars. We have come up with solutions from the very highend to the low-end,” Bulford said. “As these (shooting) eve n t s b e c o m e p u b l i c through the media, it raises a lot of awareness and they want to follow suit to prevent these situations.”
ming Seminary in Kingston were among the school officials who toured the mobile showroom on Thursday to look at security solutions. “Maintaining the safety and security of all members of the Wyoming Seminary community is a top priority for the school, and the administration is continuously surveying new security strategies and equipment as they come on the market,” said Gail Smallwood, associate director of communications for Wyoming Seminary. “The dallabaugh@citizensvoice.com, 570-821-2115
22:24 | BOONELAURA
Police: Man ‘not ready to be a dad’ admits to pinching infant
By Eric Mark Staff Writer
PITTSTON — Pittston police are searching for a city man who is charged with pinching and hurting his infant daughter. Police say the man told them he “was not ready to be a father.” The baby’s mother faces child endangerment charges for failing to report the abuse, but she turned herself in Thursday, police said in a news release. The baby’s father, Philip Edwards, was still wanted as of T hursday night, police said. Edwards, 28, is charged with aggravated assault, simple assault and endangering the welfare of a child. According to a criminal complaint filed by Pittston police: Officers responded to the Parsonage Street home shared by Edwards and Bonnie Worthy on Sept. 25.
PhiliP Edwards Allegedly abused infant daughter Worthy said she was upset about finding marks on the back and neck of her infant daughter, then 4 months old. Worthy told officers she found the marks when she changed her daughter and she felt that Edwards, her boyfriend and the baby’s father, was responsible. The baby was taken to a hospital for treatment. Worthy, 35, was interviewed by police on Oct. 5. She said she was aware of the apparent abuse to her daughter for almost two months before she reported it. She said she had observed what appeared to be singed hair and bruises near her daughter’s neck and spine, as well as black and blue marks on the baby’s back and neck.
Worthy said the injuries were caused by the baby being pinched. She said that whenever she left the room to change clothes or use the bathroom, the baby would cry loudly, but when she confronted Edwards he denied knowing anything about it. She also said she saw Edwards pinch the baby on more than one occasion. The infant would cry after Edwards pinched her and “he would just walk away,” she said. Worthy said she did not report the abuse earlier because she was afraid of Edwards. Court records indicate that Edwards is 6 feet 5 inches tall and weighs 230 pounds. Edwards, when interviewed by police, admitted he pinched the baby on multiple occasions. He said he was very stressed out, “was not ready to be a dad” and knows what he did was wrong. When investigators asked Edwards if it was
possible he was struggling to keep from hurting the baby further, he replied “yes,” according to the criminal complaint. Worthy was charged with a felony count of endangering the welfare of a child, and a misdemeanor count of reckless endangerment. Luzer ne County Children and Youth Services took the baby into protective custody on Sept. 25, Pittston police Sgt. Neil Murphy said. Edwards had been cooperating with investigating officers, but police received a tip that he might be “contemplating flight,” so they filed charges against him Thursday, Murphy said. Police released a photo of Edwards, but noted that he now has facial hair. Anyone with information on Edwards or his whereabouts is asked to call Pittston police at 570-6542425, or dial 911.
emark@citizensvoice.com, 570-821-2117
Lawsuit filed by robbery suspect shot by police dismissed By James Halpin Staff Writer
invasion robbery on Laurel Street, according to police. Police said Rankin beat Ford so badly that he bent a titanium rod in the victim’s left leg, which was recovering from surgery due to a broken femur. Rankin also stole various items during the robbery, but discarded the goods and the stun gun as he was being pursued by officers, police said. Rankin’s lawsuit alleged police “falsely announced to and amongst each other” that Rankin had a gun, when in fact he did not. Police said Rankin repeatedly failed to put up his
hands and made motions toward his waistband to indicate he had a gun while they tried to arrest him for the home invasion. Majikes then shot Rankin in the torso and police arrested him. The Luzerne County District Attorney’s Office later ruled the shooting justified. Rankin, who was paralyzed from the waist down, is still awaiting trial on charges of aggravated assault, robbery and possession and use of an electronic incapacitation device. jhalpin@citizensvoice.com 570-821-2058, @cvjimhalpin
South Carolina man allegedly resisted arrest, had weapons in Rice Township By Michael P. Buffer Staff Writer
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busted lip, the affidavit said. Watkins was convicted in South Carolina for burglary, court papers say. He was transferred to the Luzerne County Correctional Facility after an arraignment Thursday, because was unable to post bail, which was 10 percent of $50,000. Before the altercation with the officer, the officer was patting him down to look for
weapons, and when the officer believed Watkins was reaching for a knife, he pushed Watkins away and reached for his firearm, the affidavit said. While inventorying Watkin’s belongings, police said they found the rifle wrapped in a blanket, a double edged knife and another knife with a blade length of over 12 inches, the affidavit said.
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Candidates for county, municipal and school district offices in the Nov. 3 General Election will have an opportunity to communicate directly with voters through an online Voter Guide developed by The Citizens’ Voice in conjunction with the nonprofit, non-partisan group e.thePeople. Candidates will have free access to the site, where they can upload pictures and links, provide biographical information and answer questions on public policy. The Citizens’ Voice has already emailed hundreds of candidates inviting them to participate, using email addresses obtained during the May primary. Candidates who participated in the Voter Guide in May will have to update their information to participate for the General Election. If you are a candidate whose name appears on the ballot in Luzerne County and have not been contacted, please email your contact information to djanoski@ citizensvoice.com. The deadline to participate is Oct. 19. Voters will be able to access the site later this month and find the candidates in their municipal, school district and county races simply by entering their home addresses. — Staff report
Police: Woman hurt in hit-and-run crash WILKES-BARRE — A 19-year-old woman from Swoyersville sustained minor injuries when struck by a vehicle that drove off in the area of 19 N. Main St. at 11:29 p.m. Wednesday, police said. The vehicle was a black sedan with tinted windows, possibly a Honda Accord, according to the victim and witnesses. The victim was treated at a local medical facility. Anyone with information that may help identify the striking fleeing vehicle is asked to call Luzerne County 911 or the Wilkes-Barre Police at 570-208-4214. — Michael P. Buffer
Blake Shelton coming to Mohegan Sun Arena Country singer Blake Shelton is bringing his 2016 tour to the Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza in Plains Township. The musician, who appears on the NBC television show “The Voice,” will stop at the arena on March 18. Shelton is a five-time Country Music Awards vocalist of the year. His latest single, ‘Gonna,’ is a bonus track on his forthcoming album “Reloaded: 20 #1 Hits,” available Oct. 23. Ticket prices for the tour range from $29.75 to $69.75. The on sale date will be announced soon, according to the concert announcement. For more, visit blakeshelton.com or mohegansunarenapa. com.
Homebrewing competition will be held Sunday The second annual NEPA Conical Cup home brewers beer competition will be held Sunday at the American Legion in Mountain Top. The event, presented by the Luzerne County Brewers association, is co-sponsored with the Mountain Top Kiwanis Club and will be held at their first annual Brew and Barbecue at the American Legion Park at 1550 Henry Drive, Mountain Top. It runs from noon to 5 p.m. The event includes the contest, two live bands, barbecue and beer from Susquehanna Brewing Co. Tickets are $25 for the Brew and Barbecue, an all-ages outdoor event. For information, visit www.nepaconicalcup. com.
COrreCTiOns & CLArifiCATiOns It is our policy to correct errors promptly. To report an error, please call the city desk at 570-821-2056.
22:30 | GAYDOSKRIS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 3
RICE TWP. — A South Carolina man is facing charges he resisted arrest and illegally possessed a rifle and two knives after an officer investigating an auto accident spotted the man walking on Nuangola Road carrying lugg a g e around 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, police said.
David Michael Watkins, 24, told an officer he crashed his vehicle on Interstate 81 and was walking to his wife’s house, police said. After a brief physical alteration, Watkins fled on foot down Nuangola Road, and the officer stunned Watkins with a Taser in the left shoulder and right calf, according to an arrest affidavit. Watkins sustained a chipped tooth and
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WILKES-BARRE — A federal judge has thrown out the civil rights lawsuit a homeinvasion suspect filed against Wilkes-Barre and Plains Township police after he was shot and paralyzed from the waist down. James Rankin, 24, of New Castle, filed suit in April 2014 alleging civil rights violations, assault and battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress during his April 2012 arrest in which he was shot by Wilkes-Barre police officer John Majikes.
In a ruling Wednesday, U.S. District Judge A. Richard Caputo ordered the lawsuit dismissed for failure to prosecute. Rankin’s attorneys were notified Sept. 24 to explain within 10 days why the case should not be dismissed and they failed to respond, the order says. Rankin’s attorney, Holly C. Dobrosky, did not immediately return a message seeking comment. The incident took place April 9, 2012, when Rankin beat and repeatedly used a stun gun on victims Naeem Ford and Margarita Martinez during a violent home
news in brief
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
4 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
City resident asks for help Police search for shooter after incident in Scranton regarding ‘party house’ By Joseph Kohut staff Writer
By Jacob Seibel staff Writer WILKES-BARRE — A South River Street resident came before city council Thursday with a plea to get s o m e t h i n g d o n e ab o u t what he described as a party house that’s disrupting the neighborhood. John Chicchetti said Wilkes University students staying in off-campus housing near his home throw late night parties where over a hundred people turn out. He brought documentation to council at its regular meeting that he said shows people urinating in public, destroying a neighbors’ property, lighting fireworks, fist fighting, flashing their genitalia to people passing by and drinking alcohol in the street. “I got photographs, I got videos of all the nonsense these kids pull,” he said. “They are going to get hurt at their own hands.” He told council he has called city police, university administration and the property owner about the disruptions, but none of them has taken action to keep the problems from reoccurring. He said police respond three or four times a week, but when he has tried getting police reports, he was told there are none, leading him to believe no one had been cited despite clear violations. With police doing little, he joked how he went to the home during a party and stole the tap to the beer keg that was sitting on the sidewalk. T h e u n ive r s i t y a l s o hasn’t sent out campus security to address the problem, he said. City attorney Tim Henry said the jurisdiction of campus security likely ends where school property ends and has no authority over students residing in private housing. Chairman Mike Merritt asked whether they could have copies of the documentation to review, and
‘I got photographs, I got videos of all the nonsense these kids pull. They are going to get hurt at their own hands.’ John ChICCheTTI City resident Chicchetti said, “Knock yourself out,” lifting up a folder of pictures. After council members agreed to look into the matter and to try to get more police presence in the area, Councilman Tony George suggested the possibility of getting the property designated a nuisance that could be shut down under the city’s three-strikes ordinance. In other business, city council members created a resolution Thursday commending its creation in recognition of the NAACP Youth Council recently being chartered. City council commemorated the NAACP Youth Council for officially being chartered at the annual NAACP convention in Philadelphia on July 11, becoming the first char tered youth council in WilkesBarre. Youth councils are indep e n d e n t ly f u n c t i o n i n g branches with elected officers and its own set of bylaws to govern its operations within the NAACP family. Its initial organizational meeting for electing officers will be held Oct. 17 at the Quality Inn at 880 Kidder St. in Wilkes-Barre. Council also voted to allow Bell Furniture to buy a portion of the parking lot from the city next to its store at 95 S. Main St. for $154,000. Council approved the sale. The store will own the portion along its location while the city will remain owner of the center portion and along the former Army-Navy store. jseibel@citizensvoice.com 570-821-2110
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A man in an older, white mid-sized sedan shot another man in the leg shortly before 11 a.m. Thursday on the 2000 block of North Main Avenue, Scranton police Chief Carl Graziano said. Police recovered bullet casings believed to be fired from a semi-automatic handgun at the scene of the drive-by shooting. The suspect, a young man wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, fled in the vehicle on the busy strip of road heading away from North Scranton. “It’s still an active and aggressive investigation,” Graziano said. A witness to the North Scranton shooting said he briefly made small-talk with the victim minutes before pops like “firecrackers” erupted. Jose ph Sheridan, 38, caught a glimpse of the white sedan’s driver as the car sped away. The man behind the wheel hunched
MiChael J. Mullen / tiMes-shaMroCk
Scranton Police Chief Carl Graziano talks with Mayor Bill Courtright at the scene of a shooting in the 2000 block of North Main Ave. Thursday morning. over and tried to cover his face with his hood. “I tried to read the plate as quick as I can but I couldn’t,” Sheridan said. Then, Sheridan’s attention shifted to the young man a few yards away who nervously checked his body for bullet wounds. The man, not identified by police, found one on his left leg. “I didn’t want him to keep on standing,” Sheridan said. “I told him sit down, sit down.”
the video to police and told them what he knew. The chief declined to discuss any more details, saying investigators are still working on confir ming some facts. More information should be released as detectives make headway through interviews and surveillance footage review. However, the chief said the shooting was “not a random act.” “The victim was the intended target,” Graziano said. Sheridan asked the victim if he knew the shooter. The victim said yes, Sheridan said. Graziano declined to discuss that. Graziano said investigators have some indication of what the reason may be behind the shooting, but they were still working to confirm that. He declined to discuss it further. The victim was interviewed in a hospital, but investigators want to follow up with him.
The young man reclined on the curb. Blood dripped down his leg. Sheridan and another man held tissues to the wound. Police and medical personnel arrived quickly. The victim’s wound is not life-threatening, Graziano said. A camera on the exterior of the Sheridan’s home captured the suspect’s car driving away from the scene in the seconds following the jkohut@timesshamrock.com, @jkohuttt shooting. He turned over
Christopher Dolan / the Citizens’ VoiCe
Building the Vatican, brick by brick
Christopher Dolan / the Citizens’ VoiCe
The Rev. Bob Simon, at left, presented ‘Secrets of The Lego Vatican Revealed’ on Thursday at the Pittston Memorial Library. The Rev. Simon, the priest of St. Catherine of Siena in Moscow, discussed how he built the Vatican out of Legos. His masterpiece is currently on display at The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. The 14-by-6-foot replica took about roughly 500,000 LEGO pieces to create. Above, the Rev. Simon hands a Lego priest to 5-year-old Lucas Maira of Pittston.
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22:34 | GAYDOSKRIS
Suspended LCTA director pleads guilty in ‘ghost rider’ scandal By James Halpin Staff Writer
Vicki VellioS Briner / For The ciTizenS’ Voice
Suspended Luzerne County Transportation Authority executive director Stanley Strelish was emotional in court Thursday, telling the judge his ailing wife needed him at home. He was sentenced to five years of probation, a $5,000 fine and 100 hours of community service.
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assumed when the authority took over the Shared Ride program. During Thursday’s hearing, the prosecution agreed not to oppose a probationary sentence but there was some dispute about how severe Strelish’s punishment should be. Anderson argued the conduct, which took place from 2007 through 2012, was more serious than a one-time error in judgment. Strelish, as a public figure, also betrayed the public trust, he said. “It’s your job as a public official not to continue the corruption but to stop it,” Anderson said. “And he didn’t do it.”
Defense attorney Frank Nocito argued that Strelish accepts responsibility for his actions but noted that the money from PennDOT only went toward the authority, which has since repaid the funds. “Mr. Strelish did not personally benefit in any way from the funds,” Nocito said. The defense acknowledged the ridership numbers were inaccurate, but co-counsel Philip Gelso maintained they were high well before Strelish took over. During Strelish’s preliminary hearing, drivers testified that the practice had gone on for decades, an asser-
tion Anderson did not dispute. Strelish didn’t invent the scheme, but he did make it worse — there was a 51 percent increase in reported senior riders after Strelish took over, he said. “He took something that may have existed on a lower level and he hammered the throttle to the floor on it,” Anderson said. “He was the executive director. The buck stops with Mr. Strelish.” Gelso also noted that Strelish is the only person to have been charged criminally even though several other transportation authorities across the state have also had jhalpin@citizensvoice.com ghost riders appear in their 570-821-2058, @cvjimhalpin
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 5
ing senior citizen riders who were not actually on the buses. In some cases, drivers were recording two or three times more riders than were present, and the disparity grew so massive that at one point in fiscal year 2010-2011 LCTA inflated ridership numbers by nearly 600,000 s e n i o r s, a c c o r d i n g t o PennDOT. The ghost riders boosted state funding to the authority, and at the same time, Strelish was benefitting from substantial raises because the rising numbers looked good to the board, Senior Deputy Attorney General Bernard Anderson said. Between 2007, when Strelish became executive director, and last year, his salary rose from $45,000 to nearly $90,000, he said. “There were clearly merit raises,” Anderson told the judge, asserting that the executives threatened that drivers would lose their jobs if they didn’t keep the numbers up. “These bus drivers didn’t have their salaries double in five years. They were trying to save their jobs.” Strelish’s attorneys argued that the precipitous pay increase was the result of standard increases for employees as well as a boost because of an increase in responsibility Strelish
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
HARRISBURG — As he stood before a judge, suspended Luzerne County Transportation Authority executive director Stanley Strelish began to weep as he pleaded for mercy. Faced with more than three dozen charges alleging he illegally ordered bus drivers to inflate senior citizen ridership numbers to boost state funding, Strelish had pleaded guilty Thursday afternoon to five cover felony counts of tampering with story public records in exchange for the other charges being dropped. The offenses carried a maximum sentence of 35 years in prison, and Strelish broke down in tears as he told Dauphin County Judge William T. Tully his ailing wife couldn’t get by with him behind bars. “She needs me at home,” said Strelish, 61. “I have to do all of the housekeeping and the yard work.” For the first time, he publicly acknowledged his role in the scheme that the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation says resulted in millions of dollars in overpayments to the authority. “I’m very sorry to the taxpayers,” Strelish said. “I should have known better the day I started.” Tully accepted Strelish’s plea and immediately sentenced him to five years of probation, a $5,000 fine and 100 hours of community service. It was not immediately clear how the plea will impact Strelish’s status with the authority. Solicitor Joseph Blazosek did not immediately return a message seeking comment. Strelish and operations manager Robb Henderson, 59, were hit with dozens of felony theft-related counts in June 2014 over the scandal and were suspended without pay pending outcome of the case. Henderson has not entered into a plea agreement and is still awaiting trial. Prosecutors allege the pair orchestrated the scandal by ordering drivers to “hit the button” — jargon for record-
numbers. In August 2014, for instance, PennDOT ordered the County of Lackawanna Transit System to reimburse it for $5.7 million for overstating senior ridership figures over a six-year period. “This is not isolated to LCTA or Stanley Strelish,” Gelso said. The judge agreed that the state is facing an “epidemic of mistrust in their public figures” and said he feels the “culture of corruption” extends well beyond Northeastern Pennsylvania. The judge suggested PennDOT had “looked the other way” during the scandal because ghost riders were good for mass transit across the state. That, however, doesn’t excuse Strelish’s actions, he said. But still, Tully said he didn’t see a need to make an example of Strelish because PennDOT is already looking into the numbers in other systems. Sending Strelish to prison would be an added expense to taxpayers that is unnecessary with Strelish going home as a convicted felon, he said. “I think that the public shame that you’re enduring now is a greater penalty than I could ever impose,” Tully said. As for ghost riders in other counties, Anderson assured the court his office was still on the job. “There are other authorities that are being looked at as we speak,” Anderson said. “This isn’t done.”
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see when we can do this,” he said. If so, the closure of Route 315 and the bridge demolition will take place starting Friday, Oct.16,betweenOakStreetand 84 Lumber. A detour will be posted. Traffic on I-81 will not be impacted, according to PennDOT. May said the split pattern on I-81 will be in place until June 2016, and the entire project is scheduled to be complete by summer of 2017. When it is done, there will be a new threelane bridge at Exit 175, he said.
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Monday morning, when there is less traffic. Normally PennDOT would close it this Friday, but Monday is Columbus Day, and May said PennDOT won’t shut down Route315over a federal holiday weekend. Instead, May said PennDOT will try to put up the Jersey barrier on Tuesday, if weather permits and the contractors and subcontractors are available. “We’re waiting to hear back from all of them and we’re watching weather reports to
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bridge there,” May said. The barrier is held in place with long bolts cemented to the bridge with epoxy, which May said has to strengthen for 24 hours. The bolts are tested to measure the pressure needed to pull them out. For some reason, possibly that the epoxy wasn’t strong enough, numerous bolts failed, May said. So PennDOT has to drill new holes, put in new bolts with new epoxy, wait 24 hours and do the test again, he said. When Route 315 is closed, it will be from a Friday night to a
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PITTSTON — Pennsylvania Department of Transportation opted to postpone until next week an Interstate 81 project that will involve temporarily closing part of state Route 315. A strength test on the bolts that would hold a safety barrier on I-81 in place failed, so PennDOT will wait until after the holiday weekend to try again. “It’sintheinterestsof public safety that we’re delaying this,” PennDOT Spokesman James May said. He explained that I-81 northbound is going to be split about half a mile before mile marker 175 — the Pittston exit — in order to replace the bridge at the exit. The road will be divided into two separate lanes so
the contractor can work in the center. “If you want to get off at Exit 175, you’re going to have to be in the left lane,” May said. One of the first steps is to demolish the old bridge, and in order to do so, PennDOT needs to close state Route 315, which runs beneath I-81 at that point. On Wednesday night, PennDOT put up a safety measure called a Jersey barrier, to prevent cars from going off I-81 and dropping onto Route 315 while the work is being done. “It’s what prevents a car from going off the end of the
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DUNMORE — They feed the hung ry, clothe the poor, educate and provide spiritual guidance. Now, the Catholic sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary will use green building techniques and landscaping to clean up the environment. As part of their upgrade to their headquarters near Marywood University, the IHM sisters are planning improvements that will treat stormwater, establish native plant and wildlife habitat and create a space for the community to reflect in nature. “When you’re in nature, other things disappear,” said Sister Ellen Maroney, IHM, president of the congregation. Though God’s presence is everywhere, “it’s more tangible when you’ re amongst nature than when you’re in an office building,” she said. The center is the hub of their order. There they coordinate their education and ministry efforts in the U.S. and Latin America,
The Immaculate Heart of Mary sisters will upgrade their headquarters near Marywood University. hold tutoring sessions for local children, publish books and newsletters and even offer tech support for religious groups. The sisters want to expand the center to host more outside groups and gatherings. That means a d d i n g d o z e n s o f n ew parking spaces in two lots. Construction is set to begin this fall. Ordinarily, more paved surface would mean more pollutants running of f during storms and flowing i n t o n e a r by d r a i n s o r
creeks. The sisters are already dealing with poor drainage in their central courtyard and a nearby lawn. When complete, their project will prevent any stormwater from flowing into the combined sewers that dump a mixture of stor mwater and sewage into the Lackawanna Riv-
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er during heavy rains, said environmental scientist Paul Bechtel with McLane Associates, which designed the project with engineer CECO Associates. Less water in the sewers also means lower treatment costs at the Scranton Sewer Authority’s plant. “If a lot of places like IHM would do that, that would help reduce the rates of taxpayers and ratepayers over time,” Bechtel said. Native plants will do the work. Runoff will pool in two wetlands during heavy storms. Walking paths, benches and interpretive signs will educate and uplift the public. “They’re not looking at stormwater as an obligation or a negative,” Bechtel said. “They’re actually looking to utilize and enhance and visually see stormwater on their property.”
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Native plants like tussock sedge, soft rush and woolgrass will naturally filter out pollutants, he said. The project is a timely way to put the words of Pope Francis’s environmental encyclical into action, Sister Maroney said. That document called on everyone to hear the cry of the poor and an ailing planet. “I think it’s chall e n g e d u s i n w ay s we h ave n’ t b e e n i n a while,”she said. To help fund the project, they applied for g rants through the state Growing Greener and Watershed Restoration and Protection programs. The project drew letters of support from Dunmore, the Scranton Sewer Authority and the Lackawanna River Cor ridor Association,
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Warden resigns at jail where inmate murder suspect escaped KITTANNING (AP) — A c o u n t y j a i l w a rd e n i s resigning after the escape of an inmate who is charged with killing a woman while he was on the run. The Armstrong County Prison Board on Thursday announced David Hogue’s resignation. The resignation is effective Nov. 12, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette first reported. The resignation comes less than two weeks after District Attor ney Scott Andreassi recommended
Charles Pascal Jr., has praised the report calling for refor ms but has declined to speak specifically about the charges Crissman faces. Crissman remains jailed in a neighboring county awaiting trial. Hogue had been suspende d w i t h o u t p ay s i n c e August, but county officials said that was done primarily so Andreassi’s investigation and another by a private contractor could review the jail’s policies
without the appearance of bias or interference. Rich Fink, a county commissioner and prison board chairman, told the (Kittanning) Leader-Times that Hogue wasn’t pressured to resign and that the board hadn’t planned to fire him. Hogue“could’ve returned to the job with a little management training,” Fink said. “He could’ve returned to run an effective jail.” Hogue, a 31-year jail employee who’s been the warden since 2006, could
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parole violation for a drug conviction and told authorities he had used heroin shortly before his arrest, which occurred a few days before he escaped. Despite that, Andreassi found that Crissman wasn’t tested for drugs or given the recommended three-day detox. Instead, he was placed in a cell, where cellmates and guards said it appeared Crissman was still in withdrawal, the report said.
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not be immediately reached for comment. The prison board has received the private contractor’s report but doesn’t expect to release it publicly until next week. Andreassi wants changes to the trusties program and more staffing during the midnight to 8 a.m. shift when Crissman escaped. He also noted that the jail had a reputation for being lax. But much of his report centered on the fact that Crissman was jailed on a
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sweeping reforms following Robert Crissman’s July 30 escape from the jail in Kittanning, about 40 miles northeast of Pittsburgh. The 38-year-old inmate was a member of the trusties program that allowed him to walk outside to get breakfast trays for other inmates before he took off. He is accused of beating and strangling an acquaintance, 55-year-old Tammy Long, shortly after his escape. C r i s s m a n ’ s l a w y e r,
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Fan: 2014 Super Bowl ticket process violates consumer law By Maryclaire Dale Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — A New Jersey man asked a federal appeals court Thursday to revive his consumer protection lawsuit that aims to flag the NFL over the number of tickets sold to the public for the 2014 Super Bowl. A lawyer for Josh Finkelman, of New Brunswick, said the league releases only about 900 tickets for the public lottery, less than 1 percent of the total. The remaining tickets go to the individual teams, corporate partners, media outlets and others. Finkelman complained that fans like him were left to pay $2,000 or more per ticket on the secondary market. His lawyer, Bruce Nagel, argued Thursday that New Jersey law requires anyone selling tickets to an event to release 95 percent of them to the public. “The NFL has done this for 50 years, and it’s fine in most jurisdictions. But New Jersey consumer protection laws are stricter,” Nagel argued to a three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The judges seemed skeptical of Finkelman’s right to
sue since he never entered the Super Bowl lottery at all. But Nagel called that irrelevant, and said the case hinges on the number of tickets offered for sale. The NFL, in response, said the lottery is not a public sale at all and argued that the New Jersey law doesn’t apply. The lottery offers winners the chance to purchase tickets at prices that last year started at $500. “There’s no fundamental right to go see the Super Bowl,” NFL lawyer Jonathan Pressment argued. The judges questioned what actual harm people suffered if they missed the game because of high prices on the secondary market, and whether the NFL could be held responsible. The NFL compared the issue to Catholic parishes that get a bounty of tickets to see the pope. The two judges on the panel from New Jersey — Julio M. Fuentes and Maryanne Trump Barry — quipped that Pope Francis ignored New Jersey on his recent U.S. tour. “We’re used to it,” Barry said. The hearing came after a district judge in New Jersey
26th
threw out Finkelman’s case. The 3rd Circuit then agreed to hear the appeal. The case only involves Super Bowl XLVIII, held last
year at the Meadowlands in East Rutherford. Finkelman is seeking class-action status to represent anyone who paid above face value for seats on
the secondary market and anyone who was too frustrated by the long odds to enter the lottery. Finkelman, for his $2,000
ticket, sat in the nosebleed seats. The Seattle Seahawks went on to crush Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos 43-8.
Be in Good Health New medical practice opening soon in Mountain Top Geisinger is growing in the Mountain Top area with the opening of the new Geisinger–Mountain Top on October 20. The new building will feature family medicine, internal medicine, laboratory, nutrition and radiology services, as well as Geisinger’s Partners in Pediatrics practice and Careworks Walk-In Clinic, all under one roof.
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12 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Ex-Old Forge police chief reaches deal Three Kingston residents charged in purse theft in Swoyersville By Peter Cameron Staff Writer A week after earning his release from jail, former Old Forge Police Chief Larry Semenza reached a deal Thursday that will keep him from serving any more time, but also from serving in law enforcement again. T h e ch i e f h a d b e e n accused of having sexual contact with a 15-year-old girl. In the deal with prosecutors, Semenza, 41, agreed to plead guilty to misdemeanor harassment. Lackawanna County Judge Vito Geroulo immediately sentenced him to time served. The judge released the defendant on bail last week. Semenza had already spent about 20 months in
prison. He does not have to register as a sex offender. The victim in this case came forward in 2012 to report the accusations, which occurred between 2004 and 2007 when she was a junior firefighter in the Old Forge Fire Department. Semenza served as a captain there. A jury convicted the former chief in October 2013 of corruption of a minor and failing to report child abuse, but acquitted him on the more serious charges of felony aggravated indecent assault and unlawful contact with a minor, as well as misdemeanor counts of indecent assault and indecent exposure. In September, those convictions were thrown out by
an appeals court after it ruled some evidence used in the trial was inadmissible. The Lackawanna County District Attorney’s Office had formally asked the court to reconsider that decision. As part of the deal, the office has dropped that request. Both sides made concessions in reaching the agreement, said Deputy District Attorney Jennifer McCambridge. She touted the deal’s stipulation preventing Semenza from ever reassuming the position he abused, as well as the fact that the victim in the case will not have to testify again in another trial. The agreement has no affect on the victim’s pending civil suit against Semenza, the prosecutor said.
SWOYERSVILLE — Borough police have charged three Kingston residents in connection with the theft of a purse in August. Anthony Stoss, 23, Adrienne Romiski, 18, and her father Ronald Romiski, 39, were arraigned Thursday before Magisterial District Judge David Barilla on misdemeanor charges of theft by unlawful taking, receiving stolen property and endangering the welfare of children. According to a criminal complaint filed by Swoyersville police: On Aug. 22, police respond-
ed to a report of a purse stolen from a porch at a Sidney Street home. A neighbor gave police the license plate number of a minivan she said was involved in the incident. The victim and her neighbor told police they saw a man run from the porch, with the purse in hand and jump into the van. The witness said she stood in front of the van, blocking the road, and told the occupants she was on the phone with police. The frontseat passenger handed over the purse and the van drove off. A watch, prescription medication and $193 in cash
were missing from the purse. Police identified the van’s owner as Stoss’s mother, who said she allowed her son to use the vehicle. Police contacted Stoss and Adrienne Romiski, who agreed to give statements at police headquarters but never showed up. Ronald Romiski was sitting in the back of the vehicle, along with several children, during the alleged crime, according to police. The suspects are free on $2,000 unsecured bail apiece, pending preliminary hearings scheduled for Oct. 22. — Eric Mark
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No meetings between Wolf, GOP after proposal defeat HARRISBURG (AP) — Republican leaders and Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf aren’t rushing to restart meetings, one day after the governor’s tax plan was soundly defeated in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Wolf spokesman Jeff Sheridan says the governor hopes to resume talks to
Keegan-Michael Key to lead Penn State parade STATE COLLEGE (AP) — Penn State University is bringing alumnus KeeganMichael Key in to serve as the school’s homecoming grand marshal this week. The Centre Daily Times reports the 4 4 - ye a r- o l d actor says he hopes to give back to the u n ive r s i t y Key where he received his master of fine arts degree in 1996. Key says he was surprised when he was asked to be the grand marshal, citing other alumni he says were more deserving. Key lives in Los Angeles and is known for being a part of the Comedy Central TV show “Key & Peele.” He will lead the homecoming parade Friday and then attend the football game against Indiana on Saturday.
resolve the state’s 3-monthold budget impasse, but none were scheduled for Thursday or Friday. Wolf ’s proposal to raise the personal income tax rate and institute a new levy on natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale formation was soundly defeated in a test vote on Wednesday.
Nine Democrats joined all Republicans in the GOP-controlled chamber to vote down the proposal. In the wake of the vote, the administration is distributing a memo about the state’s structural deficit, warning it could result in deep cuts to education and human services.
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Saturday, Oct. 10 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wilkes University invites adults and children in grades 4 through 12 to join Wilkes faculty, staff, and students for a day of hands-on fun in the sciences. Participate in interactive laboratory projects and observe demonstrations. Adults must accompany children. The event is free and pre-registration is encouraged and is required for groups. To register online, visit www.wilkes.edu/PassportToScience. Parking is available behind the Henry Student Center, 84 W. South Street, Wilkes-Barre.
WB_VOICE - DLY - 12 - 10/09/15
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Subcontractor: I should’ve walked away before collapse By Maryclaire Dale Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — A demolition subcontractor told jurors Thursday that he warned the contractor on trial for the 2013 building collapse that killed six people that his plan to take down a towering brick wall was dangerous. Sean Benschop testified against contractor Griffin Campbell after pleading guilty in the six deaths, which occurred when the wall collapsed onto an adjacent thrift store. Campbell had refused to let him rent taller equipment so workers could take the four-story, unsupported wall down by hand, Benschop said. “When I saw the building like that, I should have
walked away,” Benschop testified. “I had my family to feed and I had bills to pay.” Benschop was operating the machinery even though he smoked marijuana daily for medical purposes and had also taken the painkiller Percocet that day for an injury. He faces a maximum of 10 to 20 years in prison for six counts of involuntary manslaughter and other charges. Campbell has rejected a similar plea in the deaths, which occurred inside a Salvation Army thrift store in downtown Philadelphia that was attached to three buildings he had been hired to raze. Benschop said he was using heavy equipment nearby when the wall crashed onto the thrift shop.
One survivor who testified Thursday lost both legs after spending 13 hours in the rubble. Campbell is charged with third-degree murder, causing a catastrophe and other crimes. His lawyer has called him a scapegoat for building owner Richard Basciano, project architect Plato Mari-
nakos and others. Basciano had wanted the wall down quickly so he could redevelop the block. The Salvation Army had remained open after refusing to sell the corner property. Prosecutors are expected to wrap up their case Friday. MAtt RouRke / AssociAted PRess Campbell is expected to tesFirefighters view the aftermath of a building coltify next week.
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 13
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Congress has more work to do on Medicare program October marks the close of the 10th full year of the Medicare Part D prescription drug program, which has helped scores of millions of older Americans afford the medicine they need. The program has been a success, especially because of a relatively recent assist from the Affordable Care Act that has helped to resolve one of its worst features. But with 10 years on the books, it’s a good time to move for the most important improvement. The law was controversial not only because it added an expensive prescription drug benefit, but because lawmakers made it even more expensive by forbidding Medicare from negotiating drug prices with pharmaceutical companies. Instead, Congress wrote the law for the benefit of pharmaceutical companies and insurers, needlessly funneling billions of public dollars to private enterprises. While doing so, Congress controlled costs by penalizing people who most needed expensive medicine. It legislated a coverage gap, the infamous “doughnut hole,” under which Part D enrollees had to pick up thousands of dollars in expensive medicine costs. Obamacare has begun to close the doughnut hole with supplemental coverage and discounts, and completely will close it by 2020. Meanwhile, Congress should attack the other problem it created. It should not simply authorize, but require Medicare to negotiate prices with pharmaceutical companies. According to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 39 million Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in the drug plan. That constitutes substantial power in the marketplace to produce lower prices. Negotiations also would produce standardized pricing, rather than the wide range, by region and insurer, under the current system. Part D was a huge step forward for access to effective health care. At the close of the 10th program year, Congress should make that a leap.
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Published by Times-Shamrock Newspapers
By Joanne Cleaver Chicago Tribune TNS
Bosses, pull back the curtain on pay gap for women
The gender gap is a credibility gap. That’s the real reason why few women make it to top leadership, at companies, nonprofits and just about anywhere else. Last week, a Lean In/McKinsey & Co. report, “Women in the Workplace 2015,” reiterated the same statistics as reports released year after year by Catalyst, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and various women’s groups — and offered a familiar analysis: Women start strong and fade fast; they have ambitions to reach the top but don’t get there. Repeating the same numbers over and over is not inspiring change. What will it take? I got a glimpse of what works a few months ago, while sitting on the sidelines of a meeting of a hundred women at a New York accounting firm. The women were all in the room for an update from the leaders of their women’s initiative (a program intended to coach women through career advancement with the aim of retaining them to partnership). The managing partner of the office, a man, was there too. After a cheerful summary of new programs and opportunities was delivered by the manager of the women’s initiative, the floor opened for questions. A hand shot up and the owner of that hand — a middleaged woman — stood up. “I keep hearing about the pay gap,” she said. Her voice wavered at first, but steadied as she continued. “Movie stars are talking about it. The industry is talking about it. But we don’t hear anything from ... “ and she looked straight at the managing partner, “you.” It was graveyard-quiet in the room. She went on. “I don’t want to know what anybody else makes. But I do want to be sure that I’m making the same, especially considering that I’ve been here for 15 years. So what are you doing about that? How do I know that we women are being paid fairly?”
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The managing partner was dumbstruck. He had nowhere to hide. Then he was rescued by someone from human resources, who popped up and assured the questioner, and everybody else, that the firm was probably going to run compensation audits to detect and correct any pay disparities. “We should do a better job of explaining this,” she said. Well, yes. So should every employer. There have been so many programs, for so long, with such paltry results, that it’s only logical that women would be skeptical. In one of its few fresh insights, the Lean In/McKinsey study put numbers to the disbelief. The study reported that 74 percent of company officials say that their CEOs make gender parity a top priority. But only 37 percent of women — precisely half as many — believe that their chief executives make advancing women a top priority. Among women surveyed, 31 percent believe their direct managers are on board with the company’s purported gender priorities. Good intentions don’t automatically translate to good results. Or any results. Transparency builds trust. The more that employers show their work, the more credibility they will have with women. Show women not just fancy programs, but how, exactly, managers nominate candidates for key executive development programs. Show women not just a menu of benefits intended to ease work-life conflicts, but also exactly what happens to your career when you take advantage of those benefits. Show women not just logos, banners, advertisements and stock photos of ladies in business suits, but how companies do better when they collaborate with women-owned businesses. Show women not just executive posturing about equitable pay for equitable work, but the analysis and accountability that ensures that pay policies translate to actual equal pay. The accounting firm with the impertinent questioner just stepped up its pay equity program. It told its female staff what it’s doing. And it’s sharing its plan and early results with other accounting firms. That’s how change happens.
18:01 | GAYDOSKRIS
RUBES
BY lEigh RUBEn
We the people can stop this political downward spiral
The Citizens’ Voice will publish no letter from a candidate in the Nov. 3 General Election and no letter advocating or criticizing a candidate if it reaches our newsroom after 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 16.
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latest version of his revenue plan Tuesday, and though it scales back the scope of his original proposal, taxpayers would still get tagged with a 16 percent personal income tax increase. The natural gas industry would be subject to a severance tax for the first time, too. Wolf ’s latest proposal centers on two taxes, the personal income tax and the severance tax. The sales tax, which the governor originally wanted to raise and expand, is off the table. So are higher tobacco taxes and an increased bank shares tax.” Rep. Seth Grove, R-York, said “lower-income residents would see natural gas become more costly, while working families would be hit with a 16 percent income tax hike.” The rate for all wage-earners would rise from 3.07 percent to 3.57 percent, effective Oct. 1, 2015. On an annual basis, that 16.3 percent increase would take the tax for a person making $50,000 from $1,535, to $1,785.
commEntaRY
Time for sensible background checks
By Michael Reagan Cagle Cartoons Inc.
In the wake of the recent homicidal shooting rampage at an Oregon community college, I’m forced to come to the conclusion that it is high time for common sense national background checks for journalists. It’s time we closed the political loophole and prevented biased, ignorant political operatives from getting their hands on a dangerously misleading national microphone. RedState has a perfect example this week. Former Bill Clinton White House aide, and current Clinton Foundation donor George Stephanopoulos, is the host for ABC’s “This Week.” He uses his “bully pulpit” to bully conservatives and Republicans. During an interview with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Stephanopoulos interrupted Christie to assert, “But there’s no question the pace of mass shootings is accelerating, happening more frequently than anywhere else. If it’s not the gun, then what is it?” This is a perfect example of
leftist thinking. As Dennis Prager points out, the left always blames the inanimate object and never the user. During the Cold War the left wanted to ban atomic weapons rather than condemn and work to overthrow totalitarian regimes that could use The Bomb to further their ends. Leftist-in-Chief Obama continues to be fixated on nuclear weapons and behind the scenes is working to render our nuclear deterrent impotent. Now the left is fixated on the gun. Blaming the user of the gun is out of the question, because that involves individual responsibility. Once America starts thinking in terms of individual responsibility again, it has the potential to open up a line of questioning that is very uncomfortable for big government leftists. For example: Why can’t you find a job? Where is the father of your children? How did your home enter foreclosure? What do you spend your money on? Why have we lost the War on Poverty?
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About the Republican proposal: “This budget significantly increases money for schools (the highest amount ever), wipes away any deficit and keeps essential human services operating. We fund all these priorities without any new taxes.” The GOP budget plan includes no new or increased taxes, more money for education, including nearly $500 million for K-12, keeps essential human service programs operating to help those in need and continues the core operations of government. I won’t (because of space constraints) list the entire Republican proposal. Google this: “pa house republican budget proposal” and read for yourself. Let’s see… more money taken from me or more money not taken from me… Decisions…decisions… Democrat/liberal rebuttal in 3, 2, … Dave Yurko Wilkes-Barre
Help woman fighting cancer Editor: My wife Donna Kline, 60, found out she had cancer in March. I love her with all of my heart. We are married 43 years with one daughter and a granddaughter and a grandson and a son-in law whom we think of as a son. It spread to her liver and to her brain. I called everyone for help. I got none. She takes care of her 48-year-old sister, who has Down syndrome. She worked all her life until she got disabled. I am an honorably discharged Marine and help the best I can. We went to gofundme.com three weeks ago. Donations so far are at zero. Someone please help. The hurt in my heart will never go away. She is being treated by Dr. Saidman’s and Dr. Schulman’s offices and wouldn’t trade the nurses for anyone. They are the best. To help with medical bills, please go to gofundme.com and search for “Donna Kline.” Tom Kline Ashley
17:35 | GAYDOSKRIS
wE want YoUR lEttERS
The forum page of The Citizens’ Voice welcomes viewpoints from readers. Letters of 150 words or less are of the best length. Long letters may be edited for space.
Write: Your Voice, The Citizens’ Voice, 75 N. Washington St., WilkesBarre, PA 18701 Email: yourvoice@ citizensvoice .com Fax: 570-821-2247 Every letter must include your name, address and telephone number for verification. Only the name and town will be printed in the newspaper. Viewpoints are published free of charge. In an effort to express multiple views we request letter writers submit just one letter every two weeks.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 15
ElEction lEttER dEadlinE
Editor: Within my household, we have a budget. If we don’t keep w i t h i n t h at bu d g e t , d e b t occurs. Anyone with a lick of common sense knows that debt is not a good thing, except of course too many of our socalled government representatives. The Pennsylvania budget “negotiations” are a joke. Gov. Wolf ’s budget proposal “whacks” the workers with an income tax increase. I don’t know about you, but I’m really getting tired of taxes that keep going up and getting nothing in return. Pennsylvania has the highest gas tax in the country, maybe not the highest gas price, but the highest gas tax. And yes, the g as tax increase(s) happened with the help of both government parties. I don’t think many were happy with this decision. In regards to the 2015 budget i m p a s s e , Wa t c h d o g . o r g reports: “Gov. Tom Wolf unveiled the
Have a question on news coverage? Interact with Citizens’ Voice editors on our Editor’s Note blog at http://blogs.citizensvoice.com/ editorsnote/.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Editor: The two major political parties are no longer functioning as our Founding Fathers had originally intended. Lobbyists representing multibillion dollar corporations court our elected officials, shamelessly buying their votes to benefit their rich clients. This election season, we, the people, now have the opportunity to stop this downward spiral before it’s too late. Bernie Sanders, Independent senator from Vermont, and Democratic candidate for President of the United States, has been fighting for the middle class and the poor his entire career. From raising the minimum wage, investing in the country’s public works, to strengthening labor laws, expanding Social Security and opposing the Iraq war, Sen. Sanders has been an outspoken advocate for the people. In addition, Sanders has been working to overturn Citizens United in order to return our nation to cleaner elections. Bernie walks the walk by refusing any Super PAC donations, and thus far has accepted donations from over a million people. If you believe in a living wage, free health care and education, and getting big money out of politics, we strongly urge you to look at Bernie Sanders for president. Allison Petryk NEPA for Bernie Sanders Scranton
Pa. budget ‘negotiations’ a joke
EditoR’S notE:
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
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WB_VOICE - DLY - 16 - 10/09/15
Party guest feels singled out by subtle, ‘special’ treatment D E A R A B B Y: I was invited to a small gathering of women. I arrived punctually, was greeted by the hostess and asked if I wanted some water to drink. I a c c e p t e d . A s I l o o ke d around the room, everyone else had a glass of wine. When one other woman arrived a little while later and joined our group, the hostess asked her if she wanted wine or water to drink. I have never abused alcohol. Why was I not given a choice? I later found out that all the other women had been given a “show up” time that was a half-hour earlier than my “show up” time. I am hurt by the way I was treated. What are your thoughts? — SECONDCLASS CITIZEN IN FLORIDA DEAR SECOND-CLASS CITIZEN: I think your hostess could learn a few things about hospitality, because you were treated shabbily. As it stands, you have nothing to lose by asking her why because I can’t imagine that you would ever accept another invitation from the woman if one is offered. DEAR ABBY: At what point should grown kids in their 20s pay for their own “extras” (cellphone, gas, m ov i e s, g y m m e m b e rships)? In my opinion, if they can’t afford these luxuries, they should get a second job or do without. My husband, on the other hand, thinks they should be
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T16] | 10/08/15
dear abby AbigAil VAn buren DearAbby.com
“rewarded” simply for being good kids. At this stage in their lives, I think gifts should be reserved for birthdays and Christmas only and that we have been raising kids with a sense of entitlement that may be detrimental to their future (and to our retirem e n t ) . W h at a re yo u r thoughts on this? — ODD WOMAN OUT IN PENNSYLVANIA DEAR ODD WOMAN OUT: My thoughts are these: If you are truly concerned that your husband’s generosity could have a negative impact on your retirement savings, then he may be overly generous. If the “children” expect these gifts and don’t realize how lucky they are to be receiving this kind of largesse, the gifts should be stopped. However, if neither of these things is true and your husband derives pleasure from doing this for them, you should stay out of it.
WATCH BATTERIES INSTALLED $5 graduation is on the line. If vaping has had an effect on his grades, it might be best for me to tell our parents and figure things out from there. I don’t know what the right choice is. What should I do? — HOLDING A SECRET IN WASHINGTON DEAR HOLDING: From what I have been reading lately, some teens have begun vaping marijuana, which is known to impair memory. Depending upon what substance your brother has been vaping, it could d e f i n i t e ly b e why h i s grades have dropped. Secrets that can pose a danger shouldn’t be kept because they are not harmless. I think your instinct is to share your concer ns with your parents, and I concur. Dear abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
For an excellent guide to becoming a better conversationalist and a more sociable person, order “How to Be Popular.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Popularity Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 610540447. (Shipping and handling D E A R A B B Y: S i x are included in the price.) months ago my brother told me he vapes. At first I To order “How to Write didn’t think much of it. Letters for All Occasions,” Because I pride myself on send your name and mailing how well I keep secrets, I address, plus check or monhaven’t told our parents. ey order for $7 (U.S. funds) to: But now his grades have Dear Abby — Letter Booklet, started sliding, and I won- P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, der if there’s a connection. IL 61054-0447. Shipping and He’s going into his senior handling are included in the year of high school and his price.
18:02 | BILBOWLEON
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Benjamin David Swire is celebrating his first birthday today, Oct. 9. Benjamin is the son of Christopher and Georgette Swire of Noxen. He is the grandson of George and Peggy Gale of Noxen and Ralph and Jean Swire of Lehman. He is the greatgrandson of Thomas Swire of Sweet Valley.
Valentina Volpe is celebrating her first birthday today, Oct. 9. Valentina is the daughter of Kelli and Stephen Volpe of Merrick, N.Y. She is the granddaughter of Kenny and Debbie Malia of Nanticoke and Raymond Volpe of East Islip, N.Y., and Joanna Buccellato of Staten Island, N.Y.
wIlkes-BARRe Thirty one King’s College junior, senior, or graduate students are interning at local and regional sites during the fall semester. First row, from left, are Joseph Dillon, Greater Wilkes-Barre Chamber of Commerce; Colin Henry, Everhart Museum; Kendall Melochick, King’s College Human Resources Office; Brianna Prince, Office of Judge Lesa Gelb; Terria Pettus, Institute for Public Policy and Brielle Warren, WRKC. Second row: Jeffrey Cywinski, Mohegan Sun Arena; Elen O’Donnell, Luzerne County District Attorney’s Office; Kayla Pawlowski, Intermetro; Kelci Wolfe, First Hospital; Haley Greenwood, King’s College Social Media and Kelly Lettieri,
Assistant Director for Internships. Also interning are Cecelia Rodriguez, King’s College Public Relations Office; Christine Dunham, Make a Wish Foundation; Patrick Robinson, Wilkes-Barre Police Department; Brandon Gonzalez, Fastenal; Andrew Harrison, Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Bridge; Jordan Sod, The Medical Center;
Frank Barongi, King’s College Public Relations; Catherine Aiello, WilkesBarre Chamber of Commerce; Ryan Boornazian, Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins; Angela Cazonie, Berkshire Hathaway – Guard Insurance; Sarah Cease, WBRE; William Christian, King’s College Information and Instructional Technology Services; Jennifer
Fabian, St. Nicholas Federal Credit Union; Marshall Hardy, QProQ Engineering, Inc.; Lauren Martinez, Institute; Dafne Paramo, office of Judge Tina Gartley; Gabrielle Pellicciotti, office of Judge William Amesbury; Terria Pettus; Therese Roughsedge, Kirby Center and Nick Xelas, Mericle Commercial Real Estate Inc.
students could walk, crawl, and climb out of a simulated house fire. First row, from left, are
John Polifka with Ember, Kailyn Klepadlo, Gauge Ciannilli, Amani Shiloh and Landon Dougal.
Second row: Jared Whittaker, Ryan Amos, head teacher; Eric Banashefski and Paul Mierzwa.
nAnTIcOke
Sponsored by:
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Parking Available in the rear of the building
www.brunoshairandnails.com WB_VOICE - DLY - 17 - 10/09/15
Birthday announcements can also be emailed to birthdays@ The Citizens’ Voice is pleased citizensvoice.com. Please to run, free of charge, birthday include child’s last name and photos of children ages 1 birth date in the email’s subject through 16. Readers should line. send an individual photo of Articles should be typewritten. the child to: Please include a daytime teleBirthdays phone number to allow us to The Citizens’ Voice verify the information. 75 N. Washington St. Photos should be received Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701 one week prior to the birthday.
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T17] | 10/08/15
18:02 | BILBOWLEON
Photos received late will be published the next available day. We cannot accept color enlargements or computer printouts. Photos may be picked up at our convenient Customer Service Desk off our first-floor lobby. Or, you can include a stamped, self-addressed envelope and we will return the photo.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 17
Hair Is About To Change Her Life A Woman Who Cuts Her
YOUR BIRTHDAY
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Hunter Kotarski is celebrating his seventh birthday today, Oct. 9. Hunter is the son John Austin Angley is celof Nicole and Justin Kotarski ebrating his fourth birthday of Allentown. He is the grandtoday, Oct. 9. John is the son son of Renee and Donald of Seaton and Kerrie Angley Verry of Plymouth, Lee Ann of Conyngham. He is the Houlb of Luzerne and James grandson of Joseph and Linda Kotarski of Swoyersville. Stephanik of Hanover TownHe is the great-grandson of ship and James Angley, Forty Bernie Gimble of Plymouth, Fort and Rebecca Davenport, Leona Savage of Pringle Wilkes-Barre. and Antoinette Kotarski of Edwardsville. Hunter has a brother, Gavin, 3.
The Nanticoke and Newport fire departments visited K.M. Smith School in the Greater Nanticoke Area School District. The students were shown a video on fire prevention. A Nanticoke fireman discussed two ways out of a room, an exit plan, smoke alarms, crawling through smoke, 911, and stop, drop and roll. Ember, the fire dog, also visited the children and demonstrated stop, drop and roll. Teachers and firemen dressed up in the firemen’s protective suits to show the children what a fireman looks and sounds like up close. Students also got to visit the “Smokehouse.” Here,
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
18 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Community Community digest Wyoming Valley
Eddie Day Pashinski and Tarah Toohil. Sponsorship opportunities are available. Call Joe Boylan at 570-408-1732.
Wilkes-Barre NAACP chapter to host annual Freedom Fund Banquet
The Wilkes-Barre NAACP will host the annual Freedom Fund Banquet, “Pursuing Liberty in the Face of Injustice,” Nov. 6 at Gus Genetti’s Best WestSalvation Army is once again Junior achievement chair ern Hotel and Conference Center, Wilconducting its application affair: Junior Achievement kes-Barre. process to assist those in the will hold its second annual Keynote speaker is state Sen. John T. community who are in need of Chair Affair on Nov. 5. There assistance during Christmas. will be 15 food and beverage Applications are by appointvendors and live and silent ment only and are being auctions. Holiday raffle tickets scheduled through today, are being sold. Visit janepa. Oct. 9. Guidelines regarding org or contact Lisman at 570requirements are available 826-1090. at The Salvation Army, 17 S. Pennsylvania Ave., WilkesBarre, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. through today or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ SalvationArmyWB. For information, call 570-824-8741. MARTIAN,THE (XD-3D) (PG-13)
Salvation army accepting applicationS for holiday aSSiStance: The
Barre NAACP, P.O. Box 2460, WilkesBarre, PA 18703. Those interested in attending are asked to call 570-262-1360 for information. Email confirmation of attendance to 2306wbnaacpbranch@gmail.com.
1:20PM 4:40PM 8:00PM 11:10PM
chamber legiSlative breakfaSt: The Greater
Wilkes-Barre Chamber of Commerce will hold its legislative breakfast from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 15, at Genetti’s, downtown Wilkes-Barre. Register by calling 570-408-1722 or online at Legis.wilkes-barre.org. Cost is $30 per person. The breakfast will feature are legislators rotating through four stations to create an interactive setting between legislators and attendees. Invited legislators include state Sens. Lisa Baker, John Blake, John Gordner and John Yudichak and state Reps. Karen Boback, Mike Carroll, Aaron Kaufer, Gerald Mullery,
Save
Yudichak. Reception is at 6 p.m., buffet dinner is at 7. Cost is $45 for members; $50 for non members. RSVP by Oct. 16. Tables can be reserved for eight or 10 and must be paid for by Oct. 16. Send check or money order to Wilkes-
90 MINUTES IN HEAVEN (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 2:20PM 5:15PM 90 HOMES (DIGITAL) (R) 12:55PM 3:25PM 6:15PM 9:10PM BIG STONE GAP (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 12:15PM 3:00PM 5:45PM 8:15PM 10:45PM BLACK MASS (DIGITAL) (R)1:15PM 4:20PM 7:20PM 10:20PM EVEREST (3D) (PG-13) 3:30PM 9:30PM EVEREST (DIGITAL) (PG13) 12:20PM 6:30PM GREEN INFERNO, THE (DIGITAL) (R) 8:10PM 10:40PM HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 (3D) (PG) 1:40PM 4:00PM 6:20PM 8:40PM 11:05PM HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 (DIGITAL) (PG) 12:30PM 2:50PM 5:10PM 7:30PM 10:10PM INTERN, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 2:00PM 4:55PM 7:50PM 10:45PM MARTIAN, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 12:00PM 6:40PM 10:00PM
MAZE RUNNER: THE SCORCH TRIALS (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 12:05PM 3:15PM 6:25PM 9:40PM PAN (3D) (PG) 2:45PM 5:35PM 8:25PM 11:15PM PAN (DIGITAL) (PG) 11:55AM 1:10PM 4:10PM 7:00PM 9:50PM PERFECT GUY, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 12:40PM 3:10PM 5:55PM 8:35PM 11:05PM ( ) (R) ( SICARIO (DIGITAL) 12:35PM 3:45PM 6:550PM 9:55PM SINGH IS BLING ((EROS INTERNATIONAL (DIGITAL) ((NR)) 1:00PM 4:155PM 7:355PM 10:50PM VISIT, THE (2015) (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 12:45PM 3:40PM 6:05PM 8:30PM 11:00PM WALK THE (3D) (R) 4:45PM 10:35PM WALK THE (DIGITAL) (R) 1:50PM 7:40PM WAR ROOM (DIGITAL) (PG) 1:05PM 3:55PM 7:10PM
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18:02 | BILBOWLEON
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18:03 | BAIRDATHLE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 19
Please hurry! This offer contains timely information.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
But even more important, in Your Net Worth we share what we consider to be the five biggest wealth killers. You’ll learn what they are and how to avoid them and their consequences. Surprisingly, some of these threats to your wealth are exactly what some financial “experts” recommend! Finding this out could save you thousands of dollars and prevent you from making some financial decisions that could threaten your retirement lifestyle. After all, the press and the financial-services industry are rife with misconceptions that could lead you astray of achieving your goals—especially if you have significant assets.
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
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20 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
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FRANK & ERNEST
cRoSSwoRd
duSTiN
Pooch cAFE
BucKLES
BABY BLuES
PEARLS BEFoRE SwiNE
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 21
Little Billy draws up another one so Daddy can keep watching the baseball playoffs.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
ThE FAmiLY ciRcuS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
22 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
PIckleS
garfIelD
PeanuTS
Wumo
ScramletS
BIg naTe
Pajama DIarIeS
Please find answers to the previous Scramlets and Sudoku puzzles on the next page
Sudoku Puzzle The objective of the game is to fill each row, column and 3x3 box with the numbers from 1 to 9 inclusive. There is no mathematics involved. In a typical grid, approximately 30 of the numbers are given to you. From thereon, you can deduce all the other digits using logic alone.
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ZITS
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Word Warp
yesterday’s solution
CryptoQuip The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. Solution is by trial and error. Yesterday’s Cryptoquip: At the post-wedding party, a swindler was trying to cheat people. It was reception deception.
Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: H equals D
daily Bridge John Terry, captain of the Chelsea soccer team in London and former captain of England, said, “You don’t have to be captain to have an opinion.” That reminds me of Mao Tse-tung’s “Little Red Book,” which contains the recommendation that army leaders listen to the opinions of the enlisted men. Sometimes in the auction at a bridge table, one player knows where to go and immediately names the final contract. But in particular in competitive sequences, it pays to anticipate further enemy action. Look at today’s South hand. He opens one spade, and his partner raises to two spades. What should South rebid after East (a) passes or (b) overcalls three clubs? If East stays out of the auction, South ought to make a three-heart game-try, expecting partner to
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last
Celebrities born on this day Brandon Routh, 36; Scott Bakula, 61; Tony Shalhoub, 62; Sharon Osbourne, 63.
Send community news to community@citizensvoice.com. Fax to 570-821-
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2247. Mail to The Citizens’ Voice, 75 N. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701, Attn. community news.
Birthday baby You are practical, hardworking and precise. You are intuitive and supportive. ContaCt EugEnia at Eugenia’s websites: eugenialast.com for confidential consultations, eugenialast.com/blog/ for Eugenia’s blog and join Eugenia on twitter/facebook/ linkedin.
Dated announcements should be submitted at least one week prior to desired publication date.
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Today’s HoT sHoT Erika Raven of
Kingston Township photographed this deer in her yard nibbling on end-of-the-year summer flowers. Email your own Hot SHot pHotoS to hotshot@citizensvoice. com. Submitted photos should be at least 200 dpi and 4-x-6 inches. Please give a description or story behind each submitted photo and include your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be submitted by Email. No hard copies will be accepted.
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 23
How to submit community news
on the line and stand behind your word. Financial, legal and health issues can all be dealt with if you are direct and honest. Use other people’s indecisiveness to your a dva n t a g e. L ove a n d romance are favored. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A move or a change to your personal relationship or joint venture is apparent. Opportunities for financial gains look positive. Don’t exhaust yourself trying to please someone who is too demanding for what you get in return. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A new experience or acquaintance will perk you up. An opportunity to form a close bond with someone you find interesting must not be ignored even if it entails stepping out of your comfort zone. Love is highlighted.
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Happy birthday You will get the most back if you help the underprivileged by lending your talents to a humanitarian organization. Trying to make something work that has already run its course could be your downfall. Good fortune will come from doing what’s best for you. Stop procrastinating and start moving forward. Be the master of your destiny. Your numbers are 7, 15, 18, 27, 31, 36, 44. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Using practical applications, you will prove to those you work with just how valuable you are. Hard work will bring greater opportunities and confidence. Don’t be reluctant to initiate change. Put your interests first. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t wait for someone else to take over. Set up meetings and travel to a destination that encourages you to update your qualifications.
Reach out to people who can influence your future. Love is on the rise and reunions are encouraged. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Do your best and don’t worry about what everyone else is up to. Personal problems will be costly if you let them interfere with your job or your responsibilities. Search for workable solutions. Take care of your health. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Talk to friends or relatives and you will come up with some interesting ideas that will help you improve your surroundings or current living situation. Being adaptable will help you make changes that you’d like to see unfold. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You’ll have to deal with the past before you can move ahead. Tie up loose ends and take care of money, legal or health issues. A change at home or to your status, reputation or position will turn out more favorably than anticipated. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Stay on top of your responsibilities. Don’t give in to someone putting demands
on your time or inconveniencing you in any way. Offer suggestions, but go about your business to ensure that you outperform any competition you encounter. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Keep busy helping others or reaching out to people who can help you with your concerns or interests. Bring about the changes that will lead to greater prosperity. Not everyone will like your decisions, but you can’t please everyone. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You can achieve your goals if you set your mind on overdrive. What you do to promote and present your s k i l l s, k n ow l e d g e a n d uniqueness will bring high rewards. An interesting lifestyle change will push you in the right direction. Love conquers all. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t take on too much or overindulge. Use your intelligence and gauge what’s possible and what’s not. Someone will try to make you look bad if you exaggerate or show off. Focus on home improvements to avoid outside influences. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Put everything
bid game with his values in the majors. But South might shoot out four spades. When East enters the auction, though, it is time to call on partner’s opinion. Now South must show his heart suit, so that North can judge what to do if the opponents bid higher. Here, over three hearts by South, West will presumably raise to four clubs. Then North will continue with four spades, and probably East will bid five clubs as an each-way bet — maybe it will make, or it might be a cheap sacrifice. After South passes, North should go on to five spades because of his side’s double fit. East will double, and South will go down two, minus 300. This is cheaper than five clubs bid and made for plus 400.
A real enemy submarine helped rally the war bond effort here during WWII elizabeth skrapits Back Mountain Bits eskrapits@citizensvoice.com
be purchased at booths in the lobbies of the Himmler and the Shaver Theatre in Shavertown. And now I’m going to diverge a little in terms of geography, to bring up the subject of one of the region’s biggest war bond drives ever. Enemy sub sighted Even though the Wyoming Valley is many miles inland, an enemy submarine was sighted there in the midst of World War II. Joseph Yedlock sent me a note asking me to write about a Japanese two-man sub used for war bond drives that he remembers going to see when he was about 13 years old. “I tell about it and I get a blank stare. I don’t remember the year, maybe 1943 or 1944,” he writes. “It was displayed on a large flatbed trailer with access for people to look in. It was near the Square in Wilkes-Barre.” Well, Joe, you’re right. The submarine was on display in the Morgus parking lot at 23 N. Main St. in Wilkes-Barre from noon to 10 p.m. Tuesday, April 20, 1943, according to an ad in the Sunday Independent for April 18, 1943. The submarine was brought to the area by the women’s division of the Luzerne County War Savings Staff as part of a war bond drive.
This ad from the Sept. 5, 1943 — the day before Labor Day — edition of the Sunday Independent was a typical reminder to buy war bonds. “Children will be admitted to view the interior of the submarine by buying a 25-cent War Savings Stamp at the submarine that day. Adults will be admitted by purchasing a minimum of $1 worth of War Savings Stamps at the submarine on that day. “This does not apply to those who secured tickets by purchasing War Bonds at the women’s booths throughout the valley the past several days.” The reason for bringing the sub to town on April 20 was significant: “Wyoming Valley will observe Hitler’s birthday anniversary on Tuesday with a parade and exhibition to start the greatest drive for war bonds and stamps this valley has witnessed in history. The obser-
would touch off the demolition charge, destroying the crew, sub and target.” However, the captain of this particular sub survived, and the article noted he was a U.S. prisoner of war. “The morning after the Pearl Harbor attack, the sub was sighted near the Isle of Oahu and the shore patrol went out to make the capture. They found it abandoned but the Japanese officer was captured on the island Dec. 8 (1941). He spoke good English, although claiming he was never in the United States, Hawaii or the Philippines. He often asked for a gun to shoot himself, because he had failed in his mission.” Remember, at that time Hawaii was not yet a state, and the Philippines were still a U.S. territory. From doing research, I discovered the captain of the sub was Kazuo Sakamaki, the only one of 10 sailors — including the other crewman in his submarine, who drowned — to survive the Pearl Harbor attack, and the first Japanese prisoner of war captured by American forces. At the end of the war, Sakamaki was returned by the U.S. to Japan, where he wrote his memoirs. He had become a pacifist and put the war behind him, avoiding the spotlight as he settled into a career with the Toyota Motor Corp. In 1991, Sakamaki broke his silence about the war during a historical conference in Texas, where he was reunited with his submarine for the first time. The New York Times reports Sakamaki died Nov. 29, 1999 at the age of 81, survived by a wife and two children. ElizabEth SkrapitS writes about the Back Mountain. Contact her at eskrapits@citizensvoice.com.
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
On the home front during World War II, people planted victory gardens, collected materials such as aluminum foil and tin cans for the war effort, made do with rationed food, gasoline and tires — and bought war bonds by the thousands. War bonds, issued by the U.S. government to help finance the war, also served the purpose of removing money from circulation in order to control inflation. Back Mountain residents did their part, participating in bond drives and buying them by the dozens. The Sunday Independent noted in the Back Mountain column for June 25, 1944 that “School faculty members are doing a good job of selling War Stamps and Bonds at both the Trucksville and Shavertown schools. The teachers are also selling War Bonds at the Trucksville Firemen’s Hall and the Ike Brace gasoline filling station in Shavertown.” Local businesses reminded patrons via ads to buy bonds. “Save enough to buy a lot of war bonds ... Use our cash and carry drive-in service,” O’Malia’s Laundry Service on the Harveys Lake Highway would announce in its ads. Service clubs were also big promoters of bonds, often teaming up with businesses. In 1944, Dallas’ Himmler Theatre — an unfortunate name in those days — hosted war bond nights, where people who bought bonds from the Dallas Junior Women’s Club, the Dallas Senior Women’s Club or the Nesbitt Memorial Hospital Auxiliary would get in free. Bonds could also
vance will not meet with the Fuehrer’s wishes, no doubt,” the Independent reported in an article in the same edition. “The two-man Japanese suicide submarine, captured at Pearl Harbor on the second day of the sneak attack and on exhibition in connection with the Second War Bond Drive, will be in Wyoming Valley Tuesday afternoon and evening. “It will leave Harrisburg Tuesday morning at 8 o’clock and come directly to the 109th Armory, Market Street, in time for the mammoth parade starting at noon.” Unfortunately, I couldn’t find a picture of the submarine when it was in town. The article describes it as being 81 feet long, six feet in diameter and weighing 17 1/2 tons. “Normal weight of this type submarine is 32 to 35 tons. The difference in weight is that the Navy Department removed torpedoes, the demolition charge, heavy storage batteries and the motor, substituting in their stead, in exact replica, a lighter material. “It carries two torpedoes 18 feet long, 18 inches in diameter, each weighing 1,750 pounds, and a 300-pound nitroglycerin charge to blow itself up. It had 104 storage batteries in four banks, to furnish power for navigation. An electric motor turned a dual-drive shaft spinning two propellers in opposite directions to give the sub additional speed and power, prevent torque, and keep it on an even keel. “The cruising range was 150 miles, surface speed 14 knots, submerged six to eight knots. It had no way to recharge batteries. When energy was expended it had to surface.” And it was deadly: “After firing the torpedoes the sub would seek a target, dive under it or come alongside and the officer
The Kiwanis Club of Swoyersville will hold its annual “Trunk or Treat” event from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25, in St. Elizabeth Ann Seton church and school grounds, Hughes Street. Businesses, organizations and residents are invited to wear costumes and decorate their vehicle’s trunk. From left, are Kiwanis members Jane Wallace, President Cheryl Baranosky and Barbara Hartnett. For information or to register a vehicle, call Sandy 570-288-5848 or 570-606-1153.
SwoyerSville
The Men in Mission (MIM) organization of St. John’s Lutheran Church, 231 State St., Nanticoke, announced the winner of their 2015 ATV raffle was Ashley Terray of Freeland. Terray chose the cash prize of $5,000. From left, are Wayne Getz (MIM), John Polifka (MIM), Ed North (MIM), Joe Stettler (MIM), and winner, Ashley Terray.
NaNticoke
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Funeral notices APPNEL, Marie Bukowski — Friday, 9:30 a.m., Kiesinger Funeral Services Inc., Duryea. Mass, 10 a.m., Queen of the Apostles Parish, Avoca. BRIGIDO, Ralph W. — WilkesBarre. Monday, 9 a.m., Nat & Gawlas Funeral Home, 89 Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre. Mass of Christian Burial, 9:30 a.m., St. Andre Bessette Parish, 666 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre. Old Forge Cemetery. Friends, Sunday, 3 to 6 p.m., at the funeral home. BROJAKOWSKI, Victoria A. — Plymouth Township. Friday, 9 a.m., S.J. Grontkowski Funeral Home, 530 W. Main St., Plymouth. Mass of Christian Burial, 9:30 a.m., All Saints Parish, 66 Willow St., Plymouth. St. Mary’s Nativity Cemetery, Plymouth Township. CONOLOGUE, Edward A. — Swoyersville. Mass of Christian Burial, Saturday, 9:30 a.m., St. Therese’s Church, Pioneer Avenue and Davis Street, Shavertown. Friends, Friday, 4 to 6 p.m., at Harold C. Snowdon Funeral Home Inc., 140 N. Main St., Shavertown. GALAZIN, Sister Sandra Anne — Maryknoll, N.Y. Vespers service, Oct. 30, 4:15 p.m., Chapel of the Annunciation, Maryknoll Sisters Center, Maryknoll, N.Y. Memorial Mass, Oct. 31, 11 a.m., at the center. MARKOCH, David — Swoyersville. Memorial service, Saturday, 10 a.m., St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church, Hughes Street, Swoyersville. St. John’s Cemetery, Courtdale. Friends, Saturday, 9 to 10 a.m., at the church. NACHLIS, Nathaniel B. — Pittsford. Celebration of life, Friday, 1 to 3 p.m., at 141 Park Ave., Apartment 1, Wilkes-Barre.
NIEZGODA, Paul Edward — Shavertown. Celebration of life, Oct. 17, 11 a.m., Athletics and Recreation Gym, Penn State Wilkes-Barre Campus, Lehman Township. A luncheon will follow. PEALER, Muriel C. — West Wyoming. Mass of Christian Burial, Friday, 9 a.m., St. Monica’s Parish, 363 W. Eighth St., West Wyoming. Mount Olivet Cemetery, Carveton. Friends, Friday, 8:30 to 9 a.m., at the church. RENDINO, Stephen A. — Mountain Top. Friday, 9 a.m., McCune Funeral Home, Mountain Top. Mass of Christian Burial, 9:30 a.m., St. Jude’s Church, Mountain Top. SHILKOSKI, Alda Josephine Marini — Wilkes-Barre. Friends, Saturday, 1 to 3 p.m., at E. Blake Collins Funeral Home, 159 George Ave., Wilkes-Barre. STADTS, Edna T. — Plymouth. Memorial Mass, Oct. 23, 12:05 p.m., All Saints Parish, 66 Willow St., Plymouth. THOMAS, Betty Singer — Avoca. Blessing service, Saturday, 11 a.m., Kiesinger Funeral Services Inc., 255 McAlpine St., Duryea. St. Mary’s Cemetery, Avoca. Friends, Saturday, 10 to 11 a.m., at the funeral home. TRUSAVAGE, Deborah J. — Memorial service, Friday, 10:30 a.m., Denison Chapel. WASILEWSKI, Emily M. — Ashley. Saturday, 9:30 a.m., George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home, 105 N. Main St., Ashley. Mass of Christian Burial, 10 a.m., Holy Family Church, Sugar Notch. St. Mary’s Cemetery, Hanover Township. Friends, Saturday, 8:30 to 9:30 a.m., at the funeral home.
Thomas McFadden Jr. October 6, 2015 Thomas McFadden Jr., 56, of Pittston lost his battle with cancer, passing away Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2015, at home. He was born March 29, 1959, son of Joan McFadden and the late Thomas “Mickey” McFadden, and was the beloved husband of Patricia Merriman. Tom was a gentle, kind and loving man. He easily made friends and could talk to anyone, even strangers. Never afraid to speak up for what was right, Tom was easily able to relate to others and build friendships. He loved the outdoors and enjoyed camping. He was a 1977 graduate of Pittston Area High School. He was a good cook, known for making outstanding chili, and an
avid Phillies and Dallas Cowboys fan. He worked at Schott Glass for a number of years and enjoyed his work thoroughly. A loving husband, son, brother, uncle and friend, he loved children and while he
Irene Felch, 87, formerly of Nanticoke, passed away peacefully early Thursday morning, Oct. 8, 2015, at Birchwood Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Nanticoke. Born April 25, 1928, in Nanticoke, Irene was the daughter of the late Paul and Sophie Dolny Lawrence. Irene attended Nanticoke schools, and was a member of
the former St. Stanislaus Church, now St. Faustina Parish, Nanticoke. Prior to her retirement, Irene was employed as a seamstress in the local garment industry. In addition to her parents, Irene was preceded in death by her beloved husband, Michael, in 2000. Presently surviving are her
Bishme Basheem Allah Tyre October 6, 2015
Happy Birthday in Heaven
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St. Faustina Parish, Nanticoke. Inter ment will be in Hanover Green Cemetery, Hanover Township. Friends are invited to join the family for calling hours from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to a charity of the donor’s choice.
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Bishme Basheem Allah Tyre, infant son of Victor and Ebony Jackson Tyre of Wilkes-Barre, passed away shortly after birth on Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2015, in Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Plains Township. Interment will be held at 10 a.m. Oct. 15 in Maple Hill Cemetery, Hanover Township.
JAMES MISSON SR.
sons, Paul Felch, Nanticoke; and Eugene Felch and wife, Bonnie, Nanticoke; sister, Lois Nardello, Florida; and grandchildren, Michael and Chantel Felch. Funeral services will be held at 9:30 a.m. Satuday from Grontkowski Funeral Home P.C., 51-53 W. Green St., Nanticoke, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Robert is survived by his sisters, Bernadine Klem, Marcia Fostock and Kathy Costello, and several nieces and nephews. A private funeral service will be held at the convenience of the family. There will be no calling hours. Funeral arrangements are by Bednarski Funeral Home, 168 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming.
band, Dave; niece, Alyssa; sister-in-law, Chris Darko; nephews, John and Tony; brother-in-law, Mike Merriman and his wife, Laurie, and nephew, Michael; and numerous cousins. Funeral services will be held at 5 p.m. Sunday at Howell-Lussi Funeral Home, 509 Wyoming Ave., West Pittston. Friends may call from 2 p.m. until service time at 5 p.m. Sunday. Jonathan McNair, minister, will officiate. Interment will be Monday in St. Michael’s Cemetery, Union Street, Pittston, at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Living Church of God, P.O. Box 3810, Charlotte, NC 28227-8010, or to the SPCA of your choice.
Irene Felch October 8, 2015
Robert Krakosky October 6, 2015 Robert Krakosky, 64, of Swoyersville passed away Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2015. Born Nov. 17, 1950, in Swoyersville, he was the son of the late Frank Sr. and Cecilia Centka Krakosky. He was preceded in death by his brothers, Frank Krakosky and Bernard Krakosky, and his sister, Carole Jean Cassata.
never had any children he was a good father to his stepson, Ryan. Tom was very creative, he enjoyed fixing anything and was very good at making them work. Tom was a member of the Living Church of God. He was preceded in death by his father, Thomas “Mickey” McFadden; brothers-inlaw, James A. Connors and John Darko; as well as his grandparents, aunts and uncles. He will be enormously missed by all his family and friends. He is survived by his mother, Joan McFadden, Pittston; wife, Patricia Merriman; stepson, Ryan Ksiezopolski; sisters, Donna Connors and her companion, Kenny Bangs, and Denise Skrzysowski and her hus-
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
26 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
William (Bill/Punkin) Jackson Jr. October 21, 1961–October 7, 2015 In Loving Memory
Erin (Toby) Marie Boote October 6, 2015 Erin (Toby) Marie Boote passed away peacefully at her home Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2015. She was 53 years old. She was the last of seven children bor n to Jeanne and Frank H a n non. Erin lived in South Wilkes-Barre her whole life and proudly graduated from E.L. Meyers High School in 1980. She married Fred Boote in 1984 and was an inspiring mother to her four children, Daniel, 31; Bryan-Patrick, 30; Brittany, 27; and HayleyJeanne, 17. Erin was the sole proprietor of Angel Tours, a tour group specializing in trips to New York and Atlantic City, from 1996 to 2001. She
also worked for the WilkesBarre Area School District for eight years until her retirement in 2014. Her life was dedicated to those around her and she enjoyed volunteering for her children’s PTA and sports organizations, Arts S e e n G a l l e r y, a n d h e r daughter’s charity, Shots for Tots. She was an active parish member of St. Robert Bellarmine Parrish, Barney Street, South Wilkes-Barre. She was preceded in death by her older brother, Timothy, and her parents, Jeanne and Frank Hannon. She is survived by her children, Daniel Boote, Wilkes-Barre; Brittany Boote, Wi l ke s - B a r r e ; H ay l e y Jeanne Boote, Wilkes-Barre; and Bryan and his wife, Erica Boote, Kingston; her three grandchildren, Aiden,
Ari and Britain; and her siblings, Francis Hannon, Sheila Kang, Maureen Macri, Colleen Moses and Cynthia (Cindy) Hannon. She also left 14 nieces and nephews. The Boote family gives special notice and recognition to Thomas Ferrell of Clarks Summit as a devoted c o m p a n i o n wh o m s h e admired and loved dearly. The funeral will be held at 9:30 a.m. Saturday from Mamary-Durkin Funeral Service, 59 Parrish St., Wilkes-Barre. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated in St. Aloysius Church at 10 a.m. Calling hours will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday. Memorial contributions may be made to Shots for Tots. All donations may be mailed to 620 Centre St., Freeland, PA 18224.
William (Bill/Punkin) Jackson Jr., 53, passed away peacefully at Celtic Hospice, Geisinger South WilkesBarre, surrounded by his family and friends. Born Oct. 21, 1961, in Nanticoke, he enjoyed watching the Buffalo Bills, NASCAR, playing horseshoes and listening to music. Most of all he loved to spend time with his grandkids, family and friends. Bill was a roofer and mason by trade. Anyone who had the pleasure of knowing him would tell you that he welcomed them with open arms and made them feel like family. He had a great sense of humor and will be remembered for his quickwitted one liners. Bill was preceded in death by his mother, Josephine; father, William; brother, Danny; nephew, Dale; and grandson, Noah.
He is survived by his loving wife, Barbara O’BoyleJackson; children, Tara Jackson, Tanya Jackson, Wi l l i a m J a c k s o n a n d Tamara Jackson; stepchildren, Dean Lutinski, Josh Lutinski, Justin Lutinski and Fred Toole; brothers, Patrick Jackson, Jimmy Jackson, James Jackson,
Bob Jackson and Ike Benscoter; sisters, Carrie Martins, Rosemary Goss, Judith Burke, Billy Jo Relyea and Trisha Wilder; grandchildren, Mikenzie, Madison, Maddox, Makayla, Marlee, Hunter, Joshua, Jameson, Irelyn, Kaelyn, Tristan and Thomas; and numerous aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, brothers- and sisters-inlaw and extended family. The family will meet with friends from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at Yeosock Funeral Home, 40 S. Main St., Plains Township. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to the American Lung Association. Your presence we miss, Your memories we treasure, Loving you always, Forgetting you NEVER! In the words of Bill (Punkin) Jackson, “It’s all good!”
Bertha Malesky October 8, 2015
Phyllis I. Golembeski October 7, 2015 Phyllis I. Golembeski, 92, of 2366 Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg, died at 6:17 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2015, at Balanced Care at Bloomsburg. Born in Yorkville, Ohio, on Dec. 20, 1922, she was a daughter of the late Teofil and Stella (Stodolna) Marczewski. Phyllis was a 1940 graduate of Avoca High School, Avoca, and also graduated from Lackawnna Junior College, Scranton. She owned and operated a beauty shop in Harding for many years prior to moving to Bloomsburg. She was a member of St. Columba Catholic Church, Bloomsburg, and also of St. Francis X. Cabrini Catholic Church, Carverton, Luzerne County.
Phyllis was proud of her service to her country during World War II as a member of the U.S. Navy. She was preceded in death by her husband, Stanley H. Golembeski, in August 1985; by three brothers, John, Stanley and Frank Marczewski; and by two sisters, Veronica Winslow and Frances Chmelewski. Phyllis is survived by a son, Michael J. Golembeski and his wife, Vanessa, Clarks Green; two daughters, Annie, wife of Peter Kenny, Deland, Fla.; and Sally, wife of Charles Purosky, with whom she last resided in Espy; seven grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and a sister, Mary, wife of Joseph Pramick, Dupont. A Mass of Christian Buri-
al will be celebrated at 1 p.m. Oct. 16 in St. Francis X. Cabrini Catholic Church, 585 Mount Olivet Road, Carverton, by the Rev. James J. Paisley. Interment will be made in Mount Olivet Catholic Cemetery, Carverton. The family will greet friends at the church from noon to 1 p.m. Memorial contributions in Phyllis’ name may be made to the Activity Fund of Balanced Care at Bloomsburg, 3298 Ridge Road, Bloomsburg, PA 17815. Arrangements have been entrusted to the care of Dean W. Kriner Inc. Funeral Home & Cremation Service, 325 Market St., Bloomsburg. Condolence messages and photographs may be posted at www.krinerfuneralhomes. com.
Bertha Malesky, 92, of Plymouth passed into the hands of the Lord on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2015, at her home. Born Jan. 25, 1923, in Wilmington, N.C., she was the daughter of the late Henry and Katie Smith. Bertha was a graduate of Hanover High School, Wilmington, N.C. She was a member of St. Robert Bellarmine Parish, WilkesBarre, formerly St. Casimir’s Church, Lyndwood, Hanover Township, where she was a member of the Christian Mothers for many years. While at St. Casimir’s church, she was very active with many church functions, including the annual parish bazaars. In past years, she had been
employed by the Leader East Nursing Home, Kingston. She had been involved in local political elections, serving at the Plymouth election polls. Bertha was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Ladies Auxiliary, Shawnee Post 1425. Throughout her life, she loved the garden, especially admiring her flowers and birds. She loved spending time with her family, especially baking and making potato pancakes. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Anthony; grandson, Thomas Belcher Jr.; brothers, John and Sam; and sisters, Flora, Coralee and Thelma. Surviving are her loving children, Catherine (Cathy) Belcher and her husband, Thomas, New Freedom;
Anthony Malesky Jr., Plymouth; George Malesky, Lyndwood, Hanover Township; Dorothy Sperock, Palmyra, N.J.; and Joanie Malesky, Plymouth; four grandchildren, Kim, Brian Sr., George and Alyson; two great-grandsons, David and Brian Jr.; and many nieces and nephews. Bertha will be sadly missed by her three cats, Chucky, U.B. and Baby. The funeral will be held at 9 a.m. Monday from S.J. Grontkowski Funeral Home, 530 W. Main St., Plymouth, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in St. Robert Bellarmine Parish, Wilkes-Barre. Interment will be in St. Casimir’s Cemetery, Muhlenburg. Family and friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday. To submit condolences, please visit www.sjgrontkowskifuneralhome.com.
Rose M. Pelleschi October 7, 2015
Regina E. Angle October 7, 2015
Rose M. Pelleschi, 89, of West Pittston passed away Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2015, in Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Plains Township. Funeral arrangements are pending from Gubbiotti Funeral Home, 1030 Wyoming Ave., Exeter. Formoreinformation,please visit www.gubbiottifh.com.
Stanley E. Makuch Sr. October 7, 2015
Regina E. Angle, 88, of West Union Street, Nanticoke, passed away early Wednesday morning, Oct. 7, 2015, in Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. Arrangement details and a complete obituary will be announced by Davis-Dinelli Funeral Home, 170 E. Broad St., Nanticoke, in Sunday’s edition of The Citizens’ Voice.
Gloria C. Thomas October 6, 2015
Dolores L. Mrozinski October 6, 2015
Donna M. Siley October 8, 2015
Stanley E. Makuch Sr., 90, of Wilkes-Barre passed away Wednesday evening, Oct. 7, 2015, at Riverstreet Manor Nursing Home, Wilkes-Barre. Funeral arrangements are pending from Corcoran Funeral Home Inc., 20 S. Main St., Plains Township.
Gloria C. Thomas, 87, of Langhor ne, for merly of Warrior Run, passed away Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2015, in Langhorne. Funeral arrangements are pending from George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home, 105 N. Main St., Ashley.
Dolores L. Mrozinski, 85, of Woodstock, Ga., and formerly of Plains Township, passed away Tuesday evening, Oct. 6, 2015, at Woodstock Estates, Woodstock, Ga. Funeral arrangements are pending from Corcoran Funeral Home Inc., 20 S. Main St., Plains Township.
Donna M. Siley of Dan Flood Towers, Kingston, died Thursday, Oct. 8, 2015, in Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. Family and friends are invited to memorial services from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at Jendrzejewski Funeral Home, 21 N. Meade St., Wilkes-Barre.
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VW executive apologizes but says scandal not his fault By Michael Biesecker and Matthew Daly Associated Press WASHINGTON — Volkswagen’s top U.S. executive offered deep apologies yet sought to distance himself Thursday from the emissions scandal enveloping the world’s largest automaker, asserting top corporate officials had no knowledge of the cheating software installed in 11 million diesel cars. Though he said he hadn’t been briefed on the preliminary findings of the ongoing internal investigation, Volkswagen of America CEO Michael Horn told a congressional subcommittee that a tiny group of software developers in Ger many was responsible for the computer code that enabled the cars to trick U.S. government emissions tests. Three lower-level managers have been suspended. “To my understanding this was not a corporate decision, this was something individuals did,” Horn said, adding that he felt personally deceived. That explanation left members of the House panel investigating the scheme incredulous. “I agree it’s very hard to believe,” Horn conceded. Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y., was among the lawmakers who said he couldn’t accept
Cliff Owen / AssOCiAted Press
Members of the media surround Volkswagen of America CEO Michael Horn, right, as he waits at the witness table prior to testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington Thursday before the House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee hearing on Volkswagen’s emissions-rigging scandal. VW’s characterization that “this was the work of a couple of rogue engineers.” Collins, an engineer, suggested that such a far-reaching cheating strategy couldn’t be pulled off without the complicity of high-ranking supervisors across several parts of the company. “What I’ve picked up here and I hope you can relay back to your board, the folks running Volkswagen back in Germany, is that the response so far is inadequate,” Collins said. “It’s a sign of arrogance.
It’s a sign of not admitting yet the severity of your problem.” For more than two hours, Horn sat calmly, occasionally sipping from a cup of water as news photographers’ camera shutters clicked away. As the elected officials expressed anger, disappointment and skepticism at the company where he has worked for nearly half his life, the 51-year-old German executive apologized but provided little new information. More than a month after
the company first confessed the emissions-rigging to U.S. regulators, Horn said it doesn’t yet have a detailed plan for fixing the nearly 500,000 “clean diesel” cars sold in the U.S. with the suspect software since the 2009 model year. Such a solution will likely take up to two years, he said, adding that each car might require between 5 and 10 hours’ work by a mechanic to meet clean air standards. The cars are safe to drive, the government says, but
Horn suggested Volkswagen could compensate some owners, possibly by paying them for the lost value of their vehicles. So far, the company has set aside more than $7 billion to address the scandal, which Horn said may not be enough. Shortly before Horn began his testimony, German police and prosecutors raided VW’s global headquarters in Wolfsburg and other locations seeking material that would help clarify who was responsible for the cheating. The searches were intended to “secure documents and data storage devices” that could identify those involved in the alleged manipulation and explain how it was carried out, prosecutors said. In the U.S., the Environmental Protection Agency and the Justice Department are conducting a criminal investigation. VW also potentially faces billions in fines for violating the Clean Air Act, as well as a raft of state investigations and classaction lawsuits filed on behalf of customers. Horn said VW plans to withdraw applications seeking U.S. emissions certifications for its 2016 model Jettas, Golfs, Passats and Beetles with diesel engines. That raised questions about whether a “defeat device” similar to that in earlier models is also in the new cars.
By withdrawing the applications for the 2016 models, VW is leaving thousands of diesel vehicles stranded at ports nationwide. It was not immediately clear what a newly revealed device found in the new VW models does, or when the company might resubmit the applications needed to sell the cars. Liz Purchia, an EPA spokeswoman, said VW recently gave the agency information on an “auxiliary emissions control device.” The EPA and California Air Resources Board are investigating “the nature and purpose” of the device, she said. The lack of certification is bad news for American VW dealers who had hoped to put the new models on sale soon. For some dealerships, the diesel models account for about one-third of sales. During the hearing, lawmakers from both parties fondly recalled their first VWs before hammering the iconic company for betraying the public’s trust. Rep. Fred Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said Volkswagen “has long enjoyed an almost cultish following dating back to the Beetle. But through the years something apparently became rotten in Wolfsburg and cheating and betrayal became part of the VW game plan.”
COOKOUT FOR Ashley & Elliot Keeley’s Alehouse & Grille: 199 Division St. Kingston
CONTACTS: Facebook @ Cookout for Ashley & Elliot or Denise @ 570-472-7047
DONATIONS FOR CHINESE AUCTION IS GREATLY APPRECIATED WB_VOICE - DLY - 27 - 10/09/15
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In August, Ashley Bartusek and her 2 year old son Elliot were critically injured in a horrific house fire which claimed the lives of their pets and destroyed all of their worldly possessions. Family and friends are hosting a cookout to raise much needed funds to assist Ashley & Elliot in their recovery from this devastating experience. Please join us for food, drinks, music, Chinese Auction, and great fun while supporting this worthy cause. COST: $20.00 Includes food, soda/water *There will be a Cash Bar
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Saturday Oct. 10, 2015 - 12 noon to 5:00 PM
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28 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
SportS
Rangers fire first salvo By Ian Harrison Associated Press TORONTO — A big day by the bottom of Texas’ batting order helped the Rangers overcome an injury to slugger Adrian Beltre in the start of their postseason run. Robinson Chirinos hit a two-run homer against David Price, Rougned Odor added a solo shot and the Rangers beat the Blue Jays 5-3 Thursday in their AL Division Series opener as postseason baseball returned to Toronto for the first time in 22 years. “It means a lot to the team to come to Toronto and win that first game against a great pitcher,” Chirinos said. Both starting third baseman left with injuries: Beltre came in the third with a strained muscle in his lower back and Toronto’s Josh Donaldson in the fifth after he was kneed in the head while sliding in an attempt to break up a double play. Rangers manager Jeff Banister said he wasn’t sure whether Beltre would be available for Game 2 today. In an effort to remain in the series, Beltre had a cortisone shot. “Obviously we want Adrian in there,” Banister said. “He’s the heart and soul of this ballclub.” After going for tests at a
hospital, Beltre returned to the clubhouse about an hour after the game and walked gingerly. An MRI confirmed Beltre had a strained back but no structural damage, general manager Jon Daniels said. “We haven’t ruled him out of tomorrow’s game,” Daniels said. Texas will have Joey Gallo and Ed Lucas travel from its Arizona Fall League team in case Beltre needs to be removed from the roster, a decision that also would rule Beltre out of the AL Championship Series. Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said Donaldson felt light-headed while playing defense in the top of the fifth, forcing the AL MVP candidate to come out of the game. “They check for concussions, and apparently he passed all the tests. So that’s good news,” Gibbons said. Yovani Gallardo (1-0) allowed two runs and four hits in five innings. “That’s what we really needed from him,” Banister said. “I think he did a great job.” Gallardo is 4-0 with a 1.78 ERA in four career starts against Toronto. “We got in some good hitter’s counts and he wouldn’t give in,” Blue Jays catcher Russell Martin said. “He
didn’t make those mistakes that we capitalize on.” Keone Kela, Jake Diekman and Sam Dyson finished, with Dyson getting a save. Pitching on 11 days’ rest, Price (0-1) allowed five runs and five hits in seven innings. He dropped to 1-6 with a 4.79 ERA in 11 postseason games, and is 0-6 in six playoff starts. “I expect to have better results,” a subdued Price said. Gibbons said Price was the victim of timely hits by the Rangers. “He wasn’t getting hit around. It was just a couple of key hits at some key times that made the difference,” Gibbons said. Blue Jays slugger Jose Bautista hit a solo homer in the sixth, then left with a sore right hamstring after popping out in the eighth and was replaced in right by Dalton Pompey. The Jays said Bautista is expected to play today. UP NEXT RHP Marcus Stroman, who returned from a torn left knee ligament to go 4-0 in four September starts, goes for the Blue Jays today. Texas starts LHP Cole Hamels, who is 7-1 with a 3.66 DArren CAlAbrese / AssoCiAteD Press ERA. Texas has won each of the past 10 games started by Rangers’ Delino DeShields scores past Blue Jays’ Russell Martin in the third inning of Game 1 of their AL Division Series on Thursday in Toronto. Hamels.
McHugh, stingy defense lead Astros to victory over Royals By Dave Skretta Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Houston Astros beat the Kansas City Royals at their own game Thursday night, relying on sharp pitching from Collin McHugh and stingy defense behind him for a 5-2 victory in the opener of their AL Division Series. McHugh (1-0) allowed four hits, including a pair of solo homers by Kendrys Morales, while pitching around a 49-minute rain delay. The right-hander lasted six innings before turning the game over to his bullpen, which scattered just three
runners over the final three frames. Tony Sipp, Will Harris and Oliver Perez got the game to Luke Gregerson, part of Oakland’s wild-card collapse in Kansas City last year. He handled the ninth to earn the save. George Springer and Colby Rasmus went deep for the homer-happy Astros, but they also scored via the same sort of small ball the Royals used in reaching the World Series last season. The Astros swung a deal for Scott Kazmir in July with October baseball in mind. The Royals did the same for Johnny Cueto.
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It’s only fitting the two talented pitchers, acquired by their teams three days apart, will oppose each other in Game 2 of their AL division series today. “It’s a big responsibility for someone like me that gets traded to a contending team, to be able to bring these guys to the postseason,” Kazmir said Thursday. “It’s just a matter of staying confident and pitching my game. There’s a lot of things you can’t control on the mound to where you have to stay confident in your abilities and know what you’re capable of doing.” The Astros traded right-hander
Daniel Mengden and catcher Jacob Nottingham to Oakland for Kazmir, a hometown kid whom they had pursued in free agency. In doing so, they got a veteran left-hander to slip into the top of the rotation with Dallas Keuchel and Collin McHugh. But the 31-year-old Kazmir wasn’t nearly as effective for the Astros as he was for the A’s, going 2-6 with a 4.17 ERA in 13 starts. That led some to wonder whether manager A.J. Hinch would be confident enough in Kazmir to send him to the mound for Game 2. “He’s had three games against the
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Royals this year. He’s done very well in all three of those games,” Hinch said, alluding Kazmir’s 1-1 record and 2.11 ERA against Kansas City. “It factors in a little bit in the decision-making,” Hinch said. “He’s comfortable in this ballpark. Maybe he likes the mound.” Once Cueto was acquired, most thought he would be the Royals’ playoff ace. But like Kazmir, he struggled for a long stretch after the trade, so Yordano Ventura got the Game 1 nod. That worked out anyway. Cueto will now pitch today on his normal rest.
ToNIGHT: WBS PENGUINS AT PRoVIDENCE BRUINS, 7:05 P.m. // oN THE AIR: 103.1 fm
PENGUINS SEASON PREVIEW PART 5 of 5: THE oPENER
Previewing the AtlAntic Division Thanks to the American Hockey League’s realignment and consolidation from six divisions to four, the WilkesBarre/Scranton Penguins switched from the East Division to the new-look Atlantic Division. Here’s a quick look at each of their divisional opponents. LEHIGH VALLEy PHANTomS (33-35-7-1 in 2014-15) Notes: Nick Cousins will be back for his third year. The young center led the Phantoms with 56 points (22 goals, 34 assists) in 64 games last year. He’ll have a new coach in former Islanders bench boss Scott Gordon, and former Penguins center Tim Brent joins a team that’s loaded with veteran talent. HERSHEy BEARS (46-22-5-2 in 2014-15) Notes: The Bears lost Casey Wellman and his 25 goals last season to the KHL. However, look for big things from rookie Jakub Vrana, who netted two goals in an exhibition game against the Penguins last week. The always-dangerous Chris Bourque returns to Hershey as well. BRIDGEPoRT SoUND TIGERS (28-40-7-1 in 2014-15) Notes: The addition of 28-year-old Ben Holmstrom wasn’t exactly headlinegrabbing, but the center plays the game hard and provides good leadership. He’s just one of several veterans brought in by an organization that’s gotten increasingly competitive over that past two years.
Penguins coach Mike sullivan, center, began his coaching career with the Providence Bruins in the 2002-03 season.
the citizens’ voice file
HOME AWAY FROM HOME Providence a fitting city for Penguins coaches to debut staff writer
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the providence journal file
Mike sullivan is introduced as coach of the Providence Bruins before the 2002-03 season.
cool for both Leachy and I. I haven’t been back there in a long time. I have nothing but great memories of my experience there. “I was only there for less than a year, but the time I
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PRoVIDENCE BRUINS (41-26-7-2 in 2014-15) Notes: Going strictly by the historical numbers, the Bruins will contend for a playoff spot. The franchise has played extra hockey 18 times in its 23-year existence. In prospects Malcolm Subban and Zane McIntyre, the Bruins are one of the only teams in the league that can rival the Penguins’ depth in net. SPRINGfIELD fALCoNS (38-28-8-2 in 2014-15) Notes: For the Falcons, the end of an affiliation with the Columbus Blue Jackets brought an influx of talent to Springfield. The signing of Matthias Plachta this offseason should also help. Plachta, whose father Jacek is the coach of the Poland men’s national team, is coming off a 35-point season for Adler Mannheim under the direction of current Penguins assistant coach Jay Leach.
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WILKES-BARRE — For Wilkes-Barre/Scranton coaches Mike Sullivan and Jay Leach, tonight’s seasonopening game against the Providence Bruins is a return home — of sorts. Sullivan, a New England native, began his coaching career 13 years ago with Providence, leading the Bruins to a 41-17-9-4 record and ultimately earning a late-season promotion to the NHL. “I know I’m still a little wet behind the ears when it comes to the coaching ranks,” Sullivan told USA Today in June of 2003, short-
ly following his promotion to head coach of the Boston Bruins at the age of 35. “I can’t say enough about the experience I had in Providence. Hopefully, it will prepare me for what lies ahead.” What lay ahead for Sullivan, has been quite the coaching career that will come full circle tonight. As for Leach, the Penguins assistant coach graduated from Providence College and went on to play parts of four seasons with the P-Bruins. He was ultimately named a captain in Providence. “I think (starting the season in Providence) is kind of cool,” Sullivan said. “It’s
had just two full-team practices before heading east on Thursday morning. “We didn’t exactly know what our team was going to look like until a few days ago, but it looks real strong and real deep,” Kostopoulos said. “So, if everyone works hard, we should be a competitive team.” Given the fresh faces, a road trip to begin the season could play into the Penguins’ hands. “We’re going to go into some tough buildings, so it will be a challenge and we’ll see what we’re made of,” Sullivan said. “But to start off on the road, where the guys will have an opportunity to get to know one another to spend some time together, isn’t necessarily a bad thing for our group.”
PoRTLAND PIRATES (39-28-7-2 in 2014-15) Notes: The team switched affiliates from Arizona to Florida, and Garrett Wilson not making the Panthers only means more offensive firepower for the Pirates. He scored 23 goals and had 38 points — both career highs — last season with the San Antonio Rampage.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
By Seth Lakso
was there we had a terrific hockey team. We won a lot of games and I had a great experience, so I look forward to going back.” The Penguins split their two-game season-series with the P-Bruins last season, with each team taking care of business at its own barn. “We know they’re a really good team,” Penguins captain Tom Kostopoulos said. “They’re always competitive and they always work hard so we’ll have to bring our best to compete with them.” With eight preseason games this year, the Pittsburgh Penguins were forced to hold on to many eventual Wilkes-Barre/Scranton players longer than usual. As a result, the Penguins
HARTfoRD WoLf PACk (43-24-5-4 in 2014-15) Notes: The Pack added old friend Jayson Megna earlier this week when he was reassigned from Rangers camp, and also have Brian Gibbons. However, Bourque and second-leading scorer Danny Kristo will be missed.
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30 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Matthews climbing leaderboard
Pittston Area graduate Brandon Matthews on Thursday shot his best round yet at the Web.com Tour First Qualifying Stage Tournament Event. Matthews shot a 6-under 66 at Callaway Gardens, a golf course in Pine Moun-
tain, Georgia. He made six birdies and did not bogey a single hole. Through three days, Matthews’ score is an 8-under 208. He is tied with seven others for 14th place. The 24 lowest-scoring players at the conclusion of the
tournament, along with those tied for the last qualifying position, will advance to the Second Qualifying Stage. Matthews is scheduled to tee off 10:05 a.m. today for his final round. The second stage will be played Nov. 10-13.
Spartans, Patriots battle to tie
Frank lauri / For the Citizens’ VoiCe
The Holy Redeemer girls volleyball team and head coach Jack Kablick celebrate their 150th straight WVC win on Thursday.
Royals reach milestone By Thomas Romanelli Correspondent
WILKES-BARRE — Thursday afternoon brought a familiar result for the Holy Redeemer girls volleyball team. The Royals defeated Valley West, 3-0, in a WVC match. This one, however, was a little more special than just another regular-season win. The Royals reached a milestone seldom seen in high school sports with the shutout win, their 150th consecutive regular-season victory over WVC opponents. The Royals are currently working their way toward a ninth consecutive undefeated regular season, and have not lost a regular-season match since the school was formed in 2007. “(The win) felt surreal a little bit,” said Royals coach Jack Kablick, who has presided over the entire win streak. “A lot of hard work goes into this program and we have great assistant coaches.” While the win is a huge milestone for Kablick and the Royals, it is not what the coach has his sights on. “I want to celebrate 158 wins because that means another undefeated season and we have good matches
ahead of us,” Kablick said. Before Holy Redeemer was formed, Kablick coached a Bishop Hoban team to 63 straight victories. The coach said he thought that was “ultimate” until his Royals surpassed that mark. They haven’t shown any signs of slowing down, and came out firing on all cylinders in Thursday’s match. After conceding the game’s opening point to Valley West, Holy Redeemer scored 10 consecutive points and went on to win the first set 25-7. The Royals were led, in part, by their continuously s t r o n g s e r ve s . B r y n n Kukosky had a match total of five aces and Courtney Kijek had two of her own. The power behind their serves became tough for the Spartans to handle. “Wyoming Valley West was a quality team, but we run a good offense,” Kablick said. “We moved the ball around a lot and I thought we were consistent all the way through the match.” The second and third sets were more of the same. The Royals, who have not lost a set this season, commanded early leads and never let up on the Spartans.
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Leading the way for Holy Redeemer was co-captain Lauren Slavoski, who had three blocks and eight kills. “It was a huge accomplishment to win our 150th match, especially because it keeps the streak going for so many seasons,” Slavoski said. “We are really looking forward to No. 158 though.” HOLY REDEEMER vALLEY WEST
25 25 25 1 — 3 7 16 11 — 0
Wyoming Area 3 Meyers 0 At Meyers, Rachael Solano tallied 14 assists, three aces and two kills, leading the Warriors. Wyoming Area’s Jess Sorick had 13 kills and Nicole Wright had 12 service points. WYOMING AREA MEYERS
25 25 25 — 3 10 9 22 — 0
Crestwood 3 Tunkhannock 0 At Crestwood, Ally Olszyk (14 assists) paced the Comets in their sweep. Karissa Levenoski also had 14 assists and seven kills. Julie Murphy added 10 service points and five digs. Tunkhannock was led by Amanda Hardy, who had 12 kills and 11 service points. CRESTWOOD TuNkHANNOCk
25 25 25 — 3 15 20 22 — 0
At Pittston Area, the Patriots nearly pulled off an upset of the defending District 2 Class AAA field hockey champs, but Valley West’s Erin Gibbons and Natalie Zasada scored second-half goals to earn a 2-2 tie in overtime on Thursday. Alana Platukus and Ali Dunn scored for PA. FIRST HALF: Alana Platukus (PA) from Ali Dunn, 2:07. SECOND HALF: Dunn (PA) from Platukus, 27:09; Erin Gibbons (VW) from Foto Tsioles, 20:55; Natalie Zasada (VW) from Mercedes Jasterzenski, 8:46. SHOTS: VW 16, PA 5. CORNERS: VW 9, PA 3. SAvES: VW (Nikki Hartzel) 2, PA (Shelby Gardner) 7.
Christopher Dolan / the Citizens’ VoiCe
Pittston Area’s Marissa Morreale tries to steal the ball from Valley West’s Karaline Stemla dur7 ing Thursday’s field hockey game. 0
Wyoming Area Holy Redeemer At Wyoming Area, Bree Nanticoke Area’s other goal, assisted on George Oko’s goal. Bednarski scored four goals while also assisting each of FIRST HALF: Frank Castellana (C), 29:14; George Oko (C) from Castellana, 16:22. SECOND and eclipsed 100 for her career Colemire’s scores. HALF: Castellana (C) from Sam Sebia, 18:31. in a Wyoming Area win. FIRST HALF: Carly Grabowski from Amber SHOTS: C 15, T 1. CORNERS: C 7, T 0. SAvES: C 1 Ally Bresnahan, Emilie Grohowski, 23:39; Liz Colemire from Grabowski, (Steve Johnson), T 5 (Andrew Mills). Wanko and Madison Mul- 0:00. SECOND HALF: Colemire from Grabowski, 1:00. SHOTS: NA 20, GAR 6. CORNERS: NA 9, 6 hern all added goals for the GAR 6. SAvES: NA (Miranda Gola) 3, GAR (Britt Valley West Vital 4, Samara McDaniels 6) 10. Nanticoke Area 2 Warriors. At Nanticoke Area on FIRST HALF: Emilie Wanko from Bree Bednarski, 29:35; Madison Mulhern from Wanko, Lake-Lehman 9 Wednesday, Joyssen Gonza23:30. SECOND HALF: Bednarski from Mul0 lez scored two goals, leading hern, 26:15; Bednarski from Mulhern, 25:21; Elk Lake Bednarski from Wanko, 18:17; Ally Bresnahan At Elk Lake on Wednesday, the Spartans. from Grace Angelella, 11:10; Bednarski from Valley West’s Mike BazaWanko, 5:49. SHOTS: WA 20, HR 1. CORNERS: Katie Supey and Izzy Radel WA 17, HR 2. SAvES: WA (Katie Wolfgang) 3, scored two goals each to lead dona scored twice and added HR (Bailey Janowski) 12. the Black Knights. two assists. SCORING: Katie Supey from Melissa Ber-
Coughlin 7 notsky; Supey from Sarah Sabaluski; Izzy Honesdale 1 Radel from Maranda Moosic; Moosic from Lilli Stepanski; Stepanski from Supey; Makayla At Honesdale, Brigid Wood Adams unassisted; Sarah Berholtz from Radel; scored a pair of goals in each Radel from Madison Klopp; Maranda Martin from Klopp. SHOTS: L-L 19, EL 2. CORNERS: L-L half, finishing with four, as 13, EL 3. the Crusaders won. Hannah Rushkowski, BOYS SOCCER Savanna Robinson and Ken- Meyers 1 dyl Margolis also scored for Berwick 0 Coughlin. Mauricio Castillo scored FIRST HALF: Brigid Wood (Cou) unassist- the lone goal of the game and ed, 28:35; Hannah Rushkowski (Cou) from Emily Anderson, 22:55; Wood (Cou) unassist- David Torres stopped all five ed, 2:43. SECOND HALF: Wood (Cou) unassist- shots he faced for the ed, 26:26; Savanna Robinson (Cou) unassisted, 13:35; Wood (Cou) unassisted, 12:20; Kendyl Mohawks. Margolis (Cou) from Katie Anderson, 3:02; Brie Mayers (Hon) from Clayre Smith, 1:00.
Nanticoke Area 3 GAR 0 At Wilkes-Barre Township, Liz Colemire scored a goal in each half to lead the Trojanettes. Carly Grabowski scored
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SCORING: Mauricio Castillo (M) from Gino Setta, 10:21. SHOTS: M 8, B 5. C M 4, B 3. SAvES: M 5 (David Torres), B 7 (Morgan Broyan).
Coughlin 3 Tunkhannock 0 At The Bog, Frank Castellana factored into every Coughlin goal. Castellana scored twice and
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SCORING: Nik Placek (NA) from Ed Lukowski, 7th minute; Joyssen Gonzalez (VW) from Mike Bazadona, 12th; Kyle Yusko (VW) from Bazadona, 20th; Gonzalez (VW) from Anthony Barbose, 30th; Gonzalez (VW) from Mike Tandoh, 40th; Lukowski (NA) from Luke Butczynski, 50th; Bazadona (VW) from Yusko, 76th; Mike Bazadona (VW) from Nick Bazadona, 79th. SHOTS: VW 27, NA 11. CORNERS: VW 6, NA 3. SAvES: VW (Davis Weaver) 5, NA (Carmelo Pioquinto, Brian Kotz) 20.
GIRLS SOCCER Valley West 4 Nanticoke Area 3 At Valley West on Wednesday, Tiffany Michalek led a furious comeback, scoring a game-tying and game-winning goal for the Spartans. FIRST HALF: Kayla Aufiero (NA) from Liz Mulhern, 12:00; Katie Butczynski (NA) unassisted, 24:56; Mulhern (NA) from Butczynski, 26:03; Tiffany Michalek (VW) from Julia Kobusky; Audrey Williams (VW) unassisted, 36:18. SECOND HALF: Michalek (VW) from Michaela Shonk, 54:30; Michalek (VW) from Riley O’Neil, 76:23. SHOTS: VW 20, NA 15. CORNERS: VW 3, NA 3. SAvES: VW (Danielle Cook) 12, NA (Lexi Seery) 10.
LOCAL COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW WILKES (1-4, 1-3) at aLbrIght (4-0, 3-0) When: 1, Saturday Last meeting: Albright 36, Wilkes 35 (OT) Series history: Albright leads 22-16 how they fared last week Widener 27, Wilkes 7 Albright 41, Misericordia 13 Coaches corner Wilkes: Trey Brown (2nd year, 3-12) albright: John Marzka (9th year, 57-25) Players to watch Wilkes: LB Tanner Stengel leads the team with 62 tackles. albright: QB Mike Knight averages 168.3 yards passing per game. Scouting report Albright has won the last four meetings between the two teams. The last Wilkes victory in the series came in 2010, 38-35. Wilkes is ranked seventh in the MAC in scoring defense, allowing 29.2 points per game and eighth in total defense, allowing 411.4 yards per game. Wilkes is sixth against the run and ninth against the pass. Wilkes quarterback Ryan Dailey threw for 235 yards in last week’s loss to Widener. It was the fifth consecutive game where Dailey has thrown for at least 220 yards. He currently has 2,524 career passing yards and needs 263 to reach sixth-place on the school’s all-time passing
list. Dailey ranks second in the MAC in passing yards per game with 269 and is second in attempts with 229. He has thrown for seven touchdowns, which is good for second. The defense kept the Colonels in the game last week. Linebacker Jordan Stiles accounted for the only Wilkes touchdown last week when he returned an interception. Wilkes is ninth in the MAC in scoring offense with 15.2 points per game. The Colonels are fourth in total offense with 362.8 yards per game, eighth in rushing (93.2) and second in passing (269.6). Stengel leads the MAC with 12.4 tackles per game and is third in tackles for loss with 7.5. Jared Powell has 27 tackles, six pass breakups and one interception from his spot in the secondary. Albright leads the MAC in scoring offense with 31 points per game. The Lions are ninth in total offense with 288 yards per game, sixth in rushing and sixth in passing. Running back Brian Wickkiser is 12th in the conference with 50 yards per game. He has rushed for 12 touchdowns. The Lions defense is third in the MAC allowing 14 points, fourth in total defense, fifth against he run and fifth against the pass. Wilkes will have a bye next weekend. — Steve Bennett
BOYL YLE FIRE REPLA LACE
Field Hockey William Paterson 3, Misericordia 2: Colby Eldridge and Kailey Vogl scored for the Cougars. Surdy honored: Wilkes’ Marissa Surdy was named the ECAC Division III Mid-Atlantic Co-Offensive Player of the Week after scoring 14 points to lead her team to a 2-0 week. Men’s Soccer King’s 2, Summit 0: Erik
Redeemer falls to North Pocono Foster scored and the Monarchs took advantage of an own goal for the win. Women’s Volleyball King’s 3, Rosemont 0: Elen O’Donnell had seven kills and Alexis Swagler had four kills to lead the Monarchs. PS Wilkes-Barre 3, PS Lehigh 0: Kahli Kotulski had 21 kills, Alison Rowski had 23 service points and Deanna Thomas had 26 assists in the win.
At Redeemer, Sarah Sposi- and Abington Heights beat to and Annika Treitz won Coughlin, 5-0. singles matches to lead SINGLES: 1. Angela Malinovitch (HR) d. Sarah North Pocono to a 4-1 win Tofilska 6-3, 6-2; 2. Sara Sposito (NP) d. Charlotte Maria 6-2, 6-1; Annika Treitz (NP) d. Alex Kester over Holy Redeemer on 6-3, 6-3. DOUBLES: Brooke Panek/Haley Zemek Thursday in the opening (NP) d. Emily Evans/Lauren LaMarca 7-5, 6-3; 2. Morgan Carney/Aurora Monacelli (NP) d. Abby round of the District 2 Class Muth/Julia Randazzo 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. Class AA Semifinals, 12:30 Tuesday at Kirby AA Team Championships. Valley View vs. Scranton Prep; North Valley View beat Wyoming Park: Pocono vs. Wyoming Seminary. Class AAA semifinals, 11 a.m. Tuesday at KirArea 4-1 in the other semi. Park: Wallenpaupack vs. Williamsport or In Class AAA, Wallenpau- by Hazleton Area; Abington Heights vs. Williamsport pack beat Delaware Valley 4-1 or Hazleton Area.
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INDIANA
4-1 (0-1 BIG TEN)
HooSIErS
WHEN: NooN SATurDAy WHErE: BEAVEr STADIuM rADIo: 980 AM TV: ESPN oNLINE: foLLoW @PSuBST
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PENN STATE
NITTANy LIoNS DEPTH CHArTS
PLAyErS To WATCH
PENN STATE OFFENSE XWR: 12 Chris Godwin, 13 Saeed Blacknall LT: 73 Paris Palmer, 59 Andrew Nelson LG: 53 Derek Dowrey, 71 Albert Hall C: 66 Angelo Mangiro, 55 Wendy Laurent RG: 72 Brian Gaia, 68 Kevin Reihner RT: 70 Brendan Mahon, 60 Noah Beh TE: 88 Mike Gesicki, 11 Brent Wilkerson FWR: 5 DaeSean Hamilton, 3 DeAndre Thompkins QB: 14 Christian Hackenberg, 9 Trace McSorley RB: 8 Mark Allen, 24 Nick Scott ZWR: 7 Eugene Lewis, 80 Matt Zanellato DEFENSE DE: 95 Carl Nassib, 52 Curtis Cothran DT: 98 Anthony Zettel, 91 Tarow Barney DT: 99 Austin Johnson, 41 Parker Cothren DE: 90 Garrett Sickels, 19 Torrence Brown SLB: 25 Von Walker, 43 Manny Bowen MLB: 40 Jason Cabinda, 38 Ben Kline WLB: 42 Troy Reeder, 33 Jake Cooper CB: 15 Grant Haley, 29 John Reid FS: 28 Troy Apke, 7 Koa Farmer SS: 9 Jordan Lucas, 6 Malik Golden CB: 10 Trevor Williams, 1 Christian Campbell SPECIAL P: 37 Chris Gulla, 92 Daniel Pasquariello K: 99 Joey Julius, 95 Tyler Davis PR: 3 DeAndre Thompkins, 8 Mark Allen KR: 24 Nick Scott, 7 Koa Farmer
Penn State WR Chris Godwin The Indiana defense loaded the box to try to control Ohio State’s running game last week, and it would make sense that they’d attempt the same approach against the Nittany Lions. That would leave plenty of 1-on-1 coverage on receivers like Godwin, who has consistently come up with the big play on the rare occasions Penn State tries to take advantage of the opportunities. He is averaging 15.2 yards per reception. InDIana DE Nick Mangieri As good as the Indiana offense has been, the defense has been as challenged. Their efforts to stop Ohio State’s running game last week yielded three touchdown runs of 55 yards or more by star running back Ezekiel Elliot. The one defender the Buckeyes had consistent problems with was Mangieri, a converted linebacker who has provided a speed rush off the edge. He has five sacks and two forced fumbles this season.
NITTANy NuMBErS
0
Wins, in eight tries, for Indiana against Penn State at Beaver Stadium
1
Upperclassman, RB Akeel Lynch, who has scored an offensive touchdown for Penn State this season
4.2
Sacks per game for Penn State’s defense, the third-best total in the nation
PrEDICTIoN
The Hoosiers have been a tough matchup in recent years, but with Nate Sudfeld and Jordan Howard both question marks, they’re as beaten up as the Nittany Lions right now. The schedule does not get easier from here, and the Nittany Lions need wins in some toss-up games like this one. It won’t be easy for a team that now has to get ready for what could be two very different offenses. To do so, Penn State will have to tackle well in the secondary and protect Christian Hackenberg against a team that will give him chances to throw deep. Two things it hasn’t done well all season. Indiana 17, Penn State 13
— Donnie Collins
tribune neWS Service file
Penn State’s Ben Kline (38) tackles Illinois’ Josh Ferguson during a November 2013 game.
After frustrating 2 years, Kline back on field By Donnie Collins Staff Writer
For most of the last two years, Ben Kline has tried to focus on what matters. On Nov. 9, 2013, what mattered most was finishing the football game, which Penn State’s then-sophomore linebacker did even after injuring a chest muscle on the game’s second play. He finished with four tackles in the game, boarded the team flight home and soon got the news no player wants to hear. His season was over. That pulled muscle kept him out of the last three games that season, and when he suffered a leg injury in summer camp in 2014, it cost him that season, too. So, imagine the emotion he felt last Saturday, when Kline took the field for the final play of the first half for the first time in 693 days against Army West Point.
“I don’t take for granted any opportunities to be out there with my teammates,” Kline said. “It was fun to be out there with them and get back playing on the field and play a good game. It was good to get a win.” Between that Minnesota game in 2013 and those few snaps he got last weekend against Army, Kline never played a down on Saturdays. He still remained one of Penn State’s most significant players, though. College football programs love to tout their best students, and Kline certainly might be Penn State’s. He possessed a 3.75 gradepoint average entering the summer session at Penn State, and that’s six months after graduation with a finance degree in 3½ years. Because of that success, he earned a nomination for an American Rhodes Scholarship, the world’s most celebrated international schol-
arship. He’s still waiting to learn if he’ll win it. Kline also serves as the president of Penn State’s Uplifting Athletes chapter. Kline helped the charity raise a record $151,990 in 2013-14. “This program is very important to me, and since I was not able to contribute on the field as much as I would have liked to, I had to find a way to contribute to the betterment of this program,” Kline said. “It was important to me. It was definitely a motivating factor.” Now, he’s back on the field, and getting there was a long process. Firmly entrenched as the top backup to middle linebacker Jason Cabinda, Kline didn’t just have to rehab chest and leg injuries. He had to convince himself that his body was healed; that he could run again and tackle again like
he did in 2013, when his whole career seemed to be in front of him. Once again, as his career winds down, Kline is back where he was when it looked like it was over. Just in time for a young Penn State defense that could use his experience and leadership, too. “Mentally, he’s there,” head coach James Franklin said. “What he’s been doing really for the last I don’t know how many months is getting his body back to the point where his mind is telling him what to do, and his body can do it. “You know what you’re going to get from Ben from a maturity and leadership standpoint and from an experience standpoint. Every day in practice, he’s getting better, and now that he’s able to get back on the field and do some positive things, we can continue to build on those.”
INDIANA OFFENSE WR: 4 Ricky Jones, 15 Nick Westbrook LT: 78 Jason Spriggs, 62 Brandon Knight LG: 76 Wes Martin, 71 Delroy Baker C: 50 Jake Reed, 65 Wes Rogers RG: 67 Dan Feeney, 70 Jacob Bailey RT: 77 Dimitric Camiel, 57 Tim Gardner TE: 85 Michael Cooper, 88 Anthony Corsaro WR: 87 Mitchell Paige, 38 Damon Graham QB: 7 Nate Sudfeld, 12 Zander Diamont RB: 8 Jordan Howard, 34 Devine Redding WR: 1 Simmie Cobbs Jr., 80 Leon Thornton III DEFENSE DT: 93 Ralph Green III, 47 Robert McCray III NT: 99 Adarius Rayner, 74 Nate Hoff DE: 56 Nick Mangeri, 58 Patrick Dougherty BANDIT: 33 Zack Shaw, 49 Greg Gooch SLB: 41 Clyde Newton, 29 Dawson Fletcher MLB: 2 T.J. Simmons, 43 Dameon Willis Jr. WLB: 44 Marcus Oliver, 8 Tegray Scales LCB: 16 Rashard Fant, 5 Devonte Williams FS: 30 Chase Dutra, 26 Kiante Walton SS: 9 Jonathan Crawford, 19 Tony Fields RCB: 14 Andrew Brown Jr., 18 Noel Padmore SPECIAL P: 36 Erich Toth, 86 Joseph Gedeon K: 92 Griffin Oakes, 90 Aaron Del Grosso PR: 87 Mitchell Paige, 16 Rashard Fant KR: 5 Devonte Williams, 38 Damon Graham
TEAM SCHEDuLES Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 21 Nov. 28 Sept. 5 Sept.12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 28
PENN STATE at Temple L, 27-10 vs. Buffalo W, 27-14 vs. Rutgers W, 28-3 vs. San Diego State W, 37-21 vs. Army W, 20-14 vs. Indiana Noon at Ohio State 8 p.m. at Maryland (Baltimore) TBA vs. Illinois TBA at Northwestern TBA vs. Michigan TBA at Michigan State TBA INDIANA vs. Southern Illinois W, 48-47 vs. Florida Int’l W, 36-22 vs. Western Kentucky W, 38-35 at Wake Forest W, 31-24 vs. Ohio State L. 34-27 at Penn State Noon vs. Rutgers 3:30 p.m. at Michigan State TBA vs. Iowa TBA vs. Michigan TBA at Maryland TBA at Purdue TBA
KEy MATCHuPS When Penn State haS the ball Offensive line vs. Defensive line Indiana plays a true 3-4 defense, with big linemen asked to consume blockers, with the linebackers taking over from there. Penn State may not be able to handle them one-onone, especially on the inside, where C Angelo Mangiro left the game with an injury last week. Penn State has been better up front since the Temple debacle, but a lot of that has to do with how vanilla the offense had to get because of the line. They’ll need to be more aggressive today. EDGE: Indiana
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When InDIana haS the ball Quarterback/receivers vs. Secondary There’s one thing any team that can corral Indiana’s offense has to do: Tackle well. Penn State has not done that this season, especially in the secondary. Maybe getting Marcus Allen back this week will help. But is this going to be the Indiana offense everyone has gotten used to? Star QB Nate Sudfeld suffered a leg injury last week and may not go this week. Backup Zander Diamont is more of a runner, which completely changes the attack. EDGE: Penn State
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T32] | 10/08/15
On SPeCIal teaMS Kicking game There’s really no comparison here. Indiana’s kickers are much steadier, much more experienced than Penn State’s youngsters. Sophomore kicker Griffin Oakes is one of the Big Ten’s best, and he already has drilled nine of his 10 field goals. Punter Erich Toth is averaging 41 yards per punt. The Nittany Lions struggled again with the punt game last week, and while Joey Julius has made 8 of 10 field goal attempts, there’s still a feeling that he’s untested. EDGE: Indiana
21:25 | CIGNOLIMIC
Johnson stars as Colts edge Texans NFL BRIEFS
PACKERS: Former NFL coach Lindy Infante died Thursday in Florida after a lengthy illness. He was 75. Infante coached the Green
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Jets 6 Bruins 2 BOSTON — Chris Thorburn and Nicolas Petan scored in the third period to lead Winnipeg.
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Blues 3 Oilers 1 ST. LOUIS — Connor McDavid was held scoreless in his debut for Edmonton. Stars 3 Penguins 0 DALLAS — Ales Hemsky had a goal and an assist.
WB_VOICE - DLY - 33 - 10/09/15
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Predators 2 Hurricanes 1 NASHVILLE — Viktor Arvidsson scored the gamewinning goal for Nashville.
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Senators 3 Sabres 1 BUFFALO, N.Y. — Kyle Turris scored twice for Ottawa. Jack Eichel, the No. 2 overall pick in this year’s draft, scored for Buffalo.
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Texans’ Arian Foster (23) tries to escape Colts’ Trent Cole during Thursday’s game in Houston
Bolts strike down Flyers in overtime TAMPA, Fla. — Jason Garrison scored his second goal of the game in overtime, and the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the Philadelphian Flyers 3-2 on Thursday night. Garrison’s game-winner came on a breakaway with 2:43 left in the extra session, which featured the NHL’s first 3-on-3 OT of the season. Matt Read and Brayden Schenn scored for the Flyers.
in 1996, leading the team to the playoffs in his first season. His overall NFL record was 36-60. — Associated Press
PA#012312
HOUSTON — Andre Johnson had two touchdown catches against his former team to help the Indianapolis Colts beat the Houston Texans 27-20 on Thursday night. Johnson, who spent his first 12 NFL seasons in Houston before he was released in March, pushed the lead to 27-17 with a 2-yard touchdown reception from Matt Hasselbeck in the fourth quarter. Johnson finished with six catches for 77 yards. The Colts (3-2) extended their AFC South winning streak to an NFL-record 16 games.
Bay Packers from 1988 to 1991, winning Coach of the Year honors in 1989 after the Packers went 10-6. He was hired by Indianapolis
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
34 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
NL DIVISION SERIES PREVIEW
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
Cardinals’ John Lackey
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
Cubs’ Jon Lester
Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
Mets’ Yoenis Cespedes
A DIFFERENT LOOK Old friends face off for Cardinals, Cubs
By R.B. Fallstrom Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — John Lackey has been quite the bargain for the St. Louis Cardinals. Pitching for the major league minimum $507,500 salary due to a clause in contract, Lackey went 13-10 for a team that lost its ace early. And when old rivals face each other in a postseason series for the first time today, he’ll be pitching against an old buddy. The 36-year-old Lackey will oppose the Chicago Cubs’ Jon Lester, a duo that formed a devastating one-two for the Red Sox in the 2013 World Series. “I’d like to say I was surprised, but I’m not,” Lackey said Thursday. “He’s good. No accident people running into each other this time of year.” Lackey had a career-best 2.77 ERA and consistently went deep for the 100-win Cardinals, stepping up as the de facto ace after Adam Wainwright tore his left Achilles in late April. He has earned this slot, the crusty, bulldog demeanor
reminding management of former star pitcher Chris Carpenter. Lackey was paid $82.5 million the previous five years under a contract he signed with Boston, which included a conditional club option for 2015 at the minimum. That condition was met when he missed 2012 while recovering from reconstructive elbow surgery. St. Louis acquired him from the Red Sox on July 31, 2014. Lackey can become a free agent again this fall. “I don’t think we’ll discuss what we’re doing in the offseason or strategy in the offseason at this point,” Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak said. “We’re excited he’s a part of it and we’re looking forward to a successful October.” Lester and Lackey combined for three victories in a six-game 2013 Series triumph over the Cardinals. Lester was 2-0 with a 0.59 ERA and Lackey won the clincher. “He was probably the best on the planet going through the playoffs that year,” Lackey said. “He knows how to compete and he knows how
WB_VOICE - DLY - 34 - 10/09/15
to handle this time of year, for sure.” Lester will try to follow an excellent wild-card performance by Jake Arrieta, who threw a four-hitter Wednesday night in a 4-0 victory over the Pirates. Lester figured he’d be matched against 17-game winner Michael Wacha, but the right-hander was 2-3 with a 7.78 ERA the final month and will start Game 3. When Lester learned he would be opposed by Lackey, he thought it funny — and fitting. “He’s going to almost outwill you sometimes, if that makes sense,” Lester said. “Our friendship will go beyond this game, will go beyond this career, but come tomorrow, we’re not buddies anymore.” Kyle Hendricks (8-7, 3.95) will oppose Jaime Garcia (106, 2.43) in Game 2 Saturday. Arrieta (22-6, 1.77), having a breakout Cy Young-caliber season, faces Wacha (17-7, 3.38) in Game 3 and in Game 4 it will be St. Louis’ Lance Lynn (12-11, 3.03) against probably Jason Hammel (107, 3.74).
Kershaw, Dodgers facing transformed Mets
By Beth Harris Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Clayton Kershaw isn’t sure what to expect from the new-look Mets, whose dramatic transformation in the second half of the season led to an NL East title. The Los Angeles Dodgers ace faced a mostly different New York lineup before the July trade deadline. Even veteran Mets infielder David Wright was out at the time. “There’s a lot of guys that I’ll be seeing for the first time this season,” Kershaw said Thursday. “Definitely a completely different team. Obviously, a lot better than what we faced in July.” The Dodgers aren’t the same team that got chased out of the Division Series by St. Louis a year ago. They shipped out Matt Kemp, Hanley Ramirez and Juan Uribe (now a Met), and ushered in veterans Jimmy Rollins, Howie Kendrick and Yasmani Grandal. When Kershaw takes the mound for tonight’s opener at Dodger Stadium, he’ll be trying to earn just the second
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postseason win of his career after going 0-4 in his last two series against the Cardinals. “I definitely remember,” he said, “but it’s a new team, new season and, hopefully, for me a new outcome.” The Mets won four of seven meetings between the teams, all in that month before Yoenis Cespedes arrived from Detroit in a trade that boosted the Mets’ anemic offense. They are in the playoffs for the first time in nine years; the Dodgers are making their third straight appearance for the first time in franchise history. Kelly Johnson and Uribe joined the Mets shortly after Cespedes, acquisitions manager Terry Collins credited for turning around the team. Kershaw will be opposed by Jacob deGrom, last year’s NL Rookie of the Year and a converted infielder who is making his playoffs debut. The right-hander isn’t about to compare himself to Kershaw, last year’s NL MVP and a three-time Cy Young Award winner, except in one area. “The way he takes the
19:36 | CIGNOLIMIC
mound, he goes out there and attacks hitters,” deGrom said. “I try to do the same thing, not get intimidated by anybody who steps in the box and go out there and make your pitches when you need to.” The teams split the four regular-season games started by Kershaw and Zack Greinke, who will take the mound for the Dodgers in Game 2 on Saturday. DeGrom’s path to the majors took several twists and turns, starting with him becoming a pitcher in his junior year at Stetson University. He was drafted ninth by the Mets in 2010 and missed his first minor-league season the next year after undergoing Tommy John surgery. DeGrom didn’t make it to the big leagues until last year. “All of us are thankful every day we get to put this uniform on and we play this game,” he said, “so try not to take any days for granted.” Collins plans to start three left-handed hitters against Kershaw: Curtis Granderson, Daniel Murphy and Lucas Duda.
NFL STANDINGS AMERICAN East W L T Pct. PF PA 3 0 0 1.000 119 70 New England N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 .750 95 55 2 2 0 Buffalo .500 110 92 Miami 1 3 0 .250 65 101 South W L T Pct. PF PA 3 2 0 Indianapolis .600 99 113 Tennessee 1 2 0 .333 89 77 1 3 0 Jacksonville .250 62 107 Houston 1 4 0 .200 97 135 North W L T Pct. PF PA 4 0 0 1.000 121 77 Cincinnati Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 96 75 1 3 0 Baltimore .250 93 104 Cleveland 1 3 0 .250 85 102 West W L T Pct. PF PA 4 0 0 1.000 97 69 Denver Oakland 2 2 0 .500 97 108 2 2 0 San Diego .500 96 110 Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 100 125 NATIONAL East W L T Pct. PF PA 2 2 0 Dallas .500 95 101 N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 102 82 .500 78 79 Washington 2 2 0 Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 78 86 South W L T Pct. PF PA 4 0 0 1.000 108 71 Carolina Atlanta 4 0 0 1.000 137 93 .250 72 117 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 86 104 North W L T Pct. PF PA 4 0 0 1.000 113 71 Green Bay Minnesota 2 2 0 .500 80 73 1 3 0 Chicago .250 68 125 Detroit 0 4 0 .000 66 96 West W L T Pct. PF PA Arizona .750 148 73 3 1 0 St. Louis 2 2 0 .500 74 89 Seattle .500 87 71 2 2 0 San Francisco 1 3 0 .250 48 110 Thursday Indianapolis 27, Houston 20 Sunday Chicago at Kansas City, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Green Bay, 1 p.m. Buffalo at Tennessee, 1 p.m. Seattle at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Washington at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. New Orleans at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Arizona at Detroit, 4:05 p.m. Denver at Oakland, 4:25 p.m. New England at Dallas, 4:25 p.m. San Francisco at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m. Open: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, N.Y. Jets Monday Pittsburgh at San Diego, 8:30 p.m.
WVC GIRLS SOCCER W 7 4 1 W 10 9 7 7 6 6 3 2 3 2 0 W 3 3
L 4 5 9 L 1 1 1 2 3 4 4 3 7 6 10 L 4 8
T 0 1 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 T 0 0
WB_VOICE - DLY - 35 - 10/09/15
WILD CARD Oct. 6: Astros 3, Yankees 0 Oct. 7: Cubs 4, Pirates 0 DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Houston 1, Kansas City 0 Oct. 8: Houston 5, Kansas City 2 Oct. 9: Houston (Kazmir 70-11) at Kansas City (Cueto 4-7), 3:45 p.m. (FS1) Oct. 11: Kansas City (Volquez 13-9) at Houston (Keuchel 20-8), 4:10 p.m. (MLBN) x-Oct. 12: Kansas City at Houston, TBA (FOX or FS1) x-Oct. 14: Houston at Kansas City, TBA (FOX or FS1) Texas 1, Toronto 0 Oct. 8: Texas 5, Toronto 3 Oct. 9: Texas (Hamels 7-1) at Toronto (Stroman 4-0), 12:45 p.m. (MLBN) Oct. 11: Toronto (Estrada 13-8) at Texas (Lewis 17-9), 8:10 p.m. (FS1) x-Oct. 12: Toronto (Dickey 11-11) at Texas (Holland 4-3), (FOX or FS1) x-Oct. 14: Texas at Toronto (FOX or FS1) National League All games televised by TBS St. Louis vs. Chicago Oct. 9: Chicago (Lester 11-12) at St. Louis (Lackey 13-10), 6:45 p.m. Oct. 10: Chicago (Hendricks 8-7) at St. Louis (Garcia 10-6), 5:37 p.m. Oct. 12: St. Louis (Wacha 17-7) at Chicago (Arrieta 22-6), 4:37 or 6:07 p.m. x-Oct. 13: St. Louis (Lynn 12-11) at Chicago (Hammel 10-7), 4:37 or 8:07 p.m. x-Oct. 15: Chicago at St. Louis, 4:37 or 8:07 p.m. Los Angeles vs. New York Friday: New York (deGrom 14-8) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 16-7), 9:45 p.m. Saturday: New York (Syndergaard 9-7) at Los Angeles (Greinke 19-3), 9:07 p.m. Monday: Los Angeles (Anderson 10-9) at New York (Harvey 13-8) x-Oct. 13: Los Angeles at New York
TODAY’S RADIO SCHEDULE AHL 7 p.m. Penguins at Providence, 980 AM, 103.1 FM High School Football 7 p.m. Berwick at Wyoming Area, 103.5 FM TODAY’S TV SCHEDULE Auto Racing 7 a.m. Formula One, practice for Russian GP, NBCSN 3:30 p.m. Sprint Cup, practice at Charlotte, NBCSN 4:30 p.m. Xfinity Series, qualifying at Charlotte, NBCSN 6:30 p.m. Sprint Cup, practice at Charlotte, NBCSN 8 p.m. Xfinity Series, Drive for the Cure 300 at Charlotte, NBCSN College Football 8 p.m. NC State at Virginia Tech, ESPN Golf 8 a.m. British Masters, GOLF 3 p.m. Champions, SAS Championship, GOLF 6 p.m. Presidents Cup, Day 3, GOLF 11 p.m. Presidents Cup, Day 3, GOLF High School Football 7 p.m. Meyers at Hanover Area, SE Ch. 2 7 p.m. Hazleton Area at Crestwood, WYLN Major League Baseball 12:30 p.m. ALDS, Texas at Toronto, MLBN 4 p.m. ALDS, Houston at Kansas City, FS1 6:30 p.m. NLDS, Chicago at St. Louis, TBS 9:30 p.m. NLDS, NY Mets at LA Dodgers, TBS NBA Preseason 7 p.m. NY Knicks at Washington, NBATV NHL 7 p.m. NY Rangers at Columbus, MSG 7:30 p.m. Chicago at NY Islanders, NHL Women’s Volleyball 8 p.m. Penn State at Illinois, BTN WNBA 8 p.m. Finals, Game 3, ESPN2
WVC CROSS COUNTRY BOYS Dallas Holy Redeemer Berwick Hazleton Area Tunkhannock Lake-Lehman Crestwood Valley West Coughlin Wyoming Area Pittston Area Hanover Area MMI Prep Wyoming Seminary Meyers Northwest GAR GIRLS Lake-Lehman Dallas Holy Redeemer Pittston Area Hazleton Area Tunkhannock MMI Prep Crestwood Valley West Wyoming Seminary Northwest Hanover Area Wyoming Area Meyers Berwick Coughlin
W 13 10 9 11 10 8 8 8 8 5 5 4 4 3 1 0 0 W 12 11 9 10 9 8 7 6 6 5 4 2 2 1 0 0
NHL L 0 1 1 2 3 5 5 5 6 8 9 7 7 10 10 10 14 L 0 1 1 3 3 4 5 6 6 7 6 8 10 9 10 13
WVC GIRLS VOLLEYBALL Delaware Valley North Pocono Holy Redeemer Crestwood Wyoming Area Valley West Pittston Area Nanticoke Area Coughlin Berwick Tunkhannock MMI Prep GAR Hazleton Area Lake-Lehman Dallas Hanover Area Meyers
W 9 9 9 9 9 7 6 6 5 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1
Rangers 5, Blue Jays 3
L 0 0 0 0 1 4 3 3 6 6 7 7 7 9 9 8 8 9
EASTERN Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts. PF Montreal 1 1 0 0 2 3 Ottawa 1 1 0 0 2 3 Tampa Bay 1 1 0 0 2 3 Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 0 Florida 0 0 0 0 0 0 Buffalo 1 0 1 0 0 1 Toronto 1 0 1 0 0 1 Boston 1 0 1 0 0 2 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts. PF N.Y. Rangers 1 1 0 0 2 3 Philadelphia 1 0 0 1 1 2 Columbus 0 0 0 0 0 0 New Jersey 0 0 0 0 0 0 N.Y. Islanders 0 0 0 0 0 0 Washington 0 0 0 0 0 0 Carolina 1 0 1 0 0 1 Pittsburgh 1 0 1 0 0 0 WESTERN Central Division GP W L OT Pts. PF Winnipeg 1 1 0 0 2 6 Dallas 1 1 0 0 2 3 St. Louis 1 1 0 0 2 3 Nashville 1 1 0 0 2 2 Colorado 0 0 0 0 0 0 Minnesota 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago 1 0 1 0 0 2 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts. PF San Jose 1 1 0 0 2 5 Vancouver 1 1 0 0 2 5 Anaheim 0 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona 0 0 0 0 0 0 Edmonton 1 0 1 0 0 1 Calgary 1 0 1 0 0 1 Los Angeles 1 0 1 0 0 1 Wednesday’s Late Games Vancouver 5, Calgary 1 San Jose 5, Los Angeles 1 Thursday Winnipeg 6, Boston 2 Ottawa 3, Buffalo 1 Tampa Bay 3, Philadelphia 2, OT St. Louis 3, Edmonton 1 Nashville 2, Carolina 1 Dallas 3, Pittsburgh 0 Minnesota at Colorado, 9 p.m. Friday Winnipeg at New Jersey, 7 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Columbus, 7 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at N.Y. Islanders, 7:30 p.m. Arizona at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T35] | 10/08/15
PA 1 1 2 0 0 3 3 6 PA 2 3 0 0 0 0 2 3 PA 2 0 1 1 0 0 3 PA 1 1 0 0 3 5 5
Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. DeShields cf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .500 Stubbs cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Choo rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .000 Beltre 3b 1 0 1 1 1 0 1.000 Alberto 3b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Fielder dh 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .000 Moreland 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 — J.Hamilton lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Venable lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Andrus ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Odor 2b 2 3 1 1 0 0 .500 Chirinos c 4 1 1 2 0 0 .250 Totals 31 5 5 5 3 7 Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Revere lf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .250 Donaldson 3b 1 0 0 0 1 0 .000 a-Carrera ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Pennington 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Bautista rf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .250 Pompey rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Encarnacion dh 4 0 2 1 0 0 .500 Tulowitzki ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Smoak 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Ru.Martin c 4 1 1 0 0 1 .250 Goins 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Pillar cf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .333 Totals 33 3 6 3 1 4 Texas.......................002 020 100 — 5 5 0 Toronto....................000 111 000 — 3 6 1 a–grounded out for Donaldson in the 5th. E:Revere (1). LOB:Texas 4, Toronto 4. 2B:DeShields (1), Ru.Martin (1), Pillar (1). HR:Chirinos (1), off Price. Odor (1), off Price. Bautista (1), off Kela. RBIs:DeShields (1), Beltre (1), Odor (1), Chirinos 2 (2), Bautista (1), Encarnacion (1), Pillar (1). RISP:Texas 2 (Fielder, Choo). Toronto 2 (Smoak, Carrera). RISP:Texas 2 for 4. Toronto 2 for 9. RMU:Choo, Chirinos, Revere, Tulowitzki, Goins. GIDP:Fielder. DP:Toronto 1 (Goins, Tulowitzki, Smoak). Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gallardo W, 1-0 5 4 2 2 1 1 79 3.60 Kela H, 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 17 9.00 Diekman H, 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 16 0.00 S.Dyson S, 1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 17 0.00 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Price L, 0-1 7 5 5 5 2 5 90 6.43 Cecil 1 0 0 0 1 1 15 0.00 Aa.Sanchez 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 0.00 HBP:by Price (Odor, Odor). Umpires:Home, James Hoye. First, Vic Carapazza. Second, Alfonso Marquez. Third, Marvin Hudson. Left, Dale Scott. Right, Dan Bellino. T:2:53. A:49,834 (49,282).
FRIDAY’S AHL SCHEDULE Manitoba at Toronto, 7 p.m. Penguins at Providence, 7:05 p.m. Lake Erie at Rochester, 7:05 p.m. Grand Rapids at Bakersfield, 10 p.m. Rockford at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
23:49 | REESERJAME
Astros 5, Royals 2 Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Altuve 2b 5 1 3 1 0 0 .600 Springer rf 4 2 2 1 1 1 .500 Correa ss 5 0 1 0 0 2 .200 Col.Rasmus lf 3 1 1 2 1 1 .333 Gattis dh 4 0 1 1 0 1 .250 1-C.Gomez pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Valbuena 3b 3 0 0 0 1 3 .000 Carter 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .250 Ma.Gonzalez 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 — J.Castro c 4 0 0 0 0 3 .000 Marisnick cf 4 1 2 0 0 1 .500 Totals 36 5 11 5 3 14 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Zobrist 2b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .500 L.Cain cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Hosmer 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .000 K.Morales dh 4 2 2 2 0 1 .500 Moustakas 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 S.Perez c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 A.Gordon lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Rios rf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .000 Totals 33 2 6 2 1 4 Houston ..................210 010 010 — 5 11 0 Kansas City ............010 100 000 — 2 6 0 1–ran for Gattis in the 8th. LOB:Houston 7, Kansas City 6. 2B:Marisnick (1). HR:Springer (1), off C.Young. Col.Rasmus (1), off Madson. K.Morales 2 (2), off McHugh 2. RBIs:Altuve (1), Springer (1), Col.Rasmus 2 (2), Gattis (1), K.Morales 2 (2). SB:Col.Rasmus (1), Zobrist (1). CS:Altuve (1). RISP:Houston 5 (Valbuena 2, Springer, J.Castro, Correa). Kansas City 3 (Hosmer 2, Zobrist). RISP:Houston 2 for 10. Kansas City 0 for 5. RMU:Altuve, Col.Rasmus, Gattis. GIDP:J.Castro. DP:Kansas City 1 (Zobrist, A.Escobar, Hosmer). Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McHugh W, 1-0 6 4 2 2 1 1 92 3.00 Sipp H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 17 0.00 W.Harris H, 1 ⅔ 2 0 0 0 1 17 0.00 O.Perez H, 1 ⅓ 0 0 0 0 0 3 0.00 Gregerson S, 1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 0.00 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ventura L, 0-1 2 4 3 3 1 2 42 13.50 C.Young 4 3 1 1 2 7 70 2.25 K.Herrera 1 1 0 0 0 2 12 0.00 Madson 1 2 1 1 0 3 16 9.00 Hochevar 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 0.00 IRS:O.Perez 2-0. HBP:by Gregerson (Moustakas). Umpires:Home, Lance Barksdale. First, Angel Hernandez. Second, Mike Everitt. Third, Ron Kulpa. Left, Gerry Davis. Right, Todd Tichenor. T:3:14 (Delay: 0:49). A:40,146 (37,903).
WVC FIELD HOCKEY DIVISION 1 Coughlin Valley West Hazleton Area Pittston Area Delaware Valley Honesdale Wallenpaupack DIVISION 2 Crestwood Dallas Abington Heights Tunkhannock Berwick DIVISION 3 Lake-Lehman Wyoming Area Holy Redeemer Nanticoke Area GAR Hanover Area DIVISION 4 Wyoming Seminary Lackawanna Trail Northwest Meyers Elk Lake
W 9 6 4 3 2 2 0 W 7 3 3 2 0 W 8 10 5 3 3 2 W 5 6 3 3 0
L 0 2 3 3 5 7 6 L 0 2 4 4 6 L 0 2 5 5 9 8 L 2 1 3 4 8
T 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 T 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0
L 2 7 7 L 0 1 3 2 2 5 6 5 8 10 L 4 3 7 9
T 0 0 1 T 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 1 1 T 1 0 0 0
WVC BOYS SOCCER DIVISION 1 Valley West Hazleton Area Pittston Area DIVISION 2 Coughlin Lake-Lehman Tunkhannock Dallas Crestwood Nanticoke Area GAR Wyoming Area Berwick Hanover Area DIVISION 3 Wyoming Seminary Holy Redeemer Meyers MMI Prep
W 8 2 0 W 11 10 7 6 6 6 4 2 1 0 W 7 6 4 1
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 35
DIVISION 1 Valley West Pittston Area Hazleton Area DIVISION 2 Coughlin Dallas Holy Redeemer Crestwood Nanticoke Area Lake-Lehman Wyoming Area Berwick Hanover Area Tunkhannock GAR DIVISION 3 Meyers Wyoming Seminary
COLTS 27, TEXANS 20 Indianapolis ............10 3 7 7 — 27 Houston .................0 10 7 3 — 20 First Quarter Ind — FG Vinatieri 48, 6:28. Ind — A.Johnson 4 pass from Hasselbeck (Vinatieri kick), 1:22. Second Quarter Ind — FG Vinatieri 42, 7:37. Hou — FG Novak 36, 2:08. Hou — Strong 42 pass from Hoyer (Novak kick), :00. Third Quarter Ind — Gore 3 run (Vinatieri kick), 13:02. Hou — Strong 11 pass from Hoyer (Novak kick), 4:03. Fourth Quarter Ind — A.Johnson 2 pass from Hasselbeck (Vinatieri kick), 10:28. Hou — FG Novak 49, 6:07. Ind Hou First downs 22 24 Total Net Yards 323 444 Rushes-yards 30-110 28-82 Passing 213 362 Punt Returns 2-16 2-11 Kickoff Returns 2-74 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-29-0 31-41-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 1-0 Punts 3-49.0 3-41.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-65 13-125 Time of Possession 27:33 32:27 RUSHING — Indianapolis, Gore 22-98, Tipton 2-9, Robinson 3-6, Hasselbeck 3-(minus 3). Houston, Foster 19-41, Blue 6-22, Hoyer 1-14, Polk 1-5, Mallett 1-0. PASSING — Indianapolis, Hasselbeck 18-29-0213. Houston, Hoyer 24-31-1-312, Mallett 7-10-1-50. RECEIVING — Indianapolis, A.Johnson 6-77, Hilton 5-88, Fleener 2-9, Allen 1-21, Dorsett 1-9, Robinson 1-6, Moncrief 1-3, Doyle 1-0. Houston, Hopkins 11-169, Foster 9-77, Mumphery 4-23, Strong 2-53, Polk 2-17, Blue 1-11, Graham 1-8, Fiedorowicz 1-4.
POSTSEASON BASEBALL
RADIO / TV
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
THE LINE BASEBALL Favorite Points Underdog American League Division Series BLUE JAYS -$140 (8) Rangers American League Division Series ROYALS -$140 (8) Astros National League Division Series CARDS -$110 (6) Cubs National League Division Series National League DODGERS -$200 (5½) Mets Series price: Cards -$110 vs. Cubs -$110 Dodgers -$190 vs. Mets +$170 NOTE:The number inside the bracket is the over/under run total for the game. NFL Favorite Points O/U Underdog Sunday BUCS 3 (42½) Jaguars Bills 2½ (42½) TITANS RAVENS 7 (43½) Browns FALCONS 7 (48) Washington CHIEFS 9 (45½) Bears EAGLES 5 (49) Saints PACKERS 9½ (46½) Rams BENGALS 3 (43) Seahawks Cards 3 (44) LIONS Patriots 8½ (49½) COWBOYS Broncos 5 (43½) RAIDERS GIANTS 7 (43) 49ers Monday CHARGERS 3 (45½) Steelers Bye week: Panthers, Dolphins, Vikings, Jets. College Football Favorite Points O/U Underdog MARSHALL 5 (56½) So Miss VA TECH 1½ (46½) Nc State Saturday d-Oklahoma 17 (60.0) Texas Minnesota 3 (46.0) PURDUE 7½ (53½) E MICHIGAN Akron W VIRGINIA 6½ (60½) Oklahoma St PENN ST 6½ (54½) Indiana Duke 13 (48½) ARMY TEMPLE 15½ (46½) Tulane IOWA 11 (47.0) Illinois OHIO ST 33 (54½) Maryland BOSTON COLL 8 (36½) Wake Forest OHIO U 16 (48.0) Miami-Ohio TOLEDO 15 (44.0) Kent St NO ILLINOIS 10½ (57.0) Ball St App’chian St 16 (60½) GEORGIA ST PITTSBURGH 10 (46½) Virginia W MICHIGAN 7 (50½) C Michigan ALABAMA 16½ (48½) Arkansas AIR FORCE 23½ (56½) Wyoming BOWL GREEN 13½ (79½) U Mass MISS ST 30½ (55½) Troy MISSISSIPPI 44½ (67½) New Mexico St BYU 8 (56½) E Carolina Baylor 44 (78½) KANSAS FLA ATLANTIC 3½ (58½) Rice OREGON 17 (71.0) Wash St Georgia 3 (59½) TENNESSEE W KENTUCKY 8 (69½) Mid Tenn St TULSA 9½ (68½) UL-Monroe NOTRE DAME 14½ (56.0) Navy ARIZONA ST 15 (55½) Colorado FLORIDA ST 9 (50½) Miami-Fla MICHIGAN 7½ (35½) Northwestern CLEMSON 7 (54½) Ga Tech UL-LAFAYETTE 4 (71½) Texas St UTAH 7½ (61½) California C FLORIDA 2½ (38½) Connecticut FLA INT’L 14½ (44½) Utep La Tech 11 (57½) UTSA Boise St 15½ (59½) COLORADO ST Florida 4½ (39½) MISSOURI b-Lsu 19½ (50.0) S CAROLINA ARIZONA 10 (62½) Oregon St S FLORIDA 2½ (47½) Syracuse Tcu 10 (63½) KANSAS ST TEXAS TECH 11½ (73½) Iowa St Michigan St 13½ (54½) RUTGERS NEBRASKA 1½ (48½) Wisconsin NEVADA 5½ (53½) New Mexico San Jose St 3 (50½) UNLV Utah St 11½ (47½) FRESNO ST HAWAII 2½ (45½) San Diego St d- Dallas, TX. b- Baton Rouge, LA. Home team in CAPS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
36 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
JOE KNOWS POCONO Friday, Oct. 9
By JOE yANDOLI
Post Time: 6:30 p.m.
Best Bet: Race 10 No. 5 STACIA HANOVER Skinny: Filly has been rock-solid of late winning her last start in 1:50:3 commandingly. She already earned an impressive $154K with a stellar career mark of 1:49:2 to go with it. Value Horse: Race 11 No. 7 RACER X Skinny: Trotter might not show quick gate speed but he can bring it home in the stretch. Oakes claimed him for a bargain $15K and put him right back in where he can contend. First 5000CL $4,500 Pace 1 Sheer Desire (Si Allard) 2 Eyes Only For You (Th Jackson) 3 Major Way (Ji Taggart Jr) 4 Priceless Edition (An Napolitano) 5 Philana Chalice (Jo Cummings Jr) 6 Majo Just Do It (Ja Morrill Jr) 7 Willy Mucha (Jo Pavia Jr) 8 Brandons Escape (Mi Simons) 9 Ty’s A Big Star (Jo Kakaley)
7-2 8-1 15-1 3-1 9-2 20-1 6-1 4-1 10-1
Second 11000CL3-5 $9,000 Pace 1 Ring Warrior (An Napolitano) 2 Traffic Cop (Ke Wallis) 3 Finntastic (Jo Kakaley) 4 Allie’s Dragon (Ja Morrill Jr) 5 Ff Bigshow (Jo Pavia Jr) 6 Undisputed Truth (Mi Simons) 7 Lynyrd (Ji Taggart Jr) 8 Sage Ruck (Th Jackson) 9 Good Citations (Si Allard)
12-1 5-1 20-1 8-1 4-1 6-1 15-1 7-2 5-2
Third nw3000L5 $8,500 Trot 1 Ellabunda (Th Jackson) 2 Silverhill Volo (Ja Morrill Jr) 3 Dreams Of Thunder (Ge Sholty) 4 Mistletoe Hanover (Jo Cummings Jr) 5 Warrawee Olay (Ji Taggart Jr) 6 Naughty Not Nice (Jo Pavia Jr) 7 G Force Hanover (Mi Simons) 8 Dream Defence N (Si Allard) 9 Marathon Man (Ke Wallis)
8-1 3-1 9-2 10-1 6-1 20-1 15-1 4-1 7-2
Fourth Mnw3750L5 $8,500 Pace 1 Love Live Laugh (An Napolitano) 2 Last Minute Cindy (Mi Simons) 3 Harper Lee (Du Blumenfeld) 4 Brooklyns Best (Ja Morrill Jr) 5 Franciegirl (Jo Pavia Jr) 6 Dragon Princess (Si Allard) 7 Highly Thought Of (Ji Taggart Jr) 8 Park N Orchard (Ke Wallis) 9 Galarina (Ri Wojcio)
4-1 7-2 15-1 9-2 10-1 6-1 8-1 3-1 20-1
Fifth 11000CL3-5 $9,000 Trot 1 Columbia Lion (Jo Kakaley) 2 Drama Free (Si Allard) 3 Wheels Ah Smokin (Jo Cummings Jr)
4-1 3-1 10-1
9 Kingofthejungle (Ja Morrill Jr)
12-1
Tenth Mnw22500L5 $24,000 Pace 1 Handsoffmycupcake (Pa Berry) 2 The Summer Wind (Ja Marohn Jr) 3 Fancy Desire (An Napolitano) 4 The Real Tone (Si Allard) 5 Stacia Hanover (Ja Morrill Jr) 6 Gallie Bythe Beach (Mi Simons) 7 Sayitall Bb (Jo Bongiorno)
12-1 8-1 3-1 7-2 5-2 6-1 9-2
Eleventh 12500CLHC $12,000 Trot 1 Berkshire (Jo Bongiorno) 2 Gj Photo Victory (Ja Morrill Jr) 3 Muscle Massacre (Mi Simons) 4 Capriccio Hanover (An Napolitano) 5 Upfrontstrikesgold (Jo Pavia Jr) 6 Hesgotlegs (Ja Marohn Jr) 7 Racer X (Ke Wallis) 8 Special Action (Th Jackson) 9 Life Dream Hanover (Si Allard)
5-1 3-1 20-1 10-1 12-1 15-1 4-1 6-1 5-2
Twelfth nw3000L5 $8,500 Pace 1 Smile A Little (Ja Morrill Jr) 2 Brody Hanover (Jo Cummings Jr) 3 P H Powerplay (Mi Simons) 4 Must Be The Bunny (Du Blumenfeld) 5 Rock Three Times (Ji Taggart Jr) 6 Bobbies Cruiser (An Napolitano) 7 Eagle Artesian (Ri Wojcio) 8 Thetruthaboutdavid (Ke Wallis) 9 Windmill Shark (Th Jackson)
7-2 8-1 10-1 9-2 3-1 4-1 6-1 15-1 20-1 3-1 7-2 6-1 4-1 9-2 10-1 8-1 15-1 20-1 4-1 3-1 9-2 15-1 7-2 6-1 8-1 10-1 20-1
4 Gray N Cloudy (Ja Morrill Jr) 5 Overgrown (Jo Pavia Jr) 6 Sj’s Encore (An Napolitano) 7 Donato’s Wish (Ke Wallis) 8 Shimmering Crown (Th Jackson) 9 Hall Of Muscles (Mi Simons)
5-2 6-1 15-1 12-1 20-1 5-1
Sixth nw3000L5 $8,500 Pace 1 Morgan Shark (Mi Simons) 2 Tidewater Teddy (Jo Bongiorno) 3 Four Starzzz Z (Jo Pavia Jr) 4 Intheblinkofaneye (Si Allard) 5 Legacy N Diamonds (Ke Wallis) 6 Hez A Buckeye (An Napolitano) 7 Knocking Around (Ri Wojcio) 8 Major Marcus (Th Jackson) 9 Mystical Walter (Ja Morrill Jr)
10-1 6-1 5-2 3-1 12-1 4-1 15-1 20-1 5-1
Seventh nw4500L5 $9,000 Trot 1 Hall Pass Helen (Si Allard) 2 Sharp Edge (Jo Bongiorno) 3 Smokin Dabra (Ke Wallis) 4 Winding Hill (Ja Morrill Jr) 5 Meadowview Arty (An Napolitano) 6 Merited Victory (Ji Taggart Jr) 7 My Heidi (Th Jackson) 8 Keystone Boca (Jo Pavia Jr) 9 Chaplin Hall (Mi Simons)
4-1 5-2 6-1 3-1 5-1 20-1 15-1 12-1 10-1
Thirteenth Mnw3750L5 $8,500 Pace 1 Lizzie’s Dream (Th Jackson) 2 Janie Bay (Ja Marohn Jr) 3 Kitti Place (Jo Pavia Jr) 4 Oceans Motion (An Napolitano) 5 Royal Engagement (Ji Taggart Jr) 6 Highland Black Ice (Mi Simons) 7 Three To Dance (Jo Bongiorno) 8 Runaway Tray (Ri Wojcio) 9 Kayla’s Dream (Ke Wallis)
Eighth 11000CL3-5 $9,000 Pace 1 Walking Tall (An Napolitano) 2 Pistol Petesdragon (Ke Wallis) 3 Cotton Eyed Joe (Jo Pavia Jr) 4 Dashpedia (Ji Taggart Jr) 5 Capelo (Th Jackson) 6 Its A Big Secret (Ja Morrill Jr) 7 Dragon Wings (Jo Antonelli) 8 Machmillions (Si Allard) 9 Scootchie (Mi Simons)
7-2 20-1 9-2 6-1 8-1 4-1 15-1 3-1 10-1
Ninth nw4500L5 $9,000 Pace 1 Johnny Come Lately (Jo Bongiorno) 2 David On Ice (Mi Simons) 3 Glammit (Jo Pavia Jr) 4 Rescue Plan (Ke Wallis) 5 Fateful Choice (Si Allard) 6 Fall Toy (An Napolitano) 7 A Stitch In Time (Ja Marohn Jr) 8 Bruisen N Cruisen (Th Jackson)
Fourteenth nw3000L5 $8,500 Trot 1 Itsmrbellatou (Ja Morrill Jr) 2 Please Okay (Jo Cummings Jr) 3 Cuda Sixty Six (Th Jackson) 4 Driven (Ja Marohn Jr) 5 Enough About You (To Schadel) 6 Red Maple Lane (Mi Simons) 7 Miss Wapwallopen (Ho Parker) 8 Live Jazz (Ji Taggart Jr) 9 Browner Shuttle (Ke Wallis)
4-1 15-1 10-1 6-1 5-2 3-1 5-1 20-1
BEER BELLIES 26-28 Dexter St., Hanover Twp. 829-9183
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC SAT. - OCT. 10TH - 2:00PM
AT FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 35 WYOMING AVENUE, WEST PITTSTON DOORS OPEN AT 1:00 TO VIEW TEA TABLES
$6.00 TICKETS AT THE DOOR TEAS & REFRESHMENTS SERVED LIVE ENTERTAINMENT WITH RAGTIME RICK PEDRO (OUR OWN VICTOR BORGIA)
EVERYONE WELCOME! NO RESERVATIONS REQUIRED!
WHITEHOUSE DINER 105 WELLES STREET, FORTY-FORT • (570) 287-9455
JEFF PIAZZA, PROPRIETOR
FEATURING HOME MADE COMFORT FOODS SERVING BREAKFAST & LUNCH MONDAY - SATURDAY 6AM - 2PM
WB_VOICE - DLY - 36 - 10/09/15
Meetings
annual Dr. George Moses golf tournament is set for Oct. 18 at Sand Springs Country Club. Cost is $75. Tournament is sponsored by the Wyoming Valley Athletic Association. Shotgun start at 1 p.m. For more information, call Jack Monick at 570-6478010 or John Zimich at 570829-1086.
board of directors meets 6 p.m. Sunday at the Forty Fort borough building.
TournamenT: The third
TournamenT: The 22nd
annual “Turkey Shoot” golf tournament will be held Oct. 17 at Hollenback Golf Club. Shotgun start at 9 a.m. Cost is $25 per person. Register by calling 570-821-1169. Full payment due Oct. 15.
HoLe-In-one: Dr. Santo
Lafoca, Pittston, recorded a hole-in-one Oct. 2 at Huntsville Golf Club in Lehman. He aced the 5th hole using a 6-iron. His shot was witnessed by Charlie Gelso and Frank Pinnacoli.
LISPI LOUNGE (Across from Mohegan Sun)
DJMIXEDEMOTIONS $1.25 Draft Beer til 10
Sunday-Karaoke w/ DJ WJOY
Lager Drafts $1.75-Doz. Wings $6.50 HAPPY HOUR 5-7 P.M.
C&D Seafood
DJYuengs VENOM X & Wings
Vino Dolce
italian RestauRant & BaR
NEW FALL MENU! 824 Sans Souci Pky. Hanover Twp. 824-4055 • Open Mon. - Sat. 5pm www.vino-dolce.com
BORDERLINE TAVERN FRIDAY NIGHT!
FREE JUKEBOX FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS ALL WEEKEND!
Fresh or Frozen 722 W-B TWP. BLVD. “By the Big Cow”
HARDSHELL CRAB AVAILABLE HARDSHELL CLAWS $
319 McAlpine St., AvocA (570) 471-3801 34 ORCHARD STREET GLEN LYON 570-736-6600 NOW OPEN
PIZZA - WINGS - CHEESE STEAKS - & MUCH MORE! NASCAR SUNDAYS - FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS
/LB. (while 2.99 supplies last)
WHITE LITTLENECK CLAMS $ 12.99 /PER 50 X-LARGE (31-35 CT.) SHRIMP $
OPEN TUES-SAT @4PM, CLOSED SUNDAY
LYON’S DEN We Will Be Back at the Wyoming Valley Mall Every Weekend FREEFRIDAY JUKEBOX - SPECIAL for the Fall & Winter Season Serving FULL TRAY & ORDER HOMEMADE SOUPS and MORE! OF WINGS - $14.95
CATERING AVAILABLE 7-DAYS A WEEK
Golf
FRIDAY
11am-2am 7 Days A Week - Kitchen Hrs: 11am-12:45am
ANNUAL AUTUMN TEA
PLAyBOOK
10.99 /LB.
OYSTER CHOWDER $
3.99 /PT.
FRIED CRAB CAKE PLATTER $
4.99 PLUS TAX
WE ACCEPT MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS & THE ACCESS CARD Hours Wed. 9-5, Thurs. & Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-4
Rt. 309, Wilkes-Barre Twp.
570-822-8222
Not responsible for typographical errors.
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T36] | 10/08/15
KIngsTon/ForTy ForT: LL
Registrations
BasKeTBaLL: A winter league for 5th and 6th grade boys and girls begins Dec. 6. School teams, all-star teams and travel teams welcome. For more information, call 570-817-2101.
Camps
soFTBaLL: Misericordia will host an elite softball camp noon to 4 Sunday. Cost is $75. For more information, contact Misericordia head coach Lindsay Freitag at lfreitag@misericordia.edu or 570-674-3066.
Events
WIne TasTIng: NEPA Wild-
cats softball will host a wine tasting benefit noon to 4 Sunday at Maiolatesi Wine Cellar BasKeTBaLL: Kingston Rec is in Scott Township. Cost is accepting registrations for the $20. Tickets are available in Willie Obremski Memorial Bas- advance or at the door. For ketball League, open to ages 5 more information, contact Vic through 18. For more informa- at 570-351-5187 or Rick at 570-766-9679. tion, call 570-287-1106.
Tryouts
FLag FooTBaLL: An adult
Sunday at the Nanticoke Area Little League Field. For more information, call 570-9025198.
Cost is $160 per team. For more information, call Dwight at 570-417-2797. Deadline is Oct. 19.
flag football tournament will
soFTBaLL: PA Fusion 11 a.m. be held Oct. 24-25 in Noxen.
COAL CITY BUDDS TAVERN PIZZA Lunch...Fri-Sun open @11:30am
$8 Yuengling Beer Batter Fish
Happy Hour 5pm - 7pm Banquet Room Available For Catering And Events. 75 Main St., Luzerne • (570) 338-2301 Like us on Facebook
134 Page Ave., Kingston Open 11am Full Menu & Bar 570-285-3555
DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS (11-3) $1 A SLICE OF PIZZA $5.99 (12”) SM. PIE W/1 TOPPING ON STAGE TONIGHT!
JOE TELLIE (7-9) Daily Happy Hour 1-3pm
$1.50 Domestic Pts., $2 Well Drinks & Bottles
KARAOKE 9PM IN GAME ROOM
Pasquale’s 6 STRING SALOON 1190 Sans Souci Pkwy., W-B 823-5606
EARLY BIRD
3:30PM-5:30PM $9.95 CHICKEN PARM W/ SPAGHETTI BREADED HADDOCK
SCALLOPS CARBONARA PORK OSSO BUCCO Private Room Available
1474 SAN SOUCI PARKWAY 570-824-2337
CRUISE CONTROL 9:30PM-12:30PM
$1.00 OFF ALL DRAFTS 5PM-7PM
$1.50 HAMBURGERS $3.00 WELL VODKA BOMBS NFL SUNDAY TICKET IS HERE!
BINGO
SUNDAY, OCT. 1OTH AT 3PM OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE 200 E. DIVISION ST., WB (570) 829-3563
MAGIC # 125 COVERALL 48/$125 LCB RULES APPLY
BRING THIS AD FOR 1 FREE BINGO CARD
18:56 | REESERJAME
DALLAS AMERICAN LEGION
2014 SAUCE CRISNICS IRISH PUB WARS WINNER
THE BANDS ARE BACK!
PAN ROASTED HALIBUT
FUNKEES
SCALLOP CAKE
MEMORIAL HWY., DALLAS - 570-675-6542
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10TH 8 PM - MIDNIGHT
EVERYONE WELCOME -- JOIN AS A SOCIAL MEMBER
CHACKO’S
FAMILY BOWLING CENTER 195 N. WILKES-BARRE BLVD. 570-208-BOWL
IN MEMORY LANE LOUNGE TONIGHT
JEANNE ZANO BAND (9:30) STAND BAC
(9:30)
www.chackosfamilybo-wlingcenter.com
HAYSTACKS 2271 San Souci Pkwy. 570-735-1314
116 Wilkes Barre Twp. Blvd. 570-822-4474
Open: Mon. - Sat. 7am to 9 pm; Sun. 7 am to 7 pm
W/FRESH DILL OVER SAUTEED SHRIMP
NY STRIP STEAK FORESTIERE FAT TIRE
CLASSIC ROCK EXPRESS
OPEN LANES ALL NIGHT
DINNER SPECIALS
W/REMOULADE SAUCE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17TH
SATURDAY NIGHT
189 BARNEY ST., W-B 823-5199 - FRIDAY HH 5-7
$5.00 OFF
Bring in this ad! Expires 10/31/2015 Can not be used on Breakfast Special or 2 for $22.00 Special. Open MON-SAT 7 AM to 9 PM Sunday 7 AM to 7 PM
FRIDAY -2 Doz. Steamed Clams $5.99 - ½Lb. Lobster Tail Dinner Stuffed Haddock-Shrimp in a Basket & LASAGNA WEEKEND Slow Roasted PRIME RIB Dinner & Lobster & MORE!! “NEW”: Breakfast SPECIALS: Mon-Fri 7 am to10 am only 2 Eggs, Toast, Home Fries & Coffee $4.59 or Cheese Omelet, Toast, Home Fries & Coffee $4.59
STEGMAIER PUMPKIN - SBC PUMPKIN ON TAP
WATCH ALL THE GAMES HERE WITH SOUND ON 16 TV’s SATURDAY INDIANA VS PENN STATE @ NOON NAVY VS NOTRE DAME @ 3:30PM
STUCKER TOURS 570-655-8458
www.stuckertours.com OCTOBERFEST WOODLOCH PINES BEER/WINE Incl......................... 10/21 $89 ATLANTIC CITY OVERNITE - BALLYS ACCOM .$110.00 REBATE = $55.00 IN SLOTS/FOOD TURNING STONE 11/8-11/9............... $199 KOZIAR CHRISTMAS VILLAGE & VALLEY FORGE/BOSCOV FARMERS MARKET 11/14................... $79
RADIO CITY XMAS SHOW .............11/28 $139.............11/30 $115
Sizzling Saturdays! 2 for 7 at
VICTORY PIG PIZZA
905 WYOMING AVE., WYOMING (570) 693-9963 ACROSS FROM THE MIDWAY SHOPPING CENTER Open Wed. - Fri. - Sat. 4:30-11pm FOR EVERY 7 CUTS OF PIZZA PURCHASED
GET 2 CUTS FREE!! Offer Only Good With This Ad On
Alexis Tavern Pi z za 822-1082 1440 S. Main St., Hanover Twp.
2LARGE16”PIES$14.99 12CUTSICILIAN$8.99 BUDWEISER/COORSPINTS$1.50
Party Pricing:
YUENGLING OKTOBERFEST
You Save $4.50
$
21.87
+tax! Now thru Sunday
COLD CASE BEVERAGE 1712 WYOMING AVE., EXETER 570 655-BEER
OVERBROOK PUB & GRILLE WEEKEND SPECIALS
DRY AGED NEW YORK STRIP BRONZINO PUMPKIN CREME BRULEE 259 OVERBROOK RD, DALLAS 675-2727
Hours: Mon. Closed; Tues. - Thurs. 4-10; Fri. & Sat. 12-11; Sun. 12-9
BREWS BROTHERS
SPORTS BAR & GRILL www.brewsbrothersbar.com 1705 River St., PITTSTON - 883-0444
OPEN DAILY @ 4PM - SUNDAYS @ NOON FOR FOOTBALL!
LIVE MUSIC IS BACK EVERY FRIDAY @ BREWS FRIDAY 9PM-MIDNIGHT
THE LEGENDARY
ERIC RUDY
NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS SERVING FULL DINNER AND BAR MENU - CALL (570)883-0444 WEDENSDAY - CLAM NIGHT $4.95 DOZ.
PATTE’S
SPORTS BAR & RESTAURANT 65 W. Hollenback Ave., Wilkes-Barre 824-8015 WEEKEND DINNER SPECIALS
MONDAY & TUESDAY 2 Can Dine for $22.00 + FREE Dessert WEDNESDAY Fresh Seafood-Clams-Fish&Chips&more! THURSDAY Home Style Food
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10TH, 2015
Newtown Cafe Open Friday @ Noon & Saturday @ 2:00
FLAHERTY’S
WEEKEND SPECIALS
BAR & KITCHEN OPEN AT 3PM KITCHEN OPEN NIGHTLY UNTIL 1AM
BAKED EGGPLANT ROLLATINI
DJ ICE...9PM - MIDNIGHT
FRESH ROASTED TURKEY W/MASHED POTATOES, HOMEMADE STUFFING, GRAVY, VEG & CRANBERRY SAUCE
HAPPY HOUR MON - FRI, 3PM TO 5PM. REDUCED DRINK PRICES
FRESH BREADED HADDOCK
724 Hazle St., Ashley 570-824-5054
SERVED WITH SALAD & GARLIC BREAD
BREADED SHRIMP & SCALLOPS SERVED WITH FRENCH FRIES & COLESLAW SAT/SUN ONLY
CALL AHEAD FOR TAKE-OUTS!
SATURDAY
INDIANA VS. PENN STATE W/SOUND@ 12 PM
SATURDAY
NAVY VS. NOTRE DAME W/SOUND@ 3:30 PM
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIALS!! 3 FISH TACOS $7.95 12 RHODE ISLAND CLAMS $5.95 W/A SIDE OF OLD BAY COLESLAW 12 OLD BAY SHRIMP $6.95 6 CLAMS CASINO $7.25 5 DIFFERENT SIZE LOBSTER TO CHOSE FROM STARTING FROM $16.95 TO $31.95
NEW SATURDAY & SUNDAY KICK OFF SPECIAL HAPPY HOUR!! NOON - 2 PM
REDUCED DRINK & FOOD PRICES FOOD SPECIAL NOON - 3PM- 50¢ WINGS, $7 1LB BONELESS WINGS
275 Zerby
ave,
Kingston 288-2967
KEELEY’S ALE HOUSE & GRILLE The CheCkerboard Inn 199 Division St., Pringle - 570-287-1500 “It’s About Great Food and Friendly People”
CHICKEN FRIED SHRIMP & GRITS MEDITERRANEAN SAUSAGE FLAT BREAD 10 OZ PORK T BONE W/ROASTED APPLES & POTATOES
ON & OFF PREMISE CATERING HAPPY HOUR MON.-FRI. 5-7PM $1.75 BUD LIGHT & COORS LIGHT PINTS Delivery Available - Hrs: Mon, Tues, Weds 4-CL Th-Sunday 11-CL
WB_VOICE - DLY - 37 - 10/09/15
WEEKEND SPECIALS
HOLIDAY STYLE TURKEY DINNER (FRIDAY ONLY)
W/ HOMEMADE TARTAR SAUCE
WATCH MEYERS VS. HANOVER @7:00PM BUD LIGHT PINTS $1.75 (ALL DAY)
W-B AMERICAN LEGION BINGO FRIDAY NIGHT BINGO! 45 North River Street, Wilkes-Barre
DOORS OPEN 4:00 PM FREE H.C. 5:00-5:30 H.C. SPEED GAMES & LIGHTNING 5:30-6:30 EARLY BIRD 6:30 PM - REGULARS 6:35 PM
JACKPOT #1 $500 JACKPOT #2 50/$1,000 $100 EVERY GAME
PULLED PORK ON 6” HOAGIE BUN
BONANZA GUARANTEED $200
CHICKEN DIANE
FRI. NOVEMBER 6TH SAVE THE DATE!
SMOTHERED WITH A TANGY BBQ SAUCE & SERVED WITH FRENCH FRIES OR CHIPS
SAUTEED CHICKEN W/ MUSHROOMS, GREEN ONIONS, BRANDY,SHERRY HEAVY CREAM SERVED WITH 2 SIDES Catering Off-Site & Private Banquet Room Available
570-696-1648 - 570-696-4545 www.checkerboardinn.com BOOKING CHRISTMAS PARTIES
(2) $1,000 JP PARTY
FOR MORE INFO OR RESERVATIONS, CALL (570) 823-8305 NEW TRANSPORTATION SERVICE AVAILABLE: CALL CHARLOTTE 570-831-5057 Wilkes-Barre and surrounding areas pick up starts at 4:30. Due to PA Indoor Clean Air Act, We Are A Smoke-Free Facility. ALL PROCEEDS BENEFIT THE W-B AMERICAN LEGION
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [T37] | 10/08/15
18:08 | BAIRDATHLE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 37
WEEKEND SPECIALS
385 Carverton Road, Trucksville Daily Happy Hour 5-7 & Dinner Specials OPEN SATURDAYS & SUNDAYS AT NOON - SMOKE FREE ESTABLISHMENT!
SEAFOOD FRA DIAVOLO
SAUTEED SHRIMP, FRESH CLAMS & MUSSELS IN A SPICY RED SAUCE SERVED OVER RIGATONI
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
2 REGULAR PIES AND 20PC WINGS $25.50
(One Coupon Per Person, Per Transaction)
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
38 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
SPORTS ON TAP
TODAY’S LOCAL SCHEDULE District 2 Golf Team Championships at Fox Hill Country Club Class AA Wyoming Seminary vs. Forest City, 9 Class AAA Crestwood vs. Wallenpaupack, 9 High School Football Hazleton Area at Crestwood, 7 Williamsport at Coughlin, 7 Dallas at Valley West, 7 Pittston Area at Tunkhannock, 7 Berwick at Wyoming Area, 7 Northwest at Nanticoke Area, 7 GAR at Lake-Lehman, 7 Meyers at Hanover Area, 7 Prep Football Wyoming Seminary at Poly Prep, 7 WVC Boys Soccer Tunkhannock at Coughlin, 4:15 Wyoming Area at Hanover Area, 4:15 Dallas at Holy Redeemer, 4:15 Berwick at Meyers, 4:15 Nanticoke Area at MMI Prep, 4:15 WVC Girls Soccer Coughlin at Tunkhannock, 4:15 Holy Redeemer at Dallas, 4:15 Hanover Area at Wyoming Area, 4:15 Meyers at Berwick, 4:15 Colleges Women’s Volleyball Misericordia vs. New Jersey City, 6 AHL Penguins at Providence, 7:05
ONLINE DIRECTORY
Blogs at citizensvoice.com Penguins Insider: Seth Lakso provides breaking news, off-the-beaten-path nuggets and insightful analysis. Blog, Sweat & Tears: Donnie Collins keeps you up to date on Penn State. Twitter @cvgameface: High school scores and updates @SportsCV: Scores, updates and links for all sports @CVSteveBennett: High school sports and more from staff writer Steve Bennett @CVSethLakso: WBS Penguins news and analysis from staff writer Seth Lakso @CVBufano: High school sports and more from staff writer Matt Bufano
CONTACT US
Jim Reeser, Sports editor 570-821-2065 jreeser@citizensvoice.com Michael Cignoli, Sports copy editor 570-821-2063 mcignoli@citizensvoice.com Tyler Piccotti, Sports copy editor 570-821-2089 tpiccotti@citizensvoice.com Steve Bennett, Sports writer 570-821-2062 sbennett@citizensvoice.com Matt Bufano, Sports writer 570-821-2060 mbufano@citizensvoice.com Seth Lakso, Sports writer 570-821-2083 slakso@citizensvoice.com Sports email: sports@citizensvoice.com Fax number : 570-821-2247
WB_VOICE - DLY - 38 - 10/09/15
Americans race to early Presidents Cup lead
By Doug Ferguson Associated Press
INCHEON, South Korea — The Presidents Cup wasn’t an hour old when Nick Price looked at the scoreboard and had that sinking feeling. It was filled with American red. And there wasn’t much Price or the International team could do about it Thursday in an opening session just like so many others in this one-sided affair. Phil Mickelson and Zach Johnson capped off a performance that was as businesslike as their handshakes, and the Americans had a 4-1 lead after foursomes in which they never trailed in any match except the one they lost. “A tough day for us,” Price said. “Having said that, we are only five points into 30. We still have another 25 points left out there. So we’ve got a long way to go, and that’s that I told my team. Just to keep their chins up and do the best they can tomorrow.” The International team was adamant that the number of matches be reduced — it was lowered from 34 to 30 — to keep it a close contest. After one day, maybe having one less match on Thursday helped. It could have been worse. The Americans, who have lost the Presidents Cup only one time since it began in 1994 and
WOOHAE CHO / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Phil Mickelson, right, and Zach Johnson shake hands after winning their foursome match at the Presidents Cup on Thursday in Incheon, South Korea. are going for their sixth straight victory, had a lead after the opening session for the fifth straight time. The margin was their largest since a four-point lead in 2007 at Royal Montreal. That makes the five matches of fourballs today even more critical. U.S. captain Jay Haas put Jordan Spieth and Dustin Johnson in the first match, followed by Rickie Fowler and Jimmy Walker. “He’s going for the kill,” Price said. “If we get momentum going, it can change things.” All the momentum belonged to the Americans on Thursday.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Penguins sign Gill to AHL contract
Sahir Gill’s solid preseason has been rewarded. The center signed an AHL contract with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins on Thursday. Gill recorded four points in four preseason games with the Penguins. He was originally released from his tryout, but was brought back when Pittsburgh called up veteran Kevin Porter ahead of its season opener on Thursday in Dallas. Pittsburgh also sent center Oskar Sundqvist back to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and recalled defenseman Olli Matta in expected, salary-cap-related moves. Wilkes-Barre/Scranton plays Providence tonight. — Staff report
Commission bands 5,500 pheasants Hunters who bag a pheasant with a leg band can help the Pennsylvania Game Commission compute harvest rates by telephoning a toll-free number on the bands. While doing the first harvest survey of farmraised pheasants since 1998, the commission this fall banded 5,500 pheasants and released another 200,000 birds from farms. Pheasant season begins on Oct. 24. For junior hunters, the season starts this Saturday. — Staff report
Bubba Watson and J.B. Holmes ran off four straight birdies early in their match against Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama, and that set the tone. They wound up winning a tight match when Scott and Matsuyama missed key putts and ended it on the 16th hole. “That was my whole goal,” Watson said. “Get out there fast, change the color so the other guys see that and it sparks them going forward.” Watson and Holmes didn’t deliver the first point. That came from Fowler and Walker, who are unbeaten as a team but
picked up their first win. They halved their three matches at the Ryder Cup last year. The lone International victory came from Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace of South Africa, who took advantage of some sloppy play by Matt Kuchar and Patrick Reed in a 3-and-2 victory. Grace went 0-4 in his Presidents Cup debut two years ago, and the South Africans gave the International team at least some hope. “I know we’re behind,” Grace said, glancing at a scoreboard behind him. “But one point is better than none.” The Americans got help from top to bottom. Spieth, coming off a year of two majors, the FedEx Cup and the No. 1 ranking, and Dustin Johnson made for a formidable duo. They set the tone early when Spieth holed a 20-foot birdie putt on No. 2, and Johnson stepped up on the next hole and hammered a tee shot nearly 350 yards. They halved that hole, but a message was sent. “Me hitting bomb drives, Jordan holing putts,” Johnson said. “That’s what you want to get in their heads.” Johnson had a few wild drives, too, but they restored their cushion early on the back nine and coasted to a 4-and-3 victory.
Broadcaster Scully to Soccer star Messi to stand trial for tax fraud miss baseball playoffs
FIFA suspends Blatter, Platini for 90 days
MADRID — Lionel Messi will stand trial in Spain on three counts of tax fraud and could be sentenced to nearly two years in prison if found guilty. A Spanish judge on Thursday rejected a request to clear the Barcelona player of wrongdoing and decided to charge him and his father, Jorge Horacio Messi, with tax fraud. Prosecutors had said Messi was not fully aware of his father’s unlawful activities and should not have been charged, but the state attorney’s office contended that the Argentina forward knew enough to also be named in the case. Messi and his father are accused of defrauding Spain’s tax office $4.5 million in unpaid taxes from 2007-09. — Associated Press
ZURICH — Sepp Blatter and UEFA President Michel Platini were both suspended for 90 days Thursday. Blatter and Platini were suspended by the FIFA ethics committee in the wake of a Swiss criminal investigation. The decision seemingly ends Platini’s bid to succeed Blatter as FIFA president in the emergency election in February. Another presidential hopeful, Chung Mong-joon, was suspended for six years in a separate case and FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke was banned for 90 days. Issa Hayatou, the longtime head of the African soccer confederation who was reprimanded in 2011 in a kickbacks scandal, will be the acting president. — Associated Press
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T38] | 10/08/15
LOS ANGELES — Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully won’t be calling any games in the baseball playoffs after undergoing a medical procedure. The Los Angeles Dodgers said Thursday that Scully was resting comfortably after a recommended procedure earlier in the day. The team didn’t specify what the procedure was. Doctors advised Scully to skip the playoffs in order to rest up. Scully, who turns 88 in November, said in August he expects next season will be his last in the booth. His 66 years with the Dodgers are a broadcasting record for the same bigleague franchise. Scully missed the team’s final series of the regular season because of a cold. — Associated Press
18:37 | CIGNOLIMIC
The 30-M Minutes-or-Less E.R. Service Pledge. Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. Our experienced E.R. physicians and the entire team are committed to working diligently to have you initially seen by a clinical professional* within 30 minutes of your arrival. Most major insurance plans accepted, including GHP. *Clinical professional is defined as a physician, physician assistant or nurse practitioner. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911.
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SUNRISE/SUNSET
MOON STAGES
Sunrise today ...................... 7:09 a.m. Sunset today ...................... 6:31 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .............. 7:10 a.m. Sunset tomorrow .............. 6:29 p.m.
1
10 a.m.
Noon
1 2 p.m.
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme.
Cold Warm Stationary
Full Oct 27
Last Nov 3
COMFORT INDEX The higher the number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
REAL FEEL TEMPERATURE Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
First Oct 20
TM
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
1
New Oct 12
®
Today
8
Rating on scale of 0-10, where 10 is most comfortable and 0 is least comfortable for this time of year.
The exclusive AccuWeather.com composite index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors. Shown are the highest and lowest values of the day.
Fronts Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Oct. 9
Oct. 10
Oct. 11
NATIONAL CITIES City
REGIONAL
OUTLOOK TODAY’S ALMANAC
Temperatures Yesterday’s high ............................... 69 Yesterday’s low ................................. 49 Normal high ........................................ 63 Normal low ......................................... 43 High last year ..................................... 67 Low last year ...................................... 44 Today’s record high ......... 84 in 2007 Today’s record low ........... 26 in 2000
Wind speed and direction High .................................. SSW 7 mph Low ............................................... 0 mph
22’ 16’ 16’ 18’
1.13’ 0.61’ 1.56’ 2.72’
Fri.
1.00’ 0.60’ 1.50’ 2.90’
River stages from 7 a.m. yesterday.
JERSEY SHORE
Some sun, then clouds today with some rain and a thunderstorm late in the afternoon. High 72 to 76. Wind south 10-20 mph. A touch of rain in the evening; otherwise, cloudy tonight. Low 55 to 59. Wind west 8-16 mph. Water temperature: 65.
OCEAN CITY FORECAST
Some sun, then clouds and breezy, a thunderstorm in spots this afternoon. Winds south-southwest 10-20 mph. A touch of rain tonight. Winds west-northwest 7-14 mph. Cooler tomorrow.
59/39/pc 51/41/pc 74/58/t 64/49/pc 64/43/pc 60/46/pc 57/46/s 63/50/pc 66/49/r 65/52/s 66/44/s 61/47/s 65/45/s 86/66/s 85/52/pc 65/42/pc 64/39/pc 89/77/s 91/65/s 93/71/s 96/70/s 70/47/pc 74/52/s 89/73/t 74/57/r 85/63/pc 65/50/pc 86/70/t 66/47/pc 97/75/s 63/44/pc 57/36/s 65/49/r 57/42/s 70/53/s 72/59/pc 63/51/r 85/56/s 60/40/pc 55/39/s 77/58/s 78/60/s 66/49/pc 80/61/s 66/44/pc
68/46/s 49/37/c 72/55/pc 67/53/s 69/46/s 66/51/s 64/55/s 66/53/s 70/50/c 75/61/s 71/52/s 70/53/s 70/50/s 93/72/s 82/45/s 70/46/s 69/45/s 88/76/t 91/68/s 93/69/s 91/70/s 74/55/s 78/61/s 85/72/t 71/62/sh 81/62/pc 68/54/s 84/66/c 69/51/s 98/75/s 69/49/s 64/45/pc 68/51/c 68/53/s 80/65/s 74/57/s 63/53/pc 90/66/s 65/44/s 68/49/s 87/62/s 89/66/s 70/51/pc 89/62/s 69/48/s
Oct. 14
Oct. 15
WORLD CITIES City
Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Barbados Beijing Berlin Bermuda Cairo Calgary Cancun Cape Town Caracas Dublin Edmonton Frankfurt Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Lisbon London Madrid Manila Melbourne Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nassau New Delhi Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome St. Thomas San Juan Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tehran Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
Today Saturday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
89/78/pc 59/46/pc 76/65/c 61/53/s 93/69/s 88/81/sh 66/44/s 52/36/sh 81/74/pc 89/69/s 71/51/pc 89/74/t 79/57/pc 89/79/t 60/48/pc 69/51/pc 60/49/pc 62/47/pc 87/76/s 74/58/pc 89/60/pc 73/61/pc 62/46/pc 72/49/pc 89/77/t 81/60/sh 73/53/pc 51/35/r 35/28/sf 87/74/pc 97/75/s 52/34/r 61/47/pc 90/74/pc 70/55/t 88/80/sh 88/80/t 67/54/s 89/79/pc 47/28/c 75/61/s 75/59/t 75/62/pc 63/39/pc 62/58/c
89/79/t 58/39/s 76/70/t 62/54/c 91/70/s 88/82/sh 62/52/pc 50/32/s 80/72/pc 88/69/s 69/45/pc 89/73/t 65/50/pc 89/79/t 58/47/pc 71/42/pc 60/42/pc 63/45/pc 85/68/c 76/61/s 87/60/s 70/63/sh 61/47/pc 74/55/pc 90/76/pc 83/61/t 73/52/t 51/42/pc 38/28/pc 86/74/pc 98/76/s 52/41/pc 63/46/pc 86/73/pc 66/56/r 90/81/sh 91/81/sh 64/43/sh 89/78/s 47/31/pc 79/63/s 78/57/pc 76/66/pc 58/45/pc 61/48/sh
Oct. 16
Sunday Hi/Lo/W
90/79/pc 51/35/s 82/69/t 64/56/pc 92/69/s 88/81/pc 71/45/s 48/31/s 80/75/pc 89/70/s 58/38/pc 87/71/pc 67/52/s 89/79/t 56/44/pc 56/31/pc 56/37/s 61/44/s 76/70/c 82/65/s 89/60/s 72/61/t 58/44/pc 69/56/c 90/77/t 78/51/pc 74/53/pc 63/48/pc 37/30/sf 85/74/pc 97/75/s 64/48/s 61/42/s 83/72/pc 69/50/s 89/81/pc 91/81/sh 62/44/sh 89/78/s 48/34/pc 83/64/t 76/56/s 72/61/r 68/53/s 58/49/pc
W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
WB_VOICE - DLY - 39 - 10/09/15
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T39] | 10/08/15
19:20 | JACOBSONCH
Stefano DiPietro
today in history Today is Friday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of 2015. There are 83 days left in the year. Today’s highlight On Oct. 9, 1940, rock-and-roll legend John Lennon was born in Liverpool, England. (On this date in 1975, his son, Sean, was born in New York.) On this date In 1514, Mary Tudor, the 18-year-old sister of Henry VIII, became Queen consort of France upon her marriage to 52-year-old King Louis XII, who died less than three months later. Today’s birthdays Retired MLB All-Star Joe Pepitone is 75. Singer Jackson Browne is 67. Nobel Peace laureate Jody Williams is 65. Actress-TV personality Sharon Osbourne is 63. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Mike Singletary is 57. Movie director Guillermo del Toro is 51. British Prime Minister David Cameron is 49. Movie director Steve McQueen (Film: “12 Years a Slave”) is 46. World Golf Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam is 45. Rock singer Sean Lennon is 40. Country singer Scotty McCreery (TV: “American Idol”) is 22.
— ASSOCIATED PRESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 39
Precipitation 24-hour total ending 4 p.m. ...... 0.00” Total month-to-date ..................... 0.79” Normal month-to-date ................. 0.93” Total year-to-date ...................... 25.00” Normal year-to-date .................. 30.03” Last year-to-date ....................... 22.37” Record for Oct ............. 9.16” in 1927
River/Flood stage Thur.
Wilkes-Barre Towanda Lehigh at Bethlehem Delaware at Port Jervis
69/46/r 52/40/pc 80/63/pc 76/57/r 79/53/r 70/49/r 65/43/r 74/58/r 81/61/pc 60/46/pc 71/49/r 67/48/r 72/46/r 90/62/c 73/51/s 78/52/r 74/46/r 88/77/pc 90/68/c 93/71/s 96/72/s 74/52/r 81/55/t 87/75/pc 80/66/pc 85/69/pc 77/55/r 86/72/pc 80/56/r 95/75/s 71/48/r 61/44/r 81/60/pc 66/43/r 67/49/pc 74/61/pc 65/59/r 91/64/c 69/47/r 65/43/r 69/46/pc 75/48/c 80/57/r 75/51/pc 79/53/r
Sunday Hi/Lo/W
Oct. 13
After a nice, mild and relatively dry stretch this week, today will be a day of change. We’ll start off with some clouds today followed by some rain developing early in the afternoon. Some of the showers around could bring a quick and isolated heavy downpour. Temperatures will still be quite mild by the afternoon with highs near 70. Rain will begin to taper off in the evening, though I cannot rule out a few showers sticking around for a few football games tonight. Rain will completely move out overnight and temperatures will drop into the upper 40s. Saturday will be cool with highs right around 60 degrees. Leftover clouds will give way for sun in the afternoon. Sunday and into Monday we’ll see a mix of sun and clouds with a high of 66 on Sunday and in the lower 70s by Monday. Next chance to see some rain will come Tuesday morning.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Wilkes-Barre through 4 p.m. yesterday
RIVER STAGES
Albany Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Boston Buffalo Cape May Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus, OH Dallas Denver Harrisburg Hartford Honolulu Houston Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Myrtle Beach New Orleans New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Raleigh Rochester St. Louis San Francisco Seattle Shreveport State College Syracuse Topeka Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Wilmington, DE
Today Saturday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Oct. 12
Change is here
Voice
SPORTS
g
gA et y insmefAouR ide ce
SEASON DEBUT Penguins begin 2015-16 campaign tonight in Providence. Page 29
FIRST STRIKE
PSU PREVIEW
Rangers blast 2 homers, take early lead in ALDS. Page 28 NathaN DeNette / the CaNaDiaN Press
Rangersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Rougned Odor, left, and Sam Dyson celebrate their victory over Toronto in Game 1 of the ALDS on Thursday.
40 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
With healthy Kline, Nittany Lions set to face Indiana. Page 32
WB_VOICE - DLY - 40 - 10/09/15
WB_VOICE/PAGES [T40] | 10/08/15
21:33 | CIGNOLIMIC
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23:22 | REESERJAME
GaMeFace
u
SUPer 7
1. laKe-lehMaN
Record 5-0 Up Next vs. GAR Black Knights overcame sloppy performance to remain No. 1.
SATURDAY Holy Redeemer at Susquehanna, 2:15 All games 7 p.m. unless noted
tUNe iN TONIGHT Steve Bennett on “In The Zone” 5:20 p.m., 1240 AM, 96.1 FM The George Curry Show 6 p.m., 103.5 FM The Friday Football Commute 6 p.m., 94.7 FM, 104.7 FM, 105.5 FM Berwick at Wyoming Area 7 p.m., 103.5 FM Muncy at Bloomsburg 7 p.m., 94.7 FM, 104.7 FM, 105.5 FM Meyers at Hanover Area 7 p.m., Service Electric Ch. 2 Hazleton Area at Crestwood 7 p.m., WYLN Conneaut at Meadville 7 p.m., PCN South Fayette at Steel Valley 7:30 p.m., ROOT
School NorthweSt
3. williaMSPort
Record 4-1 Up Next at Coughlin Millionaires have chance to get back on track after taking first loss last week.
4. BerwicK
Record 3-2 Up Next at Wyoming Area This is the first since 2011 that the Dawgs have lost two straight in regular season.
claSS SeNior
PoSitioN rt / NG
5. coUGhliN
Record 3-2 Up Next vs. Williamsport Crusaders face another challenge this week in Class AAAA Williamsport.
ht/wt 6-0 / 245
u Favorite Food: Spaghetti and meatballs
Record 3-2 Up Next at Nanticoke Area Look out for the Rangers. They are making noise after winning three straight.
7. Gar
Record 3-2 Up Next at Lake-Lehman Grenadiers got back on track with big victory over Mid Valley.
GAMEFACE LIVE
Join Steve Bennett, high school football beat writer for The Citizens’ Voice, for a live chat at 12:30 today at citizensvoice.com.
FRIDAY NIGHT TWEETS
u What is your favorite movie? ‘Forrest Gump’
Follow @cvgameface for live updates, scores and more.
u What’s the one thing you are most afraid of ? Death
Follow @CVSteveBennett for updates on tonight’s GAR at Lake-Lehman game.
u What song on your iPod shows your sensitive side? ‘Banana Pancakes’ by Jack Johnson
Follow @CVBufano for updates on tonight’s Dallas at Valley West game.
u Who would play you in a movie? Mark Wahlberg
SCORESFLASH: Final scores sent to your mobile device. Visit citizensvoice.com
u Who’s your dream prom date? Jennifer Lawrence u What’s your best pickup line to get a u What’s your favorite football memory? date with a girl? Are you from Tennessee? My first pancake block last year against Meyers Because you are the only 10 I see. u Who is the funniest guy on the team? u If you could be a superhero, which one Jeremy Walsh would you be? The Hulk u What is your favorite WVC helmet othu What are your hobbies away from foot- er than your school’s? GAR ball? Hunting, fishing and golf u Where is your favorite place to play on u How many gummy bears do you think the road? Lake-Lehman you can bench press? 305,000 u What would you do if you scored a TD? u Who is the most famous person you The Whip have ever met? Joe Paterno u What are your plans after high school? u What would you make the coaching staff Attend college to major in biology and possibly if they came over for dinner? Chicken parm play football.
weather rePort TONIGHT Better plan for another rainy night. Bring the poncho and umbrella. It’ll be mostly cloudy with showers around. Temps will be in the mid 60s.
6. NorthweSt
StaY coNNecteD
u Favorite Class: History
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
Berwick at Wyoming Area 6:45 p.m., wyomingareafootball.org
Record 5-0 Up Next vs. Dallas Spartans continue to dominate are pushing for top spot in Super 7.
Meet DoUG caMPBell
ScheDUle TONIGHT Hazleton Area at Crestwood Williamsport at Coughlin Dallas at Valley West Pittston Area at Tunkhannock Berwick at Wyoming Area Northwest at Nanticoke Area GAR at Lake-Lehman Meyers at Hanover Area
2. ValleY weSt
SATURDAY It’s looking good weather-wise for the one WVC game on the slate. It’ll be partly sunny with temps in the low to mid 60s.
INSTAGRAM: For cover shots and action pictures, look for cvgameface
FACEBOOK: Like us at CV Gameface for stories, past covers and more GAMEFACE EXTRA: A new podcast is available at blogs.citizensvoice.com/ varsity and by searching Gameface Extra on iTunes
A publication of The Citizens’ Voice 75 N. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701 570-821-2060 sports@citizensvoice.com On the cover: Nanticoke Area’s Alec Norton and Coughlin’s Jacob Cole (Photo by Christopher Dolan / The Citizens’ Voice; Design by Michael Cignoli / The Citizens’ Voice)
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WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G02] | 10/07/15
Wilkes-Barre 23:25 | REESERJAME
GAME OF THE WEEK
u GAR (3-2) AT LAKE-LEHMAN (5-0) Compiled by Steve Bennett / Staff Writer
When 7, tonight
GAR
Last meeting Lake-Lehman 21, GAR 6 (2014)
Paul WIEDLICH JR.
Series history GAR leads 29-15-2
6th season 42-21
How they fared last week GAR 34, Mid Valley 20 Lake-Lehman 41, Meyers 20 No. 2 Tashawn Qualls 3 Gerson Peralta 4 Anthony Maurent 5 Garry Kroll 6 Emmanuel Solomon 7 Dajon Rush 8 Muhaideen Tajuddin 9 Midjerson Pierre 11 Noah Edwards 12 Austin Yelland 20 Anthony Blake 23 Josh Goodwin 31 Mike Drozda 42 Alquan Cade 44 Shaquan Everett 50 Zynear Bradford 51 David Virgo 54 Chris Kolativa 56 Brent Stephenson 58 Zach Norbertt 60 Joe Delaney 64 Alex Ruberto 66 Josafat Brito 68 Robbie Petrovich 70 Chris DePaula 75 Trent Brownell 80 Nate Luckey 88 Anthony Hoopingarner
Players to watch GAR: RB Anthony Maurent averages 11.7 yards per carry. Lake-Lehman: RB Trey Borger averages 7.2 yards per carry. Keys to the game 1. Protect the ball GAR and Lake-Lehman have combined to run the ball 336 times this year. Ball security is a crucial aspect. Lake-Lehman has fumbled 14 times, losing seven. GAR has fumbled 10 times, losing six. 2. Say something different for a change Football hasn’t changed much over the years. The team that gains and holds the advantage up front typically wins. That will be the case again tonight. 3. Stay home and don’t lose your keys When playing offenses such as these two, being in the right spot at the right time is critical. If a player gets occupied with looking in the backfield, chances are the player will get burned. The linebackers and defensive ends have to be disciplined tonight.
Pos. RB/DB QB/DB RB/LB QB/DB TE/DL WR/DB K/DB WR/DB WR/LB TE/LB WR/DB RB/LB RB/LB WR/DB RB/LB OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL WR/DB TE/DL
Yr. So. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr.
LAKE-LEHMAN Christopher Dolan / the Citizens’ VoiCe
GAR’s Anthony Maurent looks for running room in a game earlier this season against Holy Cross.
Jerry GILSKY
SCOUTING REPORT After Lake-Lehman’s game last Friday night at Wilkes-Barre Memorial Stadium, an assistant coach jokingly asked for any healthy Black Knight to raise his hand. Either he didn’t say it loud enough or there weren’t many healthy bodies because not a lot of players raised their hands. The next night, at the same venue, GAR coach Paul Wiedlich Jr., was mixing and matching healthy players on both sides of the ball trying to find the right fit. Fortunately, there is no injury report in the WVC because both Lehman’s and GAR’s may be pretty extensive this week. Both teams like to run the ball. GAR’s Anthony Maurent has rushed for 620 yards and 12 touchdowns. Mike Drozda is the short yardage back for GAR and has 186 yards.
WB_VOICE - GAME - 3 - 10/09/15
6th season
GAR is third in the WVC with 241.4 yards per game. Lake-Lehman has the top rushing offense in the conference with 371.2 yards per game. Lake-Lehman can turn to Nick Eury, who has rushed for 789 yards, and Joey Vigil, who has 598 yards. Both have rushed for 10 touchdowns. Trey Borger and Luke Hummel have offered a nice change of pace for the Black Knights. GAR is more of a throwing threat with quarterback Garry Kroll completing 50.9 percent of his passes. He’s thrown eight touchdowns and has yet to be intercepted. On the other side of the field, Lake-Lehman has attempted just 13 passes this season. Defensively, the r un defenses will be tested. GAR allows 184.8 yards per game, the Citizens’ VoiCe File while Lake-Lehman allows Lake-Lehman’s Trey Borger averages 7.2 yards per carry. 99.2 yards.
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G03] | 10/07/15
40-21
No. 4 Vincenzo Ferrari 7 Luke Hummel 6 Jake Tomolonis 8 Matt Myers 10 Nick Eury 11 Trey Borger 15 Mavrick Nulton 16 Nate O’Donell 18 Noah Gorski 19 Ian Dawsey 21 Nate Labar 22 Liam O’Brien 23 Tyler Wojciechowski 24 Charlie Kuschke 25 Joey Vigil 28 Matt Benn 29 Kyler Space 33 Jaydin West 34 Jesse Tomolonis 38 Mason Rios 40 Zach Brucher 44 Jack Symeon 50 Ryan White 51 John Thomas 52 Kaleb Konigus 54 Nate Mutchler 57 Nate Pavlichko 58 Jerimay Stonier 60 Connor McGovern 67 Cole Spencer 75 Riley Sutlif 76 Kris Rosencrans 79 Chris Traver 80 Eddie Sikora 83 Jarrett Daum 89 Jared Campbell
23:26 | REESERJAME
Ht. 6-0 6-1 5-11 5-11 5-9 5-9 5-7 5-11 5-11 6-0 5-7 5-8 5-9 5-5 5-10 5-10 5-9 5-11 5-9 5-7 6-5 6-1 5-7 6-3 6-2 6-0 6-0 5-11 6-5 6-3 6-1 6-0 5-10 6-0 5-6 5-11
Wt. 170 225 165 165 195 175 150 185 170 150 130 145 180 160 175 150 160 150 195 250 255 200 175 215 235 285 245 275 310 250 220 200 260 175 145 165
Pos. QB/DB TE/LB WR/DB WR/DB RB/LB RB/LB WR/DL QB/LB WR/DB K WR/DB DB/WR RB/LB RB/DB RB/DB RB/LB RB/LB WR/DB FB/LB FB/DL TE/DE TE/LB OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL OL/DL TE/DE OL/DL WR/LB WR/DB WR/DB
Yr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. So. So. Jr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. So. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 3
Lake-Lehman 28, GAR 20
Wt. 145 160 185 176 215 175 172 155 183 172 171 167 215 135 195 205 180 255 262 220 285 170 230 220 218 197 174 187
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Prediction This has the potential to be a fast-paced game with both teams looking to establish and continue to run the football. Both teams have the ability to score quickly, but Lake-Lehman prefers to play more of a ballcontrolled offense that eats up yards and time off the clock. GAR has the advantage in the passing game. QB Garry Kroll is nimble enough to escape the pocket for positive yards. Lake-Lehman has to be a little more cautious because the Grenadiers have a downfield threat in Dajon Rush. GAR’s defense has really picked up the tempo in the last few weeks, but tonight expect the Grenadiers to load the box to stop the run. This game comes down to the offensive and defensive fronts. GAR’s fronts are quick and athletic, but Lake-Lehman’s are quick, athletic and big. Look for Lake-Lehman’s offensive line to be the difference in this one.
Ht. 5-8 5-11 5-9 5-11 6-0 6-1 5-8 6-2 5-11 6-0 5-11 5-9 5-8 5-4 5-8 5-11 5-9 6-5 5-11 6-0 5-8 5-8 6-2 6-0 5-9 5-9 5-11 5-11
u
WEEK 6
Consensus
Steve Bennett Sports writer
Last week: 14-4 Overall: 70-20
Tyler Piccotti
Matt Bufano
Jim Reeser
Michael Cignoli
Last week: 12-6 Overall: 69-21
Last week: 13-5 Overall: 66-24
Last week: 14-4 Overall: 65-25
Last week: 14-4 Overall: 62-28
Sports copy editor
Sports writer
Sports editor
Neil Corbett
Seth Lakso
Last week: 12-6 Overall: 61-29
Last week: 11-7 Overall: 60-30
Sports copy editor
Retired sports editor
Last week: 13-5 Overall: 68-22
Sports writer
Hazleton Area at Crestwood
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Hazleton Area
Williamsport at Coughlin
Williamsport
Williamsport
Coughlin
Williamsport
Williamsport
Coughlin
Williamsport
Williamsport
Dallas at Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Valley West
Berwick at Wyoming Area
Berwick
Wyoming Area
Berwick
Berwick
Berwick
Berwick
Berwick
Berwick
Northwest at Nanticoke Area
Northwest
Northwest
Northwest
Northwest
Northwest
Northwest
Northwest
Northwest
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Lake-Lehman
Meyers
Meyers
Meyers
Hanover Area
Meyers
Meyers
Meyers
Meyers
Pittston Area
Tunkhannock
Tunkhannock
Pittston Area
Pittston Area
Tunkhannock
Pittston Area
Pittston Area
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Poly Prep
Holy Redeemer at Susquehanna
Susquehanna
Holy Redeemer
Susquehanna
Susquehanna
Susquehanna
Holy Redeemer
Susquehanna
Susquehanna
Delaware Valley at N. Pocono
Delaware Valley
Delaware Valley
Delaware Valley
Delaware Valley
North Pocono
Delaware Valley
North Pocono
Delaware Valley
Scranton Prep at Wallenpaupack
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Scranton Prep
Abington Hts. at Valley View
Valley View
Valley View
Valley View
Valley View
Abington Heights
Valley View
Valley View
Valley View
Albright
Albright
Albright
Albright
Albright
Albright
Albright
Albright
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Indiana at Penn State
Indiana
Indiana
Penn State
Indiana
Penn State
Penn State
Penn State
Penn State
Navy at Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Navy
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Pitt
Pitt
Pitt
Pitt
Pitt
Pitt
Pitt
Pitt
GAR at Lake-Lehman Meyers at Hanover Area Pittston Area at Tunkhannock Poly Prep at Seminary
Wilkes at Albright Bloomsburg at Millersville
Virginia at Pitt
THE LOCAL GUYS WITH THE NATIONAL BUYS VOITEK — WE’LL SHOW YOU THE DIFFERENCE!!!
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4 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
PIGSKIN PICKS
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15:51 | REESERJAME
VOITEK CHARG E
LIMITED QUANTITIES
3
Hint
Friday Morning Football Quiz This season, we’ll test your knowledge of WVC, District 2 and PIAA football history. Play here or online at citizensvoice.com/sports/quiz. This week’s quiz: Winningest PA football teams entering 2015.
Answer (Name school)
Hint
Answer (Name school)
Hint
Hint
Answer (Name school)
827 wins
684 wins
664 wins
639 wins
812 wins
680 wins
658 wins
637 wins
780 wins
672 wins
653 wins
630 wins
720 wins
672 wins
651 wins
627 wins
714 wins
670 wins
643 wins
626 wins
698 wins
668 wins
641 wins
626 wins
686 wins
666 wins
640 wins
625 wins
Answer (Name school)
SEE PAGE 10 FOR THE ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S QUIZ
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 5
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
6 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
WEEK 6 GAMES Compiled by Steve Bennett / Staff Writer
HAZLETON AREA (2-3) AT CRESTWOOD (1-4) u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Crestwood 41, Hazleton Area 7 (2014) u Series history: Crestwood leads 4-3 u How they fared last week Hazleton Area 47, Pittston Area 0 Wyoming Area 32, Crestwood 7 u Coaches Corner Hazleton Area: Mike Brennan (15th year overall, 116-75) Crestwood: Greg Myers (12th year overall, 69-55) u Players to watch Hazleton Area: RB Adrian Otero averages 5.4 yards per carry. Crestwood: RB Tanner Kahlau averages 8 yards per carry. u Scouting report Hazleton Area had by far its best game of the year last week. The Cougars had 428 yards of total offense and didn’t turn the ball over for the first time all season. The same could be said for the defense, which limited Pittston Area to 62 yards of total offense and generated four turnovers. It could be a sign things are beginning to turn around. It’s been a rough begin-
Otero
Kahlau
ning for Crestwood as its offensive front has been hit hard by injuries, which in turn has had an impact on the running game. Kahlau has maintained some consistency all season, but the passing game is still a work in progress with the Comets completing just 38.9 percent of their passes. Connor Sheloski leads the team in receptions with 16.
WILLIAMSPORT (4-1) AT COUGHLIN (3-2)
Christopher Dolan / the Citizens’ VoiCe
Pittston Area’s Kyle Petroski attempts to take down Hazleton Area’s Josh Zukoski last week.
BERWICK (3-2) AT WYOMING AREA (2-3)
PITTSTON AREA (0-5) AT TUNKHANNOCK (1-4)
u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Coughlin 49, Williamsport 38 (2014) u Series history: Williamsport leads 28-20 u How they fared last week Dallas 28, Williamsport 14 Valley West 49, Coughlin 20 u Coaches Corner Williamsport: Charles Crews (5th year overall, 15-30) Coughlin: Ciro Cinti (10th year, 57-48)
u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Berwick 29, Wyoming Area 13 (2014) u Series history: Berwick leads 17-4 u How they fared last week Selinsgrove 17, Berwick 14 Wyoming Area 32, Crestwood 7 u Coaches Corner Berwick: George Curry (46th year overall, 449-101-5) Wyoming Area: Randy Spencer (8th year, 39-42)
u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Pittston Area 30, Tunkhannock 7 (2014) u Series history: Pittston Area leads 21-13-1 u How they fared last week Hazleton Area 47, Pittston Area 0 Tunkhannock 40, Honesdale 8 u Coaches Corner Pittston Area: Jim Norris (2nd year, 3-12) Tunkhannock: Jan Cechak (4th year, 4-31)
u Players to watch Williamsport: RB Trey Potts has rushed for four touchdowns on the year. Coughlin: RB Zach King averages 7.8 yards per carry.
u Players to watch Berwick: RB Len Wyda is averaging 6.4 yards per carry. Wyoming Area: RB Brian Miles rushed for 172 yards and two touchdowns last week.
u Players to watch Pittston Area: WR Paul Brady averages 22.3 yards per reception. Tunkhannock: WR Brian Muckin leads the team in catches with 10.
u Scouting report The Crusaders played last week without leading rusher Jacob Cole, who suffered an injury leading up to the game. Cinti hopes to have Cole back in the lineup tonight. This is a big swing game for both teams. Williamsport needs the win to keep pace with Valley West in the race for the one guaranteed spot District 2-4 has in the subregional playoffs.
Potts
King
Coughlin needs the win to keep pace in the Class AAA race. Williamsport had its second lowest offensive production of the year last week and turned the ball over four times. Of course, the Coughlin defense needs to contend with Isaiah Hankins, Jerah Reeves and Elliot Walker.
WB_VOICE - GAME - 6 - 10/09/15
u Scouting report The Dawgs are in the midst of a two-game losing streak, suffering losses at home to Valley West and Selinsgrove. The offensive struggles continue for Berwick. In its three wins, Berwick has scored a combined 68 points in victories over Crestwood, Pottsville and Dallas. Those three teams have a combined record of 3-12. In
Wyda
Miles
the two losses to teams with a combined record of 10-0, Berwick has been outscored 51-20. The Warriors are on a two-game winning streak with victories over Tunkhannock and Crestwood. Miles picked up his second 100-yard performance of the season last week. The Warriors are averaging 4.8 yards per carry.
u Scouting report Tunkhannock snapped a 21-game losing streak last week with its victory over Honesdale. Logan and Ryan Cywinski have been the constants on the offensive side of the ball for the Tigers. They have combined to rush for 11 of the team’s 12 rushing touchdowns. The Tigers average 4.7 yards per carry, with Ryan Cywinski leading the way with 6.5 yards per carry. Logan
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Brady
Muckin
Cywinski is completing 55 percent of his passes on the year. Pittston Area is a difficult team to figure out. The Patriots have lost nine consecutive games dating back to last season. At times, the Patriots have looked good this year, particularly in an openingnight loss to Abington Heights, and again in a threepoint loss to Crestwood.
15:51 | REESERJAME
WEEK 6 GAMES Compiled by Steve Bennett / Staff Writer
DALLAS (2-3) AT VALLEY WEST (5-0) u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Valley West 38, Dallas 14 (2014) u Series history: Valley West leads 15-9 u How they fared last week Dallas 28, Williamsport 14 Valley West 29, Coughlin 20 u Coaches Corner Dallas: Rich Mannello (1st year, 2-3) Valley West: Pat Keating (7th year, 54-19) u Players to watch Dallas: RB David Simpson rushed for 150 yards and a touchdown last week. Valley West: RB Sean Judge averages 9.5 yards per carry. u Scouting report The Mountaineers picked up a huge win last week by knocking Williamsport from the ranks of the unbeaten. Not only was it the second win of the year for the Mountaineers, but it was their second against a Class AAAA school. The Dallas running game is showing improvement. Simpson ran for more than 100 yards last week and Bret
Simpson
Judge
Storrs ran for 178 in Week 4 against Coughlin. This week it will be a matchup against a Valley West team loaded with weapons and offensive line that can control the game. The trick will be whether or not Dallas has success running the ball against a defense that allows 93.2 yards per game on the ground.
NORTHWEST (3-2) AT NANTICOKE AREA (2-3)
Frank Lauri / For The CiTizens’ VoiCe
Valley West’s Sean Judge (10) dives across the goal line for a touchdown as Coughlin’s Jeremy Wells, right, and Jacob Soller defend last week.
MEYERS (3-2) AT HANOVER AREA (1-4)
HOLY REDEEMER (1-4) AT SUSQUEHANNA (1-4)
u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Hanover Area 37, Meyers 21 (2014) u Series history: Meyers leads 42-31-3 u How they fared last week Lake-Lehman 41, Meyers 20 Northwest 36, Hanover Area 7 u Coaches Corner Meyers: Jeff Labatch (1st year, 3-2) Hanover Area: Mike McCree (1st year, 1-4)
u When: 2:15 p.m., Saturday u Last meeting: Susquehanna 13, Holy Redeemer 0 (2014) u Series history: Susquehanna leads 3-0 u How they fared last week Nanticoke Area 64, Holy Redeemer 14 Montrose 3, Susquehanna 0 u Coaches Corner Holy Redeemer: Scott Dennis (2nd year, 4-11) Susquehanna: Kyle Cook (3rd year, 13-15)
u Players to watch Northwest: Brendan Riley leads the team with two interceptions. Nanticoke Area: RB Alec Norton is averaging 7.7 yards per carry.
u Players to watch Meyers: QB Willie Wallace has thrown for six touchdowns on the year. Hanover Area: DB Brandon Chafin leads the team with two interceptions.
u Players to watch Holy Redeemer: RB Thomas Engle has rushed for 336 yards and four touchdowns on the year. Susquehanna: Jarred Mills leads the team in rushing with 254 yards.
Riley
Norton
Walsh has rushed for 631 yards and 10 touchdowns. He averages 6.9 yards per carry. Garrett Reese is second with 5.7 yards per attempt. Nanticoke Area snapped a two-game losing streak with its win last week against Holy Redeemer. In its two wins this year, the Trojans have outscored their opponents 126-144.
WB_VOICE - GAME - 7 - 10/09/15
u Scouting report This game features two teams that are in desperate need of a win. For Meyers, it needs to get back on track after dropping its last two games. The Mohawks were hurt last week by the big play. One positive, Wallace had his best game of the year, throwing for 168 yards. The Hawks were dominant in their one victory this year, 43-7 over Holy
Wallace
Chafin
Redeemer. But since then they have lost three consecutive games and have been outscored 122-41. The Hawks are averaging 214.2 yards per game, while the defense is giving up 275.8 yards per game. The game features two of the more dangerous pass catchers in the conference with Meyers’ Raheem Twyman and Chafin.
u Scouting report Since opening the season with a 21-0 win over Holy Cross, Holy Redeemer has regressed. Since that victory, the Royals have been outscored 187-61. Holy Redeemer is struggling against opponents with bigger and more physical offensive and defensive fronts. Susquehanna enters the game 1-1 against teams from
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Engle
Dennis
the WVC this year, having beaten Nanticoke Area and losing to Meyers. Mills is Susquehanna’s leading rusher, but has not rushed for a touchdown. Quarterback Kyle Donovan has rushed for four scores and thrown for 129 yards and one touchdown. Susquehanna has rushed for 147 yards in its last two games.
15:51 | REESERJAME
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 7
Scouting report Northwest is turning out to be one of those teams to keep an eye on. After dropping their first two games of the year, the Rangers have won three in a row. Aside from a double-overtime win over GAR, the other two victories over Western Wayne and Hanover Area have been convincing, by a combined score of 63-14. Quarterback Jeremy
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
u When: 7, tonight u Last meeting: Northwest 26, Nanticoke Area 6 (2014) u Series history: Northwest leads 10-8 u How they fared last week Northwest 36, Hanover Area 7 Nanticoke Area 64, Holy Redeemer 14 u Coaches Corner Northwest: Lon Hazlet (17th year overall, 86-80) Nanticoke Area: Ron Bruza (6th year, 22-33)
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
8 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
COVER STORY
BERWICK BULLDOGS
3-2
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
The defense played as well as expected, if not beyond expectations. It kept the Dawgs in every game but one.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
The offense sputtered out of the gate and has yet to truly get on track. The Dawgs enter the second half of the season riding a two-game losing streak.
LOOKInG ahEaD
Can’t expect the defense to continue to play at such a high level with meaningful games in the second half of the year. Offense is going to have to contribute if the Dawgs want to make a return trip to the postseason.
haZLETOn aREa COUGaRS
2-3
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
The offense is getting better, but more importantly so is the defense.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
There has been a lack of consistency on both sides of the ball. One week the Cougars look as if they are ready to turn the corner, and the next week they look like they are taking a step back.
LOOKInG ahEaD
The Cougars need to carry the positive momentum from one week to the next. The results may not show it, but this is a team that is slowly beginning to figure it all out.
PITTSTOn aREa PaTRIOTS
0-5
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
The Patriots opened the season with a tightly contested game with Abington Heights, and lost a close one to Crestwood. Clearly the potential is there to do some good things.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
Pittston Area is giving up way too many points and yards to win games. It has struggled at the beginning of games,which has left it with no other choice but to play catch-up the rest of the way.
LOOKInG ahEaD
There is no better time to work on the depth chart and let some of the younger players get experience.
WB_VOICE - GAME - 8 - 10/09/15
COUGhLIn CRUSaDERS
3-2
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
CRESTWOOD COMETS
1-4
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
The Crusaders have stuck with the running game and the plan has served the team well. Coughlin ranks fifth in the conference in rushing offense and eighth in total offense.
The Comets had back-to-back weeks where the team scored 79 points and it looked as if the offense was finally going to get on track. Only problem was the Comets went 1-1 in those week.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
M
WhaT WEnT RIG
The physical p and the run gam been playing wel
WhaT WEnT WR
Opening night loss to Hazleton Area put them behind the eight-ball. At times one simple mistake has turned into three or four larger ones.
Injuries up front on both sides of the ball have made it difficult for the Comets to effectively run the ball and stop it.
Penalties and rhythm and the o overtime loss to wick are tough.
LOOKInG ahEaD
LOOKInG ahEaD
LOOKInG ahEaD
The loss to Hazleton Area made the following nine weeks all that more important. Class AAA is wide open in terms of qualifying for the district playoffs.
hOLY REDEEMER ROYaLS
1-4
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
Chances of a district playoff spot are slim to none. This is a good opportunity to create some depth and tinker a bit with the offense.
LaKE-LEhMan BLaCK KnIGhTS
5-0
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
The Royals opened the season with a shutout over Holy Cross, but it’s been tough sledding since. Establishing a run game remains a priority for second-year head coach Scott Dennis.
Just about everything has gone right, including a win over state power Old Forge in Week 4. The offensive line and running game are as good as advertised. The defense ranks third in the conference.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
There is still a long way to go in terms of getting bigger, stronger and faster. The Royals are riding a four-game losing streak.
The Knights still have a problem with putting the ball on the ground. Mistakes still pop up here and there, but they can be fixed.
LOOKInG ahEaD
LOOKInG ahEaD
The Royals are playing a considerable amount of underclassmen that will gain valuable experience heading into the offseason.
TUnKhannOCK TIGERS
1-4
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
Barring the unforeseen, the Black Knights will be a playoff team. They have the horses to put together a championship season.
VaLLEY WEST SPaRTanS
5-0
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
The Tigers snapped a 21-game losing streak and interest in the program is increasing. Logan and Ryan Cywnski have been receiving help from others.
Just about everything. Defense has been outstanding. Starting QB Aaron Austin has made a smooth transition and the playmakers are making the plays.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
Experienced depth continues to be an issue, but that is something that can be corrected. Still having problems moving the ball through the air, and stopping the run.
LOOKInG ahEaD
Look for the Tigers to be a more competitive team in the second half. It will be an opportunity to gain experience heading into next year on a positive note.
The Mountai need to string som postseason.
WhaT WEnT RIG
The Mohawks ing on all cylinde the defense was,
WhaT WEnT WR
A loss to a win look good on the hampered the ru
LOOKInG ahEaD
By no means a tention, but they two to get back o make some noise
W M
WhaT WEnT RIG
Quarterback left off last year. Jerah Reeves ge others have stepp
WhaT WEnT WR
A few communication issues in the beginning of the year appear to be cleaned up. Some kick coverage issues have led to touchdowns or long returns.
Jumped out to but couldn’t hold
LOOKInG ahEaD
LOOKInG ahEaD
There may not be a team in the district that can match up with the Spartans. They have to focus on the task at hand and not worry about what anybody else is doing.
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G08-09] | 10/07/15
23:39 | REESERJAME
It will be inter team responds to the Millionaires from.
GhT
play has been getting better each week me has followed suit. The defense has ll.
ROnG
d mistakes have taken drives out of offense has had trouble recovering. An Wallenpaupack and a 7-0 loss to Ber-
D
ineers are a work in progress. They me wins together to have a shot at the
MEYERS MOhaWKS
GaR GREnaDIERS
2-3
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
hanOVER aREa haWKEYES WhaT WEnT RIGhT
1-4
The defense is beginning to play at a high level and create turnovers. The running game is as good as expected and QB Garry Kroll can keep the defense honest with his arm.
The Hawks have been more of a running team under first-year coach Mike McCree. He earned his first win when his team beat Holy Redeemer in Week 2.
WhaT WEnT WROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
The loss to Northwest in double-overtime may come back to sting at the end of the year. To be that close on the road, you have to win that game.
LOOKInG ahEaD
After the big showdown with Lehman tonight, the Grenadiers have winnable games the rest of the way. GAR can’t afford to have a letdown or lose focus.
nanTICOKE aREa TROJanS
3-2
GhT
3-2
MIDSEaSOn REPORT
DaLLaS MOUnTaInEERS
2-3
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
There has not been enough consistency on either side of the ball. The Hawks are allowing 275.8 yards per game, which is not a lot, except for when the offense only generates 214.2 per game.
LOOKInG ahEaD
It’s a new coach, with a new staff and new system. Sometimes these things take a while to come together.
nORThWEST RanGERS WhaT WEnT RIGhT
3-2
s started the season 3-0 and were clickers. The offense was playing well and too.
The Trojans came out of the gate looking to establish the run, and that is what they are doing. Defense is playing better than the record indicates.
The Rangers have adjusted quickly to a new coach and a new system. Jeremy Walsh is playing at a high level and others have stepped up around him.
ROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
nless Lackawanna Trail team does not e resume. Mark Robinson’s injury has unning game.
A loss on the road to East Juniata may be the “what if” game when the Trojans look back at the end of the season.
Northwest stumbled a bit out of the gate, but the Rangers are in the same position up to this point as they were last year.
D
LOOKInG ahEaD
LOOKInG ahEaD
are the Mohawks out of playoff cony need to string together a victory or n track. A healthy Meyers team could e.
WYOMInG aREa WaRRIORS
4-1
2-3
This is going to be a fun team to watch in the second half of the year. A showdown with Lake-Lehman looms as does a game with Class AAA Tunkhannock, which would mean big points if the Rangers win.
MIDSEaSOn MVPS
Offense took a while to get going but that may have more to do with the level of competition than anything else. Last year’s younger players are fitting their roles better this season.
ROnG
WhaT WEnT WROnG
Hankins
o an early lead against Dallas last week d it.
D
resting to see how this Williamsport o adversity. In the past, a loss has sent s into a spiral they could not recover
Still going through a bit of an adjustment period. Playing a lot of younger players one year, does not always translate to wins the following year.
LOOKInG ahEaD
When you begin the year with Valley West and Scranton Prep, the numbers have a way of going against you. Things are beginning to even out.
WB_VOICE - GAME - 9 - 10/09/15
Williamsport QB Isaiah Hankins is putting together a special season. He’s thrown for 953 yards with 11 TDs and no interceptions. He’s a stronger runner. Defensively, he’s tied for the conference lead with three picks.
SMaLL SChOOL
Maurent
Eury
GAR senior running back Anthony Maurent leads the WVC in rushing TDs with 12. He’s strong, physical and fast. Nick Eury has been a key part of Lake-Lehman’s ground game. He’s also a dangerous return man.
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G08-09] | 10/07/15
23:39 | REESERJAME
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 9
BIG SChOOL
Isaiah Hankins picked up where he The running game is a threat. While ets most of the attention at wideout, ped up and made plays around him.
WhaT WEnT RIGhT
GhT
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
WILLIaMSPORT MILLIOnaIRES
The Trojans seem to win the games they are supposed to, and lose the games they are supposed. Nanticoke Area needs to figure a way to beat a team they aren’t expected to.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
10 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FLASHBACK TO 1985
TOP PERFORMERS
LACKAWANNA FOOTBALL CONFERENCE REPORT
Crusaders rally past Patriots By Jim Reeser sports editor
Pittston Area and Coughlin entered Week 6 of the 1985 season with 3-1 records. It was billed as the game of the week, but turned out to be the most controversial as Coughlin rallied for a 9-7 victory. The Crusaders took over with 2:16 left to play following a Pittston Area punt. Coughlin started to piece together a drive, but faced a fourth down and 10 from its own 30. Ed Osmulski’s pass fell incomplete. It appeared as though the Patriots were victorious. However, a pass interference call gave the Crusaders new life with 44 seconds to play. Then, Osmulski hit Andy Serniak for a big gain to the Patriots 6. Matt Walsh, who finished with 101 yards rushing, moved the Crusaders to the 4-yard line with 13 seconds to play. On came Carl Yastremski, who kicked a 21-yard field goal with 9 seconds to play to give the Crusaders a 9-7 lead. The Patriots tried one last time to score some points when Mike Lazevnick’s completion to John Baloga went for 35 yards. Time ran out and so did the Patriots’ hopes of a Hail Mary. Following the g ame, Pittston Area head coach Bob Barbieri cried “deception on the part of Coughlin coach John Joseph and Serniak. “The kid was two feet inside the hash mark,” Barb-
ieri said. “He must report to the huddle. He didn’t. Sure, he was on the field but it’s deception. I’ll protest, but they’ll get the win. The officials blew the call.” Here’s Joseph’s take on the play. “Andy just went unnoticed by their defense,” he said following the game. “It was just a wide-formation and we ran a streak pattern. Andy never left the field.” Serniak shared his coach’s sentiments. “We only use that play if it’s really necessary,” Serniak said. “I wasn’t surprised that I was so wide open. The defense wasn’t watching me.” Ken Scalpi’s 4--yard touchdown run early in the first quarter gave the Patriots a 7-0 lead. The Crusaders came back the ensuing possession, moving 67 yards on 13 plays. Walsh scored from 4-yards out, but Yastremski’s PAT sailed wide left. In other games: u C re s t wo o d ’s D e a n Ambosie scored four touchdowns as Crestwood improved to 4-1 with a 34-7 win over Hanover Area. u Glenn Bobish kicked a 32-yard field goal with two second left to give Hazleton a 3-0 victory over Valley West. u Jim Heffers returned a punt for a touchdown and Paul Zawadzki hit Steve Bennett with the two-point conversion as Bishop O’Reilly improved to 4-1 with an 8-7 win over Northwest.
FRIDAY MORNING FOOTBALL QUIZ ANSWERS Last week’s quiz: WC greats Berwick - Ron Powlus Crestwood - Martin Bibla Coughlin - Bruce Kozerski Dallas - Greg Manusky GAR - Greg Skrepenak Hanover - Al Kopacz Hazleton Area - Nate Eachus Lake-Lehman - Joe Lopasky Meyers - Rocket Ismail Nanticoke Area - Harry Hamilton Pittston Area - Jimmy Cefalo
Tunkhannock - Ryan Crispell Williamsport - Darrell Blackman Wyoming Area - Rich Musinski Valley West - Mark Duda Bishop Hoban - Gerry McGroarty Bishop O’Reilly - Bryan Bellas Kingston - Mike Raklewicz Swoyersville - Walt Michaels Pittston - Charley Trippi West Side Central Catholic - Joe Pisarcik
WB_VOICE - GAME - 10 - 10/09/15
Passing Yards Isaiah Hankins, Williamsport, Week 1 vs. Central Mountain, 297 Aaron Austin, Valley West, Week 1 vs. Wyoming Area, 275 Isaiah Hankins, Williamsport, Week 2 vs. Mifflin County, 218 Walter Coles, Pittston Area, Week 4 vs. Crestwood, 198 Garry Kroll, GAR, Week 2 vs. Holy Cross, 183 Rushing Yards Alec Norton, Nanticoke Area, Week 5 vs. Holy Redeemer, 271 Joey Vigil, Lake-Lehman, Week 1 vs. Lackawanna Trail, 268 Nick Eury, Lake-Lehman, Week 5 vs. Meyers, 266 Tanner Kahlau, Crestwood, Week 3 vs. Coughlin, 232 Nick Eury, Lake-Lehman, Week 4 vs. Old Forge, 218
Christopher Dolan / the Citizens’ VoiCe
Rushing Touchdowns Tyheim Taylor, Hanover Area, Week 2 vs. Holy Redeemer, 5 Alec Norton, Nanticoke Area, Week 5 vs. Holy Redeemer, 5
Old Forge’s Armando Sallavanti moves past GAR defenders in a Week 1 game.
Receiving Yards Jerah Reeves, Williamsport, Week 1 vs. Central Mountain, 196 Paul Brady, Pittston Area, Week 4 vs. Crestwood, 164 Jerah Reeves, Williamsport, (4-1) to second in the Class Week 4 vs. Hazleton Area, 114
Bucks, Devils set to defend titles By Joby Fawcett staff writer
Here they go again. As the regular season enters the second half, Dunmore and Old Forge are gearing up to defend their Lackawanna Football Conference Division titles after a successful nonleague schedule. Last week, Dunmore defeated Carbondale Area, while Old Forge beat rival Riverside for a sixth straight time. Both teams improved to 4-1 this season and continued their domination among the small school teams. Since 2010, Dunmore is 60-12, while Old Forge is 58-12 overall. Since 2011, the two have been even more impressive within their respective divisions. Interestingly, both teams lost division games in Week 10 of the 2010 season. That year, Lakeland won the Division II crown and Susquehanna won in Division III. From 2011 to 2014, Dunmore and Old Forge are each 20-0 and winners of four consecutive division titles. In its 20 division wins, Dunmore has outscored opponents by 580 points, winning by an average of 29 points. During that time, the
Bucks have scored more than 30 points 16 times with 13 of those games of at least 40 points. Old Forge has won its division games by an average of 30.6 points a game. The Blue Devils have 17 games of at least 30 points and four games of at least 50 points. Entering this season’s division schedules, Dunmore is averaging 31.2 points per game, which includes being shutout in Week 1 against Scranton Prep Old Forge is averaging 38.6 points per game this season. Forfeit impacts Scranton and West Scranton had to forfeit their games last week because of the Scranton teachers strike, and those results greatly impacted the District 2 playoff races. Teams are awarded playoff points for each win, which includes bonus points for playing a team in a higher classification and for a beaten opponent’s record. Valley View earned 150 Class AAA playoff points because Scranton is a Class AAAA school worth 120 points and it has three wins for 30 bonus points. That boosted Valley View
AAA playoff standings with 450 points behind leader Scranton Prep (4-1), which has 480 points. Delaware Valley earned 100 Class AAAA playoff points because West Scranton is a Class AAA school worth 80 points and it has two wins for 20 bonus points. The Warriors are still fighting an uphill battle, sitting in fourth place in the chase for a District 2-4-11 Class AAAA subregional berth with 330 points. Wyoming Valley West is in good shape with 530 points, Williamsport, the District 4 representative, has 450 points, and Scranton, despite its forfeit, has 350 points. Scranton earned 20 playoff bonus points last weekend thanks to wins by Hazleton Area and Scranton Prep. West Scranton would need a lot of help to climb back into Class AAA district playoff contention because the forfeit was its third loss of the season. The Invaders have 230 points and received no bonus points because their beaten opponents, Riverside and North Pocono, each lost.
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G10] | 10/07/15
Fumble Return for TDs Sean Judge, Valley West, Week 5 vs. Coughlin, 75 Connor Sheloski, Crestwood, Week 2 vs. Abington Heights, 65 Thomas Engle, Redeemer, Week 5 vs. Nanticoke Area, 62 Josh Goodwin, GAR, Week 4 vs. Northwest, 52 Sean Judge, Valley West, Week 1 vs. Wyoming Area, 31 Luke Fisher, Berwick, Week 4 vs. Valley West, 0 (in end zone) Longest Field Goals Tristan Williams, Hazleton Area, Week 1 vs. Coughlin, 40 Dave Klaproth, Wyoming Area, Week 1 vs. Valley West, 35 Jeremy Walsh, Northwest, Week 2 vs. Dunmore, 32 Connor Keenan, Crestwood, Week 4 vs. Pittston Area, 31 Jake Gurtis, Valley West, Week 2 vs. Delaware Valley, 30 Tristan Williams, Hazleton Area, Week 4 vs. Williamsport, 30 Team Rushing yards Nanticoke Area, Week 5 vs. Holy Redeemer, 468 Lake-Lehman, Week 5 vs. Meyes, 436 Lake-Lehman, Week 2 vs. Mid Valley, 396 Lake-Lehman, Week 4 vs. Old Forge, 392 Lake-Lehman, Week 1 vs. Lackawanna Trail, 370 Nanticoke Area, Week 2 vs. CMVT, 364 Tunkhannock, Week 2 vs. Western Wayne, 345
23:41 | REESERJAME
KEYSTONE REPORT
STANDINGS
QB Bowers leading way for undefeated McDevitt the Citizens’ VoiCe is working with several newspapers across Pennsylvania to bring our readers the latest in high school football news from around the state.
First-year starting quarterback Tayvon Bowers of Bishop McDevitt (5-0) registered his fourth multitouchdown game of the season in Week 5 against Hershey. Having three FBS recruits — Kobay White (Boston College), Bryce Hall (Virginia) and Kyree Calli (Bowling Green) — at his disposal has worked out nicely. Bowers banked his second four-TD game in a 42-7 win against the Trojans. The junior has now completed 70 of 109 attempts for 1,100 yards and 15 touchdowns against three picks through five weeks.
Vicki Vellios Briner / PennliVe
District 2-4-11 subregional Rec. Pts. Freedom 5-0 550 Valley West 5-0 530 Parkland 5-0 520 Nazareth 4-1 500 passing yards for his career, 4-1 450 and he’ll need 160 air yards u The Monessen-Wilkins- Easton 4-1 450 on Friday against Donegal to burg game was stopped mid- Williamsport Stroudsburg 4-1 420 join the club. way through the third quarter 4-1 410 Saturday when a fight broke Bethlehem Liberty Scranton 3-2 350 DISTRICT 6 out between the teams and 3-2 330 u Bishop Guilfoyle is back Monessen refused to continue Delaware Valley Whitehall 2-3 220 at it again. After going 16-0 playing at Graham Field. Pocono Mountain East 2-3 210 last year and upending Wilkinsburg football coach Pleasant Valley 2-3 200 Clairton for the PIAA Class A and athletic director Mike Hazleton Area 2-3 190 championship, the Maraud- Fulmore said Monessen was East Stroudsburg South 1-4 120 ers are off to a 5-0 start this leading 18-0 with 6:59 in the Emmaus 1-4 100 season following a 54-0 drub- third quarter when the game Dieruff 1-4 100 bing of Penn Cambria. was called. Northampton 1-4 100 Guilfoyle has outscored its Monessen athletic director Pocono Mountain West 0-5 0 last three opponents by a Gina Naccarato refused to Allen 0-5 0
combined 173-0. The Maraud- continue playing, Fulmore ers host Forest Hills this said, so officials called the tion 1 winning streak inside week. game and awarded the Greythe Lancaster-Lebanon hounds an 18-0 victory. League to 52 straight. DISTRICT 7 The WPIAL board of u One week after throwing directors ruled Wednesday u Elco senior Jeff Mar- for 400 yards in a win over that two Wilkinsburg players tin is poised to become the Shenango, Avonworth quar- and one Monessen player seventh Lancaster-Leba- terback Zach Chandler threw will be suspended for two non League QB — and the for 447 yards Friday night in games. second this season — to a 28-6 win over Fort Cherry Contributors: Rick O’Brien, Philjoin the 6,000-yard passing in a Class A contest. adelphia Inquirer; Eric Epler, club. He has 1,717 yards this sea- PennLive; Geoff Morrow, After passing for 214 yards son and is on pace to break PennLive; Jeffrey Reinhart, in a 40-39 OT win over the WPIAL’s regular-season PennLive; Bill Hartlep, PittsAnnville-Cleona last week, record of 2,754 held by Seton- burgh Tribune-Review; Jake Martin, a four-year starter La Salle grad Bruce Grad- Adams, Carlisle Sentinel; Phil for the Raiders, is up to 5,840 kowski. Cmor, Altoona Mirror.
Bishop McDevitt junior QB Tayvon Bowers. bishop Ryan. For the season, the Rutgers recruit has connected on 56 of 79 throws for 1,227 yards and 18 TDs.
u In Malvern Prep’s 33-21 upset of St. Joseph’s Prep in Week 5, sophomore O’Shaan Allison (30 carries for 163 yards, three TDs) and junior Zac Fernandez (13 for 108, DISTRICT 1 u Archbishop Wood’s one) combined for 271 rushAnthony Russo completed 15 ing yards of 18 passes for 378 yards and five TDs in Saturday after- DISTRICT 3 u Wilson extended its Secnoon’s 41-0 win over Arch-
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WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G11] | 10/08/15
15:52 | REESERJAME
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 11
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12 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
STANDINGS
WVC INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
WYOMING VALLEY CONFERENCE CLASS AAAA Rec PF PA Valley West 5-0 217 62 Williamsport 4-1 182 111 Hazleton Area 2-3 102 123 CLASS AAA Rec Berwick 3-2 Coughlin 3-2 Dallas 2-3 Wyoming Area 2-3 Crestwood 1-4 Tunkhannock 1-4 Pittston Area 0-5
PF 88 123 69 132 113 85 55
PA 65 145 73 123 174 183 191
CLASS AA Rec Lake-Lehman 5-0 Northwest 3-2 Meyers 3-2 GAR 3-2 Nanticoke Area 2-3 Hanover Area 1-4 Holy Redeemer 1-4
PF 217 129 120 215 153 102 82
PA 62 119 88 119 138 151 187
DISTRICT 2 CLASS AAAA Rec Valley West 5-0 Williamsport 4-1 Scranton 3-2 Delaware Valley 3-2 Hazleton Area 2-3
Pts 530 450 350 330 190
Avg 106 90 70 66 48
CLASS AAA Rec Scranton Prep 4-1 Valley View 4-1 Wallenpaupack 3-2 Coughlin 3-2 Abington Heights 3-2 North Pocono 3-2 Berwick 3-2 Dallas 2-3 West Scranton 2-3 Wyoming Area 2-3 Honesdale 2-3 Tunkhannock 1-4 Crestwood 1-4 Pittston Area 0-5
Pts 480 450 380 350 340 340 330 310 230 220 180 120 100 0
Avg 96 90 76 70 68 68 66 62 46 44 36 24 20 0
CLASS AA Rec Lake-Lehman 5-0 Dunmore 4-1 Montrose 4-1 Northwest 3-2 Meyers 3-2 Lakeland 3-2 GAR 3-2 Nanticoke Area 2-3 Western Wayne 2-3 Riverside 2-3 Mid Valley 1-4 Carbondale 1-4 Hanover Area 1-4 Holy Redeemer 1-4
Pts 560 470 380 360 350 340 310 250 220 200 120 110 110 90
Avg 112 94 76 72 70 68 62 50 44 40 24 22 22 18
CLASS A Rec Old Forge 4-1 Susquehanna 1-4 Lackawanna Trail 1-4 Holy Cross 1-4
Pts 570 140 130 110
Avg 114 28 26 22
PASSING Isaiah Hankins, Wil Aaron Austin, WVW Garry Kroll, GAR Willie Wallace, Mey Jake Peters, HA Jeremy Walsh, Nwest Matt Harrison, Dal Walter Coles, PA P.J. Angeli, WA Matt Wruble, NA Logan Cywinski, Tunk Ryan Wolk, Haz Cam Brennan, HR Jacob Soller, Cou Lance Blass, Crest
Cm Att 70 106 56 80 28 55 25 58 30 79 28 72 39 76 22 60 33 68 19 40 33 60 22 44 13 46 12 35 15 40
RECEIVING Jerah Reeves, Wil L.J. Wesneski, WVW Devon Weidman, WVW Connor Sheloski, Crest Brandon Chafin, HA Jalen Jackson, Wil Bryce Harrison, Nwest Sean Judge, WVW Ezra Judge, Nwest Marc Minichello, WA Paul Brady, PA Tanner Gattuso, Dal Dajon Rush, GAR Joey Bayzick, Haz Brian Muckin, Tunk Anthony Maurent, GAR Dante Wright, Wil Ryan Cywinski, Tunk Raheem Twyman, Mey Tristan Connor, Wil John Winter, HR Ryan Martin, Dal Michael Taylor, Tunk
Rec 33 17 16 16 14 13 12 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 9 8 8 7 7 7 7 7
Yds TD Int 953 11 2 828 11 2 649 8 0 457 6 2 434 7 3 430 2 3 426 4 1 379 3 2 314 6 3 299 2 5 273 0 2 270 2 2 233 3 6 232 5 4 208 3 3
Rtg 121.3 132.7 133.3 90.9 70.3 51.3 80.3 61.7 72.8 49.9 53.0 65.5 30.3 58.3 48.8
Yds 503 244 272 246 200 155 148 179 157 101 223 149 140 82 81 244 101 79 241 137 132 107 35
Avg 15.2 14.4 17.0 15.4 14.3 11.9 12.3 16.3 14.3 9.2 22.3 14.9 14.0 8.2 8.1 27.1 12.6 9.9 34.4 19.6 18.9 15.3 5.0
TD 4 4 5 1 3 3 0 2 1 1 2 2 2 0 0 4 2 0 2 0 1 1 0
PUNT RETURN TOUCHDOWNS Nick Eury, LL Brad Miles, WA Ryan Cywinski, Tunk
1 1 1
RANKINGS SCORING Anthony Maurent, GAR Alec Norton, NA Jeremy Walsh, Nwest Nick Eury, LL Sean Judge, WVW Joey Vigil, LL Tanner Kahlau, Crest
Austin
Hankins
Norton
Wesneski 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 EP 24 23 15 9 17 17 13 13 13 10 10
FG 3 1 2 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
2PT 3 4 1 0 0 0 0
K 0 0 16 0 0 0 0
INTERCEPTIONS Elliott Walker, Wil Isaiah Hankins, Wil Sean Judge, WVW Dajon Rush, GAR Michael Taylor, Tunk Jacob Soller, Cou Brendan Riley, Nwest Brandon Chafin, HA Adrian Otero, Haz Mark Robinson, Mey Donovan O’Boyle, WA Devon Weidman, WVW
KICKOFF RETURN TOUCHDOWNS Rich Wallace, PA Brandon Brueckner, HA Tanner Kahlau, Crest Vincent Todd, Cou Mark Robinson, Mey Nick Littzi, NA Alex Wampole, HR Nick Eury, LL KICKING Jake Gurtis, WVW Ian Dawsey, LL David Klaproth, WA Tristan Williams, HA Muhi Tajuddin, GAR Angelo Girardi, Wil Jeremy Walsh, Nwest Connor Keenan, Crest Ed Lukowski, NA Mauricio Rodriguez, HR John Morgan, HA
TD 16 12 10 12 11 11 8
LG 32 22 35 40 0 0 32 31 0 0 0
PTS 33 26 21 18 17 17 16 16 13 10 10
RUSHING Alec Norton, NA Nick Eury, LL Jeremy Walsh, Nwest Anthony Maurent, GAR Joey Vigil, LL Adrian Otero, Haz Logan Cywinski, Tunk Tanner Kahlau, Crest Jacob Cole, Cou Jacob Soller, Cou Tyheim Taylor, HA Mark Robinson, Mey Elliot Walker, Wil Sean Judge, WVW Bret Storrs, Dal Ryan Cywinski, Tunk Brian Miles, WA Thomas Engle, HR Isaiah Hankins, Wil Jason Marston, Mey Ocyrus Brown, NA David Simpson, Dal Carson Kinney, Haz Trey Borger, LL Garret Reese, Nwest
PTS 102 80 78 72 66 66 48 No. 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Rsh 109 60 92 53 31 97 92 61 72 77 92 32 54 41 66 56 84 81 44 41 38 64 45 39 48
Yds 841 789 631 620 598 526 524 488 459 437 434 409 396 391 374 362 362 336 321 299 299 297 289 282 272
TD 11 10 10 12 10 6 5 7 6 3 6 4 2 5 1 6 5 4 7 2 3 2 2 2 3
Avg 7.7 13.2 6.9 11.7 19.3 5.4 5.7 8.0 6.4 5.7 4.7 12.8 7.3 9.5 5.7 6.5 4.3 4.1 7.3 7.3 7.9 4.6 6.4 7.2 5.7
WVC TEAM STATISTICS PASS OFFENSE Yards Williamsport 953 Valley West 828 GAR 678 Meyers 457 Northwest 453 Pittston Area 438 Hanover Area 434 Dallas 426 Crestwood 402 Wyoming Area 397 Hazleton Area 366 Berwick 350 Tunkhannock 306 Nanticoke Area 299 Holy Redeemer 282 Coughlin 232 Lake-Lehman 89 PASS DEFENSE Yards Meyers 174 Dallas 279 Lake-Lehman 322 Valley West 328 Holy Redeemer 352 GAR 365 Nanticoke Area 371 Berwick 399 Williamsport 412 Crestwood 448 Pittston Area 451 Tunkhannock 452 Hanover Area 507 Coughlin 590 Northwest 600 Hazleton Area 659 Wyoming Area 699
WB_VOICE - GAME - 12 - 10/09/15
Avg. 190.6 165.6 135.6 91.4 90.6 87.6 86.8 85.2 80.4 79.4 73.2 70.0 61.2 59.8 56.4 46.4 17.8 Avg. 34.8 55.8 64.4 65.6 70.4 73.0 74.2 79.8 82.4 89.6 90.2 90.4 101.4 118.0 120.0 131.8 139.8
RUSH OFFENSE Yards Lake-Lehman 1856 Nanticoke Area 1338 GAR 1207 Valley West 1194 Coughlin 1192 Northwest 1073 Meyers 1026 Williamsport 998 Berwick 971 Crestwood 917 Tunkhannock 907 Wyoming Area 885 Hazleton Area 744 Dallas 680 Hanover Area 638 Holy Redeemer 489 Pittston Area 404 RUSH DEFENSE Yards Valley West 466 Berwick 468 Lake-Lehman 496 Wyoming Area 679 Northwest 752 Nanticoke Area 761 Hazleton Area 778 Meyers 801 Williamsort 840 Hanover Area 872 GAR 924 Dallas 936 Holy Redeemer 1164 Coughlin 1165 Crestwood 1184 Tunkhannock 1236 Pittston Area 1290
Avg. 371.2 267.6 241.4 238.8 238.4 214.6 205.2 199.6 194.2 183.4 181.4 177.0 148.8 136.0 127.6 97.8 80.8 Avg. 93.2 93.6 99.2 135.8 150.4 152.2 155.6 160.2 168.0 174.4 184.8 187.2 232.8 233.0 236.8 247.2 258.0
TOTAL OFFENSE Yards Valley West 2022 Williamsport 1952 Lake-Lehman 1945 GAR 1873 Nanticoke Area 1637 Northwest 1526 Meyers 1483 Coughlin 1424 Crestwood 1319 Hazleton Area 1314 Wyoming Area 1282 Berwick 1273 Tunkhannock 1213 Dallas 1106 Hanover Area 1071 Pittston Area 862 Holy Redeemer 771 TOTAL DEFENSE Yards Valley West 794 Lake-Lehman 818 Berwick 867 Meyers 975 Nanticoke Area 1132 Dallas 1215 Williamsport 1252 GAR 1289 Northwest 1352 Wyoming Area 1378 Hanover Area 1379 Hazleton Area 1437 Holy Redeemer 1516 Crestwood 1632 Tunkhannock 1688 Pittston Area 1741 Coughlin 1755
Avg. 404.4 390.4 389.0 374.6 327.4 305.2 296.6 284.8 263.8 262.8 256.4 254.6 242.6 221.2 214.2 172.4 154.2 Avg. 158.8 163.6 173.4 195.0 226.4 243.0 250.4 257.8 270.4 275.6 275.8 287.4 303.2 326.4 337.6 348.2 351.0
SCORING OFFENSE Points Valley West 217 GAR 215 Lake-Lehman 190 Williamsport 181 Nanticoke Area 153 Wyoming Area 132 Coughlin 129 Northwest 129 Meyers 120 Crestwood 113 Hanover Area 102 Hazleton Area 102 Berwick 88 Tunkhannock 85 Holy Redeemer 82 Dallas 69 Pittston Area 55 SCORING DEFENSE Points Lake-Lehman 54 Valley West 62 Berwick 65 Dallas 73 Meyers 88 Williamsport 111 GAR 119 Northwest 119 Hazleton Area 123 Wyoming Area 123 Nanticoke Area 138 Coughlin 145 Hanover Area 151 Crestwood 174 Tunkhannock 183 Holy Redeemer 187 Pittston Area 191
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G12] | 10/07/15
Avg. 43.4 43.0 38.0 36.2 30.6 26.4 25.8 25.8 24.0 22.6 20.4 20.4 17.6 17.0 16.4 13.8 11.0 Avg 10.8 12.4 13.0 14.6 17.6 22.2 23.8 23.8 24.6 24.6 27.6 29.0 30.2 34.8 36.6 37.4 38.2
PENNLIVE Class AAAA Team Rec Pvs 1. Woodland Hills (7) 5-0 2 2. Parkland (11) 5-0 3 3. Central Dauphin (3) 5-0 4 4. Pine-Richland (7) 5-0 7 5. North Allegheny (7) 4-1 8 6. Wilson (3) 4-1 6 7. Pittsburgh C.C. (7) 4-1 9 8. La Salle College (12) 3-1 10 9. *St. Joseph’s Prep (12) 2-2 1 10. Downingtown East (1) 5-0 NR Teams to watch Bethlehem Freedom (11) 5-0, Downingtown West (1) 5-0, Pennsbury (1) 4-1, Penn-Trafford (7) 5-0, Spring-Ford (1) 5-0, Upper Dublin (1) 5-0, WYOMING VALLEY WEST (2) 5-0. Class AAA Team Rec Pvs 1. *Archbishop Wood (12) 5-0 1 2. Imhotep Charter (12) 5-0 2 3. West Allegheny (7) 5-0 3 4. Bishop McDevitt (3) 5-0 4 5. Conneaut (10) 5-0 5 6. Central Valley (7) 4-1 6 7. Bethlehem Catholic (11) 4-1 7 8. Cathedral Prep (10) 4-1 8 9. Ringgold (7) 5-0 9 10. Lehighton (11) 5-0 10 Teams to watch Academy Park (1) 5-0, Belle Vernon (7) 5-0, Saucon Valley (11) 5-0, Scranton Prep (2) 4-1, Selinsgrove (4) 5-0, Somerset (5) 4-1. Class AA Team Rec Pvs 1. Aliquippa (7) 5-0 1 2. *South Fayette (7) 5-0 2 3. Wyomissing (3) 5-0 3 4. Berks Catholic (3) 5-0 4 5. Southern Columbia (4) 5-0 5 6. Beaver Falls (7) 5-0 6 7. Steel Valley (7) 5-0 7 8. Sharon (10) 4-1 8 9. Washington (7) 5-0 9 10. Hickory (10) 4-1 10 Teams to watch Bedford (5) 5-0, Central Martinsburg (6) 4-1, LAKE-LEHMAN (2) 5-0, Loyalsock Twp. (4) 5-0, Montoursville (4) 4-1, Seton-LaSalle (7) 4-1. Class A Team Rec Pvs 1. Clairton (7) 5-0 1 2. North Catholic (7) 5-0 2 3. Sharpsville (10) 5-0 3 4. *Bishop Guilfoyle (6) 5-0 4 5. Camp Hill (3) 5-0 5 6. Avonworth (7) 5-0 6 7. Farrell (10) 5-0 7 8. Jeannette (7) 5-0 8 9. Old Forge (2) 4-1 9 10. Berlin-Brothersvalley (5) 5-0 10 Teams to watch Brockway (9) 4-1, Frazier (7) 5-0, Neshannock (7) 4-1, Penns Manor (6) 5-0, Portage (6) 4-1, Shenango (7) 4-1. *-2014 PIAA champion Number in parentheses is PIAA district.
23:44 | REESERJAME
BERWICK Passing Cm Jared Marshman 9 Mike Force 17 Rushing Daquan Hellenthal Mike Force Len Wyda Anthony Cicini Alex Koch Matt Shannon Jared Marshman Harrison Kuchka Kyle Roberts Jordan DiValerio Tom Smith Luke Fisher ReCeiving Luke Fisher Len Wyda Harrison Kuchka Rob Harter Jim LeGrande Kyle Pierce Daquan Hellenthal Joe Norce Will Morey KiCKing Luke Fisher Jordan DiValerio
att 16 49
Yds TD int Rtg 194 1 2 80.7 156 1 1 42.6 Rsh Yds TD avg 31 269 1 8.7 38 185 2 4.9 25 161 2 6.4 22 121 1 5.5 24 103 2 4.3 30 97 1 3.2 11 31 0 2.8 7 23 1 3.3 1 1 0 1.0 1 0 0 0.0 1 -1 0 -1.0 2 -4 0 -2.0 Rec Yds TD avg 6 108 1 18.0 6 43 0 7.2 5 99 1 19.8 4 89 0 22.3 1 7 0 7.0 1 6 0 6.0 1 2 0 2.0 1 0 0 0.0 1 -4 0 -4.0 eP Fg Long 3 0 0 3 0 0
COUGHLIN Passing Cm Jacob Soller 12 Rushing Jacob Cole Jacob Soller Zach King Chris Wright Vincent Todd Vance Cullen ReCeiving Jacob Cole Nick Zalaffi Zach King Mike Brown Josh Hvozdovic Vincent Todd KiCKing Michael Cinti
att 35
Yds TD int Rtg 232 5 4 58.3 Rsh Yds TD avg 72 459 6 6.4 77 437 3 5.7 33 259 4 7.8 12 30 0 2.5 4 8 0 2.0 1 -2 0 -2.0 Rec Yds TD avg 4 79 1 19.8 4 111 2 27.8 1 13 1 13.0 1 12 0 12.0 1 11 1 11.0 1 6 0 6.0 eP Fg Long 9 0 0
CRESTWOOD att 40 32
Yds TD int Rtg 208 3 3 48.8 194 1 4 32.0 Rsh Yds TD avg 61 488 7 8.0 37 148 0 4.0 9 117 0 13.0 12 99 1 8.3 17 78 2 4.6 1 65 1 65.0 4 16 0 4.0 1 -1 0 -1.0 Rec Yds TD avg 16 246 1 15.4 3 65 1 21.7 3 48 2 16.0 3 29 0 9.7 2 13 0 6.5 1 1 0 1.0 eP Fg Long 13 1 31
DALLAS att Yds TD int Rtg 76 426 4 1 80.3 1 0 0 0 39.6 Rsh Yds TD avg 66 374 1 5.7 64 297 2 4.6 8 30 0 3.8 3 20 0 6.7 2 3 0 1.5 37 -18 3 -0.5 Rec Yds TD avg 10 149 2 14.9 7 107 1 15.3 6 52 0 8.7 5 59 0 11.8 3 26 0 8.7 3 21 0 7.0 2 15 1 7.5 1 6 0 6.0 1 3 0 3.0 1 -12 0 12.0 eP Fg Long 9 0 0
WB_VOICE - GAME - 13 - 10/09/15
LAKE-LEHMAN
Yds TD int Rtg 649 8 0 133.3 8 1 0 139.6 Rsh Yds TD avg 53 620 12 1.7 35 197 2 5.6 37 186 1 5.0 5 85 2 17.0 12 72 2 6.0 4 33 0 8.3 2 16 0 8.0 4 3 0 0.8 Rec Yds TD avg 10 140 2 14.0 9 244 4 27.1 3 88 0 29.3 3 60 1 20.0 2 60 0 30.0 2 24 1 12.0 1 52 1 52.0 eP Fg Long 17 0 0
HANOVER AREA Passing Cm Jake Peters 30 Rushing Tyheim Taylor Brandon Chafin Mike Gronkowski Jake Peters Alex Jacobs Zakee Nettles Josh Jopling Kyle Baranosky ReCeiving Brandon Chafin Brandon Brueckner Ed Nelson Zakee Nettles Tyheim Taylor Mike Gronkowski KiCKing John Morgan
att 79
att 44 31
Yds TD int Rtg 434 7 3 70.3 Rsh Yds TD avg 92 434 6 4.7 8 90 0 11.3 22 59 0 2.7 41 46 1 1.1 7 20 0 2.9 1 15 0 15.0 1 1 0 1.0 1 -12 0 -12.0 Rec Yds TD avg 14 200 3 14.3 6 95 1 15.8 4 65 1 16.3 3 19 0 6.3 2 30 1 15.0 2 17 1 8.5 eP Fg Long 10 0 0
Yds TD int Rtg 270 2 2 65.5 96 1 4 11.2 Rsh Yds TD avg 97 526 6 5.4 45 289 2 6.4 14 59 0 4.2 16 29 0 1.8 9 29 0 3.2 4 23 0 5.8 1 20 0 20.0 2 2 0 1.0 6 -1 0 -0.2 Rec Yds TD avg 10 82 0 8.2 6 143 1 23.8 4 38 0 9.5 4 30 1 7.5 4 26 0 6.5 1 36 1 36.0 1 1 0 1.0 eP Fg Long 9 3 40
HOLY REDEEMER Passing Cm Cam Brennan 13 Thomas Engle 1 J.D. Turosky 6 Rushing Thomas Engle Eric Jeffries Justin Januszko John Winter J.D. Turosky James Cunningham Rob McClay Brian Greenwalt Michael Conway Dennis Harrison Alex Wampole Ryan Januszko Cam Brennan ReCeiving John Winter J.D. Turosky Dennis Harrison Thomas Engle Alex Wampole Cade Fahey Chris Menning Justin Januszko Connor Thole KiCKing Mauricio Rodriguez
att 46 1 9
att 6 5 1 1
Yds TD int Rtg 66 1 0 129.2 23 0 1 15.0 0 0 0 39.6 0 0 0 39.6 Rsh Yds TD avg 60 789 10 13.2 31 598 10 19.3 39 282 2 7.2 16 102 0 6.4 5 57 0 11.4 8 29 0 3.6 3 19 0 6.3 5 14 0 2.8 5 13 0 2.6 4 8 0 2.0 1 2 0 2.0 2 -9 1 -4.5 Rec Yds TD avg 2 49 1 24.5 1 17 0 17.0 1 15 0 15.0 1 8 0 8.0 eP Fg Long 23 1 22
MEYERS
HAZLETON AREA Passing Cm Ryan Wolk 22 Hunter Vanblargan 8 Rushing Adrian Otero Carson Kinney Josh Zukoski Ryan Wolk Matt Sutton Logan Jones Jose Cabrera Isaiah Santiago Hunter Vanblargan ReCeiving Joey Bayzick Jose Cabrera Josh Zukoski Ed Bielen Adrian Otero Hunter Vanblargan Carson Kinney KiCKing Tristan Williams
Passing Cm Nate O’Donell 3 Vince Ferrari 2 Jake Tomolonis 0 Nick Eury 0 Rushing Nick Eury Joey Vigil Trey Borger Luke Hummel Jake Tomolonis Ty Wojciechowski Charlie Kuschke Jesse Tomolonis Matt Benn Kyler Space Vince Ferrari Nate O’Donell ReCeiving Joey Vigil Zach Brucher Nick Eury Trey Borger KiCKing Ian Dawsey
Yds TD int Rtg 233 3 6 30.3 36 0 0 118.8 13 0 0 70.1 Rsh Yds TD avg 81 336 4 4.1 24 90 1 3.8 12 85 2 7.1 6 49 0 8.2 9 34 0 3.8 9 26 0 2.9 5 20 0 4.0 1 10 0 10.0 4 6 0 1.5 4 1 0 0.3 1 -5 0 -5.0 3 -16 0 -5.3 18 -66 0 -3.7 Rec Yds TD avg 7 132 1 18.9 4 104 2 26.0 2 11 0 5.5 2 9 0 4.5 1 21 0 21.0 1 9 0 9.0 1 5 0 5.0 1 3 0 3.0 1 0 0 0.0 eP Fg Long 10 0 0
Passing Cm Willie Wallace 25 Rushing Mark Robinson Jason Marston Fahbian Biggs Namir Murphy Michael Dempsey Bryce Waters Raheem Twyman Khabir Williams Ja’mell Ballard Erik Betz Janssen Wilborn Omar Kelly Sufyan Burroughs Josh Schiowitz Travis Paul Tyriq Hatcher Willie Wallace ReCeiving Raheem Twyman Mark Robinson Bryce Waters Jason Marston Omar Kelly Khabir Williams Michael Horvath Chayne Patterson Fahbian Biggs KiCKing Tyler Schneikart James Langan Ken Macko
att 58
Yds TD int Rtg 457 6 2 90.9 Rsh Yds TD avg 32 409 4 12.8 41 299 2 7.3 37 255 3 6.9 11 44 1 4.0 3 25 1 8.3 2 17 0 8.5 2 14 0 7.0 4 13 0 3.3 1 10 0 10.0 1 7 0 7.0 1 3 0 3.0 1 2 0 2.0 1 -2 0 -2.0 2 -3 0 1.5 1 -3 0 -3.0 1 -7 0 -7.0 15 -13 0 -0.9 Rec Yds TD avg 7 241 2 34.4 5 68 1 13.6 3 91 2 30.3 3 28 0 9.3 2 3 0 1.5 2 2 0 1.0 1 11 1 11.0 1 10 0 10.0 1 3 0 3.0 eP Fg Long 8 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0
NANTICOKE AREA Passing Cm Matt Wruble 19 Rushing Alec Norton Ocyrus Brown Dawson Hughes Ian Novakoski Jacob Havey Mark Walters Nick Littzi John Pietrzyk John Gusak Matt Wruble ReCeiving Alec Norton Justin Casey Ocyrus Brown Nick Littzi Robert Roth Matt Piontkowski KiCKing Ed Lukowski
att 40
Yds TD int Rtg 299 2 5 49.9 Rsh Yds TD avg 109 841 11 7.7 38 299 3 7.9 13 78 0 6.0 10 56 1 5.6 6 46 0 7.7 3 37 0 12.3 5 7 0 1.4 13 7 0 0.5 1 5 0 5.0 12 -19 3 -1.6 Rec Yds TD avg 5 56 1 11.2 5 56 0 11.2 3 42 0 14.0 3 59 1 19.7 2 62 0 31.0 1 24 0 24.0 eP Fg Long 13 0 0
NORTHWEST Passing Cm Jeremy Walsh 28 Eric Evans 1 Rushing Jeremy Walsh Garret Reese Jake Anderson Ezra Judge Bryce Harrison Zach Carr Hayden Stancavage Mitch Mazonkey ReCeiving Bryce Harrison Ezra Judge Mitch Mazonkey Eric Evans Hayden Stancavage Neno Agnello KiCKing Jeremy Walsh
att 72 2
Yds TD int Rtg 430 2 3 51.3 25 0 0 95.8 Rsh Yds TD avg 92 631 10 6.9 48 272 3 5.7 37 146 1 3.9 4 26 0 6.5 4 24 0 6.0 5 9 0 1.8 2 3 0 1.5 1 -2 1 -2.0 Rec Yds TD avg 12 148 0 12.3 11 157 1 14.3 4 85 1 21.3 1 33 0 33.0 1 17 0 17.0 1 13 0 13.0 eP Fg Long 13 1 32
Andrew Krech / The ciTizens’ Voice
Meyers’ Willie Wallace, left, and Isaiah McGahee celebrate a fumble recovery against Lake-Lehman.
WILLIAMSPORT
PITTSTON AREA Passing Cm Walter Coles 22 Niko Cinquegrani 3 Trevor Tigue 0 Rushing Kyle Petroski Carmen Falcone Ryan Davis Eric Petroski Anthony Griffith Keemar Woodruff Niko Cinquegrani Trevor Tigue Nick Anastasi Walter Coles ReCeiving Paul Brady Niko Cinquegrani Kevin Krawczyk Nick Anastasi Kyle Petroski Keemar Woodruff KiCKing Mike Mikidish Joe Warren
att 60 8 1
Yds TD int Rtg 379 3 2 61.7 79 1 2 74.5 0 0 1 0.0 Rsh Yds TD avg 45 189 1 4.2 25 80 0 3.2 16 76 0 4.8 8 29 0 3.6 5 10 0 2.0 8 5 1 0.6 4 4 0 1.0 1 0 0 0.0 2 -8 0 -4.0 25 -30 0 -1.2 Rec Yds TD avg 10 223 2 22.3 6 58 1 9.7 4 89 0 22.3 4 35 0 8.8 3 35 1 11.7 1 18 0 18.0 eP Fg Long 6 0 0 1 0 0
TUNKHANNOCK Passing Cm Logan Cywinski 33 Bryce Steele 1 Hunter Hopkins 1 Rushing Logan Cywinski Ryan Cywinski Joey Gavik Brian Muckin Michael Taylor Bryce Steele Fred Beamer Hunter Hopkins ReCeiving Brian Muckin Ryan Cywinski Michael Taylor Jarod Bernosky Bryce Steele Braden Seboe Hunter Hopkins Connor Munley KiCKing Brian Muckin
att Yds TD int Rtg 60 273 0 2 53.0 4 26 0 1 14.6 2 7 0 0 58.3 Rsh Yds TD avg 92 524 5 5.7 56 362 6 6.5 6 34 0 5.7 1 8 0 8.0 23 3 1 0.1 4 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 0.0 10 -24 0 -2.4 Rec Yds TD avg 10 81 0 8.1 8 79 0 9.9 7 35 0 5.0 4 30 0 7.5 3 44 0 14.7 1 26 0 26.0 1 9 0 9.0 1 2 0 2.0 eP Fg Long 5 0 0
VALLEY WEST Passing Cm Aaron Austin 56 Damien Davies 0 Rushing Sean Judge Aaron Austin Bill Davison Chris Melovitz Mike Baird Devon Weidman Zach Davies Sean Mikovitch Damien Davies James Grady Paul Sims ReCeiving L.J. Wesneski Devon Weidman Sean Judge Bill Davison Chris Reese Jake Shemo Chris Melovitz KiCKing Jake Gurtis
att 80 1
Yds TD int Rtg 828 11 2 132.7 0 0 0 39.6 Rsh Yds TD avg 41 391 5 9.5 52 212 3 4.1 20 182 3 9.1 13 160 1 12.3 19 102 1 5.4 4 86 1 21.5 5 52 1 10.4 8 22 0 2.8 2 7 0 3.5 1 3 0 3.0 1 2 0 2.0 Rec Yds TD avg 17 244 4 14.4 16 272 5 17.0 11 179 2 16.3 5 63 0 12.6 5 50 0 10.0 1 12 0 12.0 1 8 0 8.0 eP Fg Long 24 3 32
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G13] | 10/07/15
Passing Cm att Yds TD int Rtg Isaiah Hankins 70 106 953 11 2 121.3 Rushing Rsh Yds TD avg Elliot Walker 54 396 2 7.3 Isaiah Hankins 44 321 7 7.3 Trey Potts 37 236 4 6.4 Latrelle Jackson 2 27 0 13.5 Ross Stebbins 3 10 0 3.3 Tysheem Anderson 1 6 0 6.0 Angelo Girardi 1 4 0 4.0 Cameron Dickey 1 4 0 4.0 Kullen Rogers 2 -1 0 -0.5 ReCeiving Rsh Yds TD avg Jerah Reeves 33 503 4 15.2 Jalen Jackson 13 155 3 11.9 Dante Wright 8 101 2 12.6 Tristan Connor 7 137 0 19.6 Elliot Walker 6 48 1 8.0 Trey Potts 3 19 1 6.3 KiCKing eP Fg Long Angelo Girardi 17 0 0 Terrance Hillman 2 0 0
WYOMING AREA Passing Cm P.J. Angeli 33 Steve Homza 6 Rushing Brian Miles Donovan O’Boyle Brandon Charney P.J. Angeli Steve Homza Justin Jospeh Jeff Urban ReCeiving Marc Minichello Brian Miles Donovan O’Boyle Steve Homza Dylan Kostak Dante DeLuca Jeff Urban Kyle Carr Mitchell Higley P.J. Angeli Anthony Saitta Kyler Higgins KiCKing David Klaproth
att 68 10
Yds TD int Rtg 314 6 3 72.8 83 2 0 126.3 Rsh Yds TD avg 84 362 5 4.3 30 243 1 8.1 31 163 1 5.3 37 105 2 2.8 1 10 0 10.0 1 2 0 2.0 1 2 0 2.0 Rec Yds TD avg 11 101 1 9.2 5 0 0 0.0 5 88 1 17.6 4 43 1 10.8 4 38 1 9.5 3 37 2 12.3 2 53 2 26.5 1 1 0 1.0 1 9 0 9.0 1 14 0 14.0 1 15 0 15.0 1 -2 0 -2.0 eP Fg Long 15 1 35
FANTASY UPDATE WeeK 5 sCoRes Reeser 85, Bufano 36 Cignoli 133, Bennett 114 Bufano 3-2 Cignoli 3-2 Bennett 2-3 Reeser 2-3
sTanDings
WeeK 6 games Bufano vs. Bennett Reeser vs. Cignoli ToP PReFoRmeRs Nick Eury (SB) 51 Alec Norton (MC) 51 Sean Judge (JR) 43 Anthony Maurent (MC) 36 Ryan Cywinski (SB) 25 Isaiah Hankins (JR) 22 Jeremy Walsh (MC) 20
23:45 | REESERJAME
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 13
Passing Cm Matt Harrison 39 Ryan Martin 0 Rushing Bret Storrs David Simpson David Schuster James Geiger Cole Dixon Matt Harrison ReCeiving Tanner Gattuso Ryan Martin David Simpson Christian Roberts Jack Tomko Stone Mannello James Geiger Ray Ostroski Bret Storrs Matt Harrison KiCKing Ron Ostrowski
att 55 1
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Passing Cm Lance Blass 15 Seamus Rother 13 Rushing Tanner Kahlau Lance Blass Patrick Rother Josh Malkemes Seamus Rother Connor Sheloski Owen Grigas Connor Keenan ReCeiving Connor Sheloski Josh Malkemes Seamus Rother Lance Blass Kyle Richards Tanner Kahlau KiCKing Connor Keenan
GAR Passing Cm Garry Kroll 28 Gerson Peralta 1 Rushing Anthony Maurent Garry Kroll Mike Drozda Gerson Peralta Josh Goodwin Dajon Rush Anthony Blake Tashawn Qualls ReCeiving Dajon Rush Anthony Maurent Austin Yelland Anth Hoopingarner Gerson Peralta Nate Luckey Mike Drozda KiCKing Muhi Tajuddin
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
14 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
BERWICK
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
2015 SCHEDULES CRESTWOOD
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 26 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 NOv. 7
Opponent at Berwick at Abington Heights Coughlin Pittston Area at Wyoming Area Hazleton Area Valley West at Dallas Williamsport at Pottsville
HANOVER AREA
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
NORTHWEST
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Time/Score L, 22-18 W, 43-7 L, 53-20 L, 33-14 L, 36-7 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Opponent at Lackawanna Trail Mid Valley Holy Redeemer at Old Forge at Meyers GAR Northwest at Nanticoke Area Hanover Area at Dallas
Time/Score W, 31-7 W, 34-7 W, 42-7 W, 42-13 W, 41-20 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Opponent at Lakeland Dunmore Western Wayne GAR at Hanover Area at Nanticoke Area at Lake-Lehman Meyers at Tunkhannock Holy Redeemer
WILLIAMSPORT
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Opponent at Central Mountain Mifflin County Abington Heights at Hazleton Area at Dallas at Coughlin Berwick Tunkhannock at Crestwood Valley West
WB_VOICE - GAME - 14 - 10/09/15
Opponent at Scranton Wallenpaupack Berwick at Coughlin Williamsport at Valley West at Wyoming Area Crestwood at Pittston Area Lake-Lehman
Time/Score W, 13-7 L, 20-14, OT L, 0-7 L, 25-14 W, 28-14 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
1-4 HAZLETON AREA
Opponent Carbondale at Holy Redeemer Old Forge at Riverside Northwest Meyers at GAR at Panther Valley at Lake-Lehman Nanticoke Area
LAKE-LEHMAN
Time/Score W, 34-14 W, 27-0 W, 7-0 L, 34-6 L, 17-14 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
1-4 DALLAS
Time/Score L, 34-14 L, 31-13 L, 42-41 W, 38-35 L, 32-7 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
5-0 MEYERS Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 19 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 15 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 26 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 24 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
2-3
Time/Score W, 22-20 L, 26-3 L, 35-6 L, 42-24 W, 47-0 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Opponent at Montrose Susquehanna Riverside at Lackawanna Trail Lake-Lehman at Hanover Area Nanticoke Area at Northwest at Holy Redeemer (at King’s) GAR
Time/Score W, 41-17 W, 32-0 W, 7-6 L, 24-20 L, 41-20 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Opponent Abington Heights Valley View at Valley West at Crestwood Hazleton Area at Tunkhannock Coughlin at Berwick Dallas at Wyoming Area
4-1 WYOMING AREA
Time/Score W, 48-30 W, 41-6 W, 36-14 W, 42-24 L, 28-14 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
2-3
Opponent at Coughlin Scranton at Delaware Valley Williamsport at Pittston Area at Crestwood Tunkhannock at Valley West Daniel Boone Berwick
3-2 PITTSTON AREA
Time/Score L, 42-14 L, 28-10 W, 27-7 W, 42-35, 2OT W, 36-7 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
3-2
Opponent Crestwood at Pottsville at Dallas Valley West Selinsgrove at Wyoming Area at Williamsport Pittston Area Coughlin at Hazleton Area
Opponent Valley West at Scranton Prep at North Pocono at Tunkhannock Crestwood Berwick Dallas at Coughlin at Wallenpaupack Pittston Area
COUGHLIN
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 24 Oct. 30 Nov. 7
GAR
Date Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 3 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Time/Score L, 22-20 W, 22-19 W, 42-41 W, 25-14 L, 49-20 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Opponent Old Forge at Holy Cross Carbondale at Northwest Mid Valley at Lake-Lehman Hanover Area Holy Redeemer at Nanticoke Area at Meyers
Time/Score L, 44-32 W, 58-7 W, 56-6 L, 42-35, 2OT W, 34-20 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
HOLY REDEEMER
Date Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 26 Oct. 2 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Opponent Holy Cross Hanover Area at Lake-Lehman CMVT at Nanticoke Area at Susquehanna Juniata at GAR Meyers (at King’s) at Northwest
3-2
NANTICOKE AREA
0-5
TUNKHANNOCK
Time/Score L, 10-0 L, 34-7 L, 62-13 L, 38-35 L, 47-0 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
2-3
Time/Score L, 42-17 L, 42-13 L, 26-21 W, 49-6 W, 32-7 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Date Sept. 5 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 15 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 19 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 7
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G14] | 10/07/15
3-2
1-4
Time/Score W, 21-0 L, 43-7 L, 42-7 L, 38-33 L, 64-14 2:15 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
2-3
Opponent at Susquehanna CMVT at East Juniata at Lakeland Holy Redeemer Northwest at Meyers Lake-Lehman GAR at Hanover Area
Time/Score L, 28-6 W, 62-30 L, 23-14 L, 43-7 W, 63-14 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Opponent Athens Western Wayne at Scranton Prep Wyoming Area Honesdale Pittston Area Coughlin at Williamsport Northwest at Coughlin
Time/Score L, 43-12 L, 21-20 L, 62-7 L, 49-6 W, 40-8 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
WYOMING VALLEY WEST
Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6
3-2
Opponent Hazleton Area at West Scranton at Crestwood Dallas at Valley West Williamsport at Pittston Area Wyoming Area at Berwick Tunkhannock
Opponent at Wyoming Area Delaware Valley Pittston Area at Berwick Coughlin Dallas at Crestwood Hazleton Area at Scranton at Williamsport
23:46 | REESERJAME
1-4
5-0
Time/Score W, 42-17 W, 30-6 W, 62-13 W, 34-6 W, 49-20 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
GAMEFACES
u SCENES FROM THE SIDELINES Photos by Mark Moran, Christopher Dolan and Frank Lauri / The Citizensâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Voice
Wilkes-Barre Memorial stadium in reflected in the tuba of a Coughlin band member.
The Dallas cheerleaders pose before a game.
WB_VOICE - GAME - 15 - 10/09/15
A member of the Northwest band plays the flute.
Pittston Area cheerleaders enjoy the halftime show.
WB_VOICE/SPECIAL_SECTION/PAGES [G15] | 10/07/15
23:47 | REESERJAME
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 15
A member of the Meyers color guard performs at halftime.
Northwest coach Lon Hazlet greets the Junior Rangers before the game.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
A Dallas band member plays the bass.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
16 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
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WB_VOICE/PAGES [A01] | 10/08/15
The CiTizens’ VoiCe
Italy: convicted US diplomat held in Portugal MILAN — A former CIA operative convicted of the kidnapping of an Egyptian cleric as par t of the extraordinary renditions program has been detained in Portugal and is awaiting a decision on whether she will be turned over to Italy to serve her six-year sentence, a top Italian prosecutor said Thursday. Sabrina De Sousa was arrested at Lisbon Airport on Monday, and released on Wednesday after authorities seized her passport, prosecutor Armando Spataro told The Associated Press. “She is awaiting a decision on whethershewillbebroughttoItaly,” Spataro said. It was not clear if she was arriving or departingwhenshewasarrested. De Sousa was among 26 Americans, mostly CIA agents, convicted in absentia over the of kidnapping of Milan cleric Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, known as Abu Omar, in broad daylight from a Milan street on Feb. 17, 2003.
A1
Friday, October 9, 2015
NATION » WORLD » BUSINESS » HEALTH
NEWS IN BRIEF
18:23 | BOONELAURA
AUTOMOTIVE » EMPLOYMENT » REAL ESTATE » AND MORE
AP: Over 1,360 killed in Saudi hajj disaster By Jon Gambrell Associated Press
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — A crush and stampede last month outside of Saudi Arabia’s holy city of Mecca killed at least 1,364 people during the annual hajj pilgrimage to the kingdom, an Associated Press count showed Thursday, nearly 600 more than the official death toll. The AP count of dead from the disaster — the worst tragedy to strike the hajj in a quarter-century — is
based on tolls offered by 18 countries through their officials or state media broadcasts. The tolls are said to only include those killed in the disaster at Mina, near Mecca. That puts the Sept. 24 tragedy, with hundreds still reported missing, even closer to the deadliest disaster to ever strike the hajj. A stampede in 1990 killed 1,426 people at an overcrowded pedestrian tunnel leading to holy sites in Mecca. Saudi officials have said their official figure of 769 killed and 934
injured in the Mina disaster remains accurate, though an investigation into its causes is ongoing. Health authorities in the kingdom previously said civil defense officials would be offering any new casualty figures, though no new toll has been released by authorities since Sept. 26. Authorities have said the Mina crush and stampede happened as two waves of pilgrims converged on a narrow road, causing hundreds of people to suffocate or be trampled to death.
Shiite power Iran, the Mideast rival of Sunni Saudi Arabia, has blamed the disaster on the kingdom’s “mismanagement.” It also accused Riyadh of a cover-up, saying the real death toll exceeds 4,700, without providing evidence to support its claim. Diplomats in Indonesia, Pakistan and India previously have said Saudi officials gave them some 1,100 photographs of those killed in the Mina disaster. At that time, Saudi officials said the photographs included pilgrims who died of natural causes.
NATO talks tough on Russia, with scant action By John-Thor Dahlburg Associated Press Writer
Israel bars ministers from Jerusalem site JERUSALEM — A Palestinian stabbed four Israelis with a screwdriver on Thursday before a soldier shot and killed him amid fresh violence that prompted Israel’s premier to bar Cabinet ministers and lawmakers from a sensitive Jerusalem holy site at the heart of the latest tensions. The attack in Tel Aviv was among four new stabbings on Thursday that left several people wounded. A series of similar attacks in recent days, carried out mainly by young people with no known links to armed groups, has shocked Israelis and raised fears of a new uprising. The screwdriver-wielding assailant, a Palestinian from east Jerusalem, stabbed and wounded four Israelis, including a female soldier, near a busy Tel Aviv road before being shot dead, police spokeswoman Luba Samri said.
Actor Daniel Craig: I’m over James Bond LONDON — Actor Daniel Craig has said he wants to move on from the James Bond franchise and that, for now, he would rather slit his wrists than do another Bond movie. In an interview with Time Out magazine, in which he was asked whether he could imagine doing another Bond film, Craig said: “Now? I’d rather break this glass and slash my wrists. ... I’m over it at the moment. We’re done. All I want to do is move on.” The 47-year-old is reprising his role as the British spy for the fourth time in the upcoming “Spectre.” He added that he doesn’t know and does not want to think about his next step, and that if he were to do another 007 movie, it would “only be for the money.”
JACquelyn MArTin / AssoCiATed Press
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California speaks to the media about his decision not to run for nomination for House Speaker on Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
CONGRESS IN CHAOS
McCarthy abruptly withdraws candidacy for House speaker By Erica Werner AP Congressional Correspondent WASHINGTON — With no warning, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy withdrew Thursday from the contest for speaker of the U.S. House, shocking fellow Republicans just before voting was to begin and plunging Congress into chaos. Lawmakers said they were thunderstruck and in disbelief following McCarthy’s announcement, which came moments after they had shown up for an election nearly certain to end with McCarthy as their pick. A mere two weeks ago outgoing Speaker John Boehner announced his plans to resign under conservative pressure, also without warning and stunning to all. Boehner, who planned to leave Oct. 30, said in a statement that he would stay on “until the House votes to elect a new speaker.” McCarthy said, “Over the last week it has become clear to me that our conference is deeply divided and needs to unite behind one leader. I have always put this conference ahead of myself. Therefore I am with-
mainstream House Republicans. The lawmaker most widely seen as a potential speaker in McCarthy’s place immediately ruled it out. “Kevin McCarthy is the best person to lead the House, and so I’m disappointed in this decision,” said Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the former vice presidential nominee who now chairs the Ways and Means Committee. “While I am grateful for the encouragement I’ve received, I will not be a candidate. One leadership ally, Rep. Steve Stivers of Ohio, said McCarthy “didn’t see a path to 218” — the number of votes needed to prevail on the House floor. McCarthy faced opposition from a bloc of 30-plus hardline conservative lawmakers who didn’t command the numbers to block him in Thursday’s secret-ballot elections, but might have prevented him from winning a floor vote later on. There was talk among some lawmakers of elevating a “caretaker” speaker who could serve with consensus support at least for the short term.
see ChAOS, PAge A3
Why is elephant cancer rare? Answer might help treat humans By Lindsey Tanner AP Medical Writer
Singer Selena Gomez treated for lupus NEW YORK — Selena Gomez has revealed that she’s battling the debilitating immune system disorder lupus. “I was diagnosed with lupus, and I’ve been through chemotherapy,” the 23-yearold singer told Billboard magazine in an interview published Thursday. Gomez acted in “Wizards of Waverly Place” before becoming a pop star. She says she was treated in late 2013 and early 2014 after she canceled the Asian and Australian legs of her Stars Dance tour. — Compiled from wire reports
drawing my candidacy for speaker of the House.” Speaking to reporters, McCarthy said: “For us to unite, we probably need a fresh face.” He said he didn’t want to win by eking out victory because the House needs a speaker with strong GOP support. McCarthy was being opposed by a small but determined bloc of hardline conservatives. McCarthy said he would stay on as majority leader. The speaker’s election was postponed, as may be the scheduled Oct. 29 vote for speaker by the full House, Democrats as well as Republicans. What happens next is unknown. McCarthy was by far the heavy favorite to replace Boehner. Congress is facing major budget deadlines and fiscal decisions. At the White House, presidential spokesman Josh Earnest said it would be easy for Democrats to poke fun at the Republicans’ troubles if not for the serious issues Congress faces. He said the next speaker will have to tame a small but vocal group of lawmakers with a strong ideological bent or find a way to “buck up” more
BRUSSELS — NATO talked tough Thursday about Moscow’s expanding military activity in Syria, but the U.S.-led alliance’s chief response to the Russian airstrikes and cruise missile attacks was a public pledge to help reinforce the defenses of member nation Turkey if necessary. “NATO is able and ready to defend all allies, including Turkey, against any threat,” alliance secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg declared at the onset of a meeting of NATO defense ministers. The meeting attended by U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter and counterparts from NATO’s other 27 countries was overshadowed by concerns about Russia’s recent military actions in Syria. On Wednesday, Russian warships fired a volley of cruise missiles in the first combined air-andground assault with Syrian government troops since Moscow began its military campaign in the country last week. U.S. officials said Thursday that some of those missiles missed their targets and landed in Iran. Over the weekend, Turkey reported back-to-back violations of its airspace by Russian warplanes. Stoltenberg said NATO had already increased “our capacity, our ability, our preparedness to deploy forces, including to the south, including in Turkey, if needed.” However, pressed about what NATO precisely intended to do to aid Turkey, which shares a border with Syria, Stoltenberg told a news conference the mere existence of a beefed-up alliance response force, as well as a new and highly nimble brigade-sized unit able to deploy within 48 hours, may suffice.
TsvAngirAyi MukWAzhi / AssoCiATed Press
An elephant crosses a road Thursday in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe.
CHICAGO — Cancer is much less common in elephants than in humans, even though the big beasts’ bodies have many more cells. That’s a paradox known among scientists, and now researchers think they may have an explanation — one they say might someday lead to new ways to protect people from cancer. Compared with just one copy in humans, elephants’ cells contain 20 copies of a major cancer-suppressing gene, two teams of scientists report. The gene helps damaged cells repair themselves or selfdestruct when exposed to cancercausing substances. The findings aren’t proof that those extra p53 genes make elephants cancer-resistant, but if future research confirms it, scientists could try to develop drugs for
TOPIC OF ThE
VOICE
humans that would mimic the effect. Dr. Joshua Schiffman, a pediatric cancer specialist at the University of Utah who led one of the teams, began his research after hearing a lecture a few years ago about Peto’s paradox. That refers to the fact that large animals including elephants and whales, have comparatively low cancer rates even though they have many more cells than smaller species. Cancer involves uncontrolled cell growth. The lecture speaker mentioned that elephants seemed to have extra copies of the p53 gene. Schiffman’s patients include children with incomplete p53 genes because of a condition called Li-Fraumeni syndrome, which greatly increases their chances of developing cancer. So Schiffman sought to find clues
from the blood of eight elephants, Ringling Bros. circus animals and local zoo animals. His team — as well as a second group of scientists — pinned down the size of the elephants’ surplus — 20 copies. The second team found many other species have only one copy, just like humans. Schiffman and his colleagues compared how elephant cells reacted to radiation, compared with cells from 10 healthy humans and 10 patients with Li-Fraumeni syndrome. The elephant cells self-destructed at twice the rate of healthy human cells and more than five times the rate of cells from patients with the syndrome. Cells that don’t selfrepair or self-destruct when exposed to carcinogens become prone to developing cancer. The work was published Thursday in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
WB_VOICE/PAGES [A02] | 10/08/15
17:37 | BOONELAURA
HEALTH & SCIENCE Dr. ANTHONY KOMArOFF Ask Doctor K
Benefits of fluoride outweigh its risks
A:
DR. ANTHONY KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. Go to his website to send questions and get additional information: www.askdoctork.com.
OCTOBER 9, 2015
A2
Mapping DNA fix wins Nobel
CHArles s. PlATKiN
Trio wins Prize in chemistry for charting how cells repair DNA damage
The Diet Detective
BY KARL RITTER AND MALIN RISING ASSociAted PreSS
LINDAHL
Q:
I’ve read that we need fluoride for healthy teeth. But I’ve also heard that fluoride can be dangerous. Can you help me sort this out? There is no treatment that doesn’t carry some risk along with the benefit. The question always is how the benefit compares to the risk. What's the risk with fluoride? Curious young kids can overdose on fluoride if they get their hands on it. They might consume improperly stored fluoride tablets. Or they might eat a large amount of a fluoridated toothpaste, or drink a large amount of fluoridated mouth rinse. On the other hand, for most children and adults, fluoride — in appropriate amounts — is a powerful ally in the fight against tooth decay. Its benefits far exceed the risks. And the risks are nil if you are careful about keeping fluoride out of the reach of young kids. Fluoride is a common mineral found in soil, all of the Earth’s water sources, and a variety of foods, from black tea to fruit juice to canned crab. Fluoride helps teeth resist being broken down by acid from plaque bacteria. (Plaque is the sticky film that coats our teeth between brushings.) Fluoride also boosts the body’s ability to rebuild tooth enamel when acidproducing bacteria dissolve it. This new enamel is actually harder and more decayresistant than the enamel on the original surface of the tooth. In addition, fluoride seems to limit the ability of plaque to stick to the tooth surface. Children and adults can help prevent tooth decay by getting some fluoride every day. One of the simplest ways to get fluoride is by drinking water that contains it, either naturally or because fluoride has been added to it. Another way is by using toothpaste that contains fluoride. (Most brands on the market contain it.) Mostcommunitiesinthe UnitedStatesaddfluorideto theirdrinkingwater.If your communitydoesn’t,orif you prefertodrinkbottledwater, orif yourfilterremovesfluoride,youmayneedtogetfluoridefromothersources. As I mentioned, getting a lot of fluoride can be deadly. But an adult would need to drink 5,000 to 10,000 glasses of fluoridated water in one sitting to take in enough fluoride to be at risk. Anyone trying to drink that much water would get sick well before they got close to drinking that amount. A minor drawback to using fluoride is that it can discolor tooth enamel. Usually, the discoloration is nearly unnoticeable. Sometimes, heavier mottling and brown blemishes occur if parents use too much fluoride while a young child’s permanent teeth still are forming in the gum. This unusual situation occurs typically in small towns that naturally have more than one-part-per-million concentration of fluoride in their drinking water. But staining doesn’t affect how the teeth function or their long-term health.
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
MODRICH
SANCAR
STOCKHOLM — Three scientists from Sweden, the U.S. and Turkey won the Nobel Prize in chemistry on Wednesday for showing how cells repair damaged DNA — work that has inspired the development of new cancer treatments. Swedish scientist Tomas Lindahl, American Paul Modrich and U.S.-Turkish scientist Aziz Sancar shared the $960,000 award for research done in the ’70s and ’80s. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said their work on DNA repair had provided “fundamental knowledge”abouthowcellsfunction and shed light on the mechanisms behindbothcancerandaging. Dr. Lindahl, 77, is an emeritus group leader at the Francis Crick Institute and emeritus director
of Cancer Research UK at Clare Hall Laboratory in Britain. Dr. Modrich, 69, is an investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute and professor at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina. Dr. Sancar, also 69, is a professor at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Dr. Sancar said the news was “quite a surprise” since he thought his best chance to win a Nobel was in the medicine category, which was announced Monday. Dr. Lindahl, who has worked for decades in Britain, said he was having breakfast when a “nice lady” from the academy called. It was only when she started speaking in Swedish that he realized it may not be a hoax. “Then, of course, it starts sink-
More Nobels nobel announcements continue with literature today, the nobel Peace Prize on friday and economics on Monday. ing in that this is a great honor and a fantastic way of winding up my career,” he said. Dr. Modrich, on vacation in New Hampshire, said he found out about his prize via an email from a colleague. “Stockholm didn’t get my number, I guess, until later in the morning,” he told the AP. Working separately, the laureates broke new ground by mapping and explaining how a cell safeguards its DNA — the molecule that contains our genes. Our DNA is constantly under assault from ultraviolet rays from the sun and carcinogenic substances.
tribune new Service file
Jake Walker helps move some of the 450 pounds of eels that were caught on Jimmy Trossbach’s boat on Oct. 24, 2013. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced Wednesday it has decided not to list American eels under the Endangered Species Act. Below, eels are shown in a container
EEls noT ThrEATEnED, govErnmEnT rulEs Petitioners said stock is jeopardized, but government says species is stable
BY PATRICK WHITTLE ASSociAted PreSS
PORTLAND, Maine — American eels will not be listed under the Endangered Species Act, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Wednesday, a victory for fishermen who catch the increasingly valuable species. The wildlife service rejected a petition from the California-based Center for Environmental Science, Accuracy &Reliabilitytolisttheeels—prizedin Asian cuisine — as threatened. The petitioners argued that the eels have lost more than 80 percent of their habitat and that the stock is jeopardized by commercial fishing. But the wildlife service issued a report Wednesday saying that “there have been large declines in abundance from historical times,” but the species “currently appears to be stable.” Fishermen and fishing advocacy groups campaigned against additional protections for eels. Listing them under the Endangered Spe-
cies Act would have severely limited the ability to harvest them as a commercial species, and they can be of high economic value because of their use in sushi. Maine baby eels were worth more than $2,100 per pound in 2015, up from less than $100 per pound in 2009. The baby eels, called elvers, are sold to Asian aquaculture companies that raise them to maturity and use them as food. The wildlife service acknowledges that habitat loss and fishing have cut back eel populations in some areas, but the fish’s challenges do not rise to the level of listing under the Endangered Species Act, said Krishna Gifford, a listings coordi-
nator for the service. The eels’ population is much lower than it was in the ’70s and ’80s after a decline in the ’90s and 2000s, but it appears to have stabilized, the service said. “We know these things are not threatening the overall species,” Ms. Gifford said. “We know that eels remain widely distributed through their historical range despite habitat loss throughout their range.” Environmentalists were quick to criticize the decision. Rob Roy Ramey, a biologist and science adviser to the petitioners, pointed out that the eels are listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. “We’re going to lose them,” he said. “If the Fish and Wildlife Service doesn’t recognize this, they have failed miserably.” Only Maine and South Carolina fishermen harvest elvers, and South Carolina’s fishery is much smaller. Several other states have fisheries for older eels, including Maryland, Virginia and Delaware.
Patches of aspen in Southwest suffering from disease BY FELICIA FONSECA ASSociAted PreSS
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Visitors marveling at the fall foliage in national forests might find that some of the aspen leaves are brown and blotchy or gone already. Spores released from leaves and twigs that were infected by a fungus last summer were carried to new leaves by splashing rain and wind this year. The result is that instead of presenting golden yellow colors, leaves
in some aspen stands across the Southwest have brown spots and blotches. U.S. Forest Service officials say visitors shouldn’t fret because the discoloring isn’t widespread enough to ruin leaf-peeping trips. “It can be really patchy, depending on some of the moisture,” forest entomologist John Anhold said. Arizona cities near national forests where aspen are found at higher elevations got above-normal precipita-
tion this monsoon season, including Alpine and Heber, in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, and Flagstaff, surrounded by the Coconino National Forest. “It’s really about the timing of the moisture and having enough of that,” Mr. Anhold said. Forestofficialssaythey’renot expecting a die-off of aspen or significant loss in growth. However, successive annual epidemics of the disease can weaken or killtherootsystemsof aspens.
tribune newS Service file
Many aspen across the Southwest, which normally look like the trees pictured, now have brown spots and blotches because of a fungus.
Don’t fall prey to autumn eating
I
t’s that time of year when it starts to get dark earlier, the days get cooler, football and school begin — in other words, it’s the beginning of fall. And something else happens as well: We start eating more. People show a marked seasonal rhythm, with increased total caloric consumption, especially from carbohydrates, that’s associated with an increase in meal size and a greater rate of eating. (Interestingly, alcohol intake has a different seasonal pattern, with the highest intake occurring in the summer and the lowest in the fall.) According to John de Castro, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at the University of Texas, El Paso, “We have a tendency to eat about 200 calories more per day during the fall. … We tend to blame much of this ‘fall’ weight gain on the holidays; however, there are other causes.” Why do we eat more in the fall? More than likely it’s biological — putting on weight in preparation for the potential winter famine our ancestors faced. “It all makes sense — the fall harvest, storing up for the long winter months,” explains Dr. de Castro. Historically, we have had a tendency to eat when food is plentiful, because we never knew when our next meal was going to be available. Perhaps we eat more simply because bathing suit season is over, and we can start hiding excess calories beneath our winter clothes. Whatever the reason, it’s important to realize that fall foods (soups, stews, breads, sweet potatoes, butternut squash, apples, pumpkins and all types of greens) can actually be healthier than foods of other seasons. They are typically packed with great nutrients, such as fiber, protein, beta carotene and vitamin C.
Think before you eat ■ Soups are great if they’re not made with cream or cheese. Just watch serving sizes, because we tend to eat whatever’s in our bowl. ■ Stews can be hardy and also fattening. Use loads of fresh vegetables, and go light on the meat and potatoes. ■ Avoid unconscious eating while watching football and the new fall TV lineup. Never bring the whole bag or bowl of anything to the couch or coffee table; premeasure it in the kitchen beforehand. When it comes to chips, make sure they’re baked, not fried. ■ Celebrate the fall harvest in other ways, not just by making pies. Apples are low in calories when they’re off the tree, not in a pie. If it’s got to be pie, try making pumpkin pie with egg whites and low-fat milk. And, of course, just have one piece. ■ Turkey is healthy, as long as you keep it lean and white. ■ Take advantage of the fall bounty by eating apples. They’ve been shown to reduce the risk of some cancers as well as cardiovascular disease, asthma and diabetes. Apples are loaded with flavonoids such as quercetin, which is important for keeping blood vessels healthy and reducing inflammation throughout the body. CHARLES PLATKIN, Ph.D., is a nutrition and public health advocate and founder of dietdetective.com.
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THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 A3
US airman who helped thwart French train attack is stabbed in California bar By Don Thompson Associated Press
“appreciates the outpouring of love and support” and requests privacy. Over the summer, Stone and two of his childhood friends from Sacramento, National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos and college student Anthony Sadler, were vacationing in Europe when they thwarted a terror attack on a Paris-bound passenger train by taking down Ayoub El-Khazzani, a man with ties to radical Islam. He had boarded the train with a Kalashnikov rifle, a pistol and a box cutter. Stone, who is assigned to Travis Air Force Base in California, suffered a cut thumb and other injuries in stopping the gunman. He is the second of the three Americans to be
touched by violence since and restaurants that is a tion for young adults and is returning home. Last week, popular nightlife destina- generally considered safe. Skarlatos left rehearsals for TV’s “Dancing With the Stars” to rush back to his hometown of Roseburg, Oregon, after a gunman killed nine people at the community college Skarlatos had attended. President Barack Obama met with the three Americans last month, praising them for their quick thinking and courage and calling them “the very best of America.” They were also awarded France’s highest honor by President Francois Hollande. The three appeared on late-night talk s h ow s a n d r e c e ive d a parade in their hometown. The stabbing happened in a busy area of central Sacramento ringed with bars
TODAY’S
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone, hailed as a hero for helping to tackle a gunman on a French train in August, was stabbed and seriously wounded outside a bar in his homet ow n e a rly Thursday in what police said was an Stone alcohol-related fight that had nothing to do with terrorism. Stone, 23, was stabbed repeatedly in the upper body while out with four friends and was taken to UC D av i s M e di c al C en t er, authorities said. He was
expected to pull through. Police said two assailants fled in a car. No immediate arrests were made. “This incident is not related to terrorism in any way,” Deputy Police Chief Ken Ber nard said. “We know it’s not related to what occurred in France months ago.” Bernard said the stabbing was “related to a nightclub incident” involving Stone’s crowd and another group of people. Bernard would not say what the fight was about and said there was no evidence Stone’s assailants knew who he was. The deputy chief said he did not know whether Stone was drinking, but others in his group were. In a statement, the hospital said Stone’s family
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Chaos: McCarthy denies fellow lawmaker’s letter played into decision From page a1 Rank-and-file lawmakers seemed unsure how to react or what to say as they milled around the lobby of the Longworth Office Building where they had gathered to eat barbecue and then — they thought — vote for a new speaker. Instead the meeting was adjour ned moments after it began with McCarthy making his jawdropping announcement as his wife and kids looked on. “Disbelief, from the surprise announcement by Boehner to the quick nature of this election to it now being postponed — it’s uncertainty on top of uncertainty,” said freshman Rep. Ryan Costello of Pennsylvania. “I’ve been here nine months, I’ve never seen anything like this. I’d bet you most other members who have been here 20 or 30 years would say
the same thing.” “He was making his plea this morning for speaker and this afternoon he’s out of the race. What happened in those four hours, I don’t know,” said Rep. John Fleming of Louisiana. Several Republicans were crying after McCarthy’s announcement, lawmakers at the meeting said. The other two announced Republican candidates for speaker — Reps. Jason Chaffetz of Utah and Daniel Webster of Florida — lack widespread support in the House GOP, although Webster has the backing of the hardline House Freedom Caucus. Thursday’s secret ballot — even if it had proceeded as expected — still would have been merely an early skirmish in the chaotic battle to lead the House. It was to have been followed by the vote in
the full House where the Freedom Caucus could have blocked McCarthy’s ascent. McCarthy’s candidacy for speaker had gotten off to a rough start with a gaffe when he suggested the House’s Benghazi committee was set up to drive down Hillary Rodham Clinton’s poll numbers, rather than search for the truth about the 2012 attacks in Libya that killed four Americans. He was roundly criticized and quickly backtracked, but the flub dogged him, giving an opening for Chaffetz to get into the race. “That wasn’t helpful. I could have said it much better,” McCarthy told reporters. But he brushed off a suggestion that his decision had anything to do with a letter circulated earlier this week by Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., asserting that any candidate
for leadership should withdraw from contention “if there are any misdeeds he has committed since joining Congress that will embarrass himself, the Republican Conference and the House of Representatives if they become public.” Jones has said the letter wasn’t directed at anyone in particular. Asked whether it played a role in his decision McCarthy said: “Nah.” But the episode evoked memories of the shocking announcement in December, 1998, when Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La., astonished Washington by suddenly dropping his bid to replace Newt Gingrich as speaker. Livingston was the heavy favorite, but had been dogged by allegations — promoted by Hustler Publisher Larry Flynt — that he had been unfaithful to his wife.
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BUSINESS DOW 17,050.75
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BRIefs Talen selling Paupack facility ALLeNtowN — talen energy will sell three power plants, including the Lake wallenpaupack hydroelectric project, the company announced thursday. Lake wallenpaupack hydroelectric project and the Holtwood dam in Lancaster county, with a combined capacity of 292 megawatts, will be purchased by Brookfield renewable energy Partners LP for $860 million. talen, an indebtedness company spun off from PPL corp., also announced the $654 million deal to sell the ironwood natural gas powered plant in Lebanon to transcanada corp. — dAVid fALcHeK
fiat Chrysler avoids strike detroit — Fiat chrysler has avoided an expensive strike at its U.s. plants after reaching a tentative labor agreement with the United Auto workers union. UAw announced the agreement just after 11:59 p.m. wednesday, which was the deadline the union had set to reach a new deal or possibly go on strike. UAw, which represents around 40,000 FcA factory workers at 23 U.s. plants, said in a post on its website that its bargaining committee had “secured significant gains.” Local union leaders will vote on the proposed deal today at a meeting in detroit.
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OCTOBER 9, 2015
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Holiday buying expected to rise New YorK — Americans are expected to spend at a slower pace than last year during the crucial winter holidays, weighed down by sluggish wage growth and other factors, according to the nation’s largest retail industry trade group. the National retail Federation, based in washington, d.c., predicts holiday spending will be up 3.7 percent to $630.5 billion, slower than the 4.1 percent increase during last year’s November-december period.
Cambodia raising garment wage PHNom PeNH, cambodia — cambodia announced thursday it will raise the minimum wage for clothing workers by 9.4 percent to $140 a month, hoping to ease tensions in the country’s main export industry. A Labor ministry statement said the government is increasing the wages on instructions from Prime minister Hun sen after eight days of tense negotiations in a committee representing employers, workers and the government. the new wages take effect at the beginning of next year. the increase falls short of the $160 a month wage proposed by unions. — AssociAted Press
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GOLD $1,144.70
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Getting what they paid for? Discount airlines take discomfort, inconvenience to new levels for some travelers By DAVID KOeNIG AssociAted Press
DALLAS — When the delay on his 90-minute flight stretched past the four-hour mark, David Rankin started tweeting to Spirit Airlines as he and other passengers grew restless. “We’re looking at the plane,” Mr. Rankin said by phone from a Spirit gate at the Philadelphia airport. “There are no pilots.” Mr. Rankin, an investment manager from New Jersey, swore it would be his last time on the discount airline. “My wife won’t let me book a flight on Spirit next
time,” he said. Spirit is one of a new breed of airline called ultralow-cost carriers that also includes Frontier Airlines and Allegiant Air. They have grown rapidly by luring travelers with cheap base fares that undercut the big airlines, and boast among the best operating profit margins in the business. Fans say the cheap tickets set the ultra-low-cost carriers apart in an industry where discomfort and inconvenience are now expected. But for many travelers, the new discounters take the aggravation to another level. They charge extra for things that are still standard on bigger airlines like soda and carry-on bags. Need to print a boarding pass at the airport? There’s a fee for that. They fit more passengers on the plane by squeez-
ing seats together, which is easier because the seats don’t recline. They don’t have tollfree phone numbers for customer service. There are few businesses that consumers love to hate more than airlines, but travelers seem to reserve a special level of vitriol for these no-frills, discount airlines. Passengers are about 20 times more likely to complain about one of them than about Alaska Airlines or Southwest Airlines, which have the industry’s lowest complaint rates. Either Frontier or Spirit has recorded the highest rate of complaints to the government every month this year. Allegiant would place thirdworst, although because of its small size it is not included in the official rankings. Much of the grousing can be tied to frequent flight
delays. So far this year, Spirit Airlines has the worst ontime rate among the largest 14 U.S. airlines — 34 percent of flights are at least 15 minutes late — and Frontier is next-to-last. In June, Spirit’s on-time rate tumbled below 50 percent. It was the worst onemonth performance by a large U.S. airline in 10 years. A Spirit spokesman blamed a four-day stretch of bad weather. With fewer planes and pilots, Spirit, Frontier and Allegiant have less flexibility to deal with setbacks like summer storms than do larger airlines — it’s not as easy to put passengers on a later flight because there might not be one. They generally don’t have agreements to Please see fLyING, Page A5
Top on-time airlines
Hawaiian rated as the top major airline in 2015 with the highest percentage of flights that arrived within 14 minutes of schedule. 88.3%
Hawaiian
Alaska
86.7
Delta
84.2
Virgin America
79.2
American/ US Airways
78.1
Southwest
77.5
JetBlue
74.9
United
74.6
Frontier
68.4
Spirit
66.3
Percentages show January through July 2015 figures only. soUrce: dePArtMeNt of trANsPortAtioN
AP
Xerox adding 200 jobs in Moosic
Positions will provide customer service at call center
Gross sues Pimco for $200 million New YorK — Billionaire bond investor Bill Gross has sued his former employer, Pacific investment management co., better known as Pimco, for more than $200 million for breach of contract and plotting to oust him from the firm he founded more than four decades ago. the suit, filed thursday in orange county, california, alleges that Pimco executives plotted to remove mr. Gross in an internal power struggle that eventually led to him leaving the company in september 2014. Pimco, which is based in Newport Beach, california, said the lawsuit has no merit and the firm will respond in court.
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By DAVID fALCHeK stAFF writer
rAm sArrAF / AssociAted Press
Nepalese oil tankers and commercial trucks stand stranded near a gate that marks the Nepalese border with India, in Birgunj, Nepal. Struggling with a fuel shortage after Indian shipments went on hold, Nepal is asking suppliers to bring gasoline and kerosene by airplane before the Himalayan country begins celebrating its biggest festival of the year, and for the first time is looking to import fuel in from China.
Nepal faces fUel shortage Indian truck drivers reluctant to cross border By BINAJ GURUBACHARyA AssociAted Press
KATHMANDU, Nepal — Struggling with a fuel shortage after Indian shipments stopped, Nepal is asking suppliers to bring gasoline and kerosene by airplane before the Himalayan country begins celebrating its biggest festival of the year. And for the first time, it is looking to import fuel from China. The state-run Nepal Oil Corp. said Thursday it also needs aviation fuel and diesel, after supplies were cut off two weeks ago. Since then, the country has had to halt all fuel sales for private vehicles, and is rationing what is left among hospitals, government offices and police. India, which supplies all of Nepal’s fuel, has said there is no official blockade, but that its truck drivers are simply reluctant to cross the border to make deliveries because of ongoing protests by an ethnic group against the country’s newly adopted constitution. Someschoolshaveclosedbecause there is no gasoline for the school
NirANjAN sHrestHA / AssociAted Press
Passengers crowd the roof of a public bus in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Thursday. The country has halted fuel sales for private vehicles, and is rationing what is left. buses. Meanwhile, the halt in truck shipments has hurt Nepal’s stocks of medicine and food. Amid the chaos, Nepal is now looking at the possibility of Chinese fuel imports for the first time. With Nepal poisedto celebrate the Hindu festival of Dasain next week, Nepal Oil Corp. decided to ask supplierstosubmitproposalsbySunday for flying in shipments. The request was open to all international suppliers, indicating Nepal’s readi-
ness to move away from its exclusive agreementwiththeIndian OilCorp. During the two-week Dasain festival, celebrating the Hindu goddess Durga’s defeat of an evil demon, Nepal’s Hindus and Buddhists alike typically travel to their home villages and visit relatives while businesses and schools close. They also sacrifice buffalos, chickens and goats, but the fuel shortage has prevented trucks from bringing sacrificial animals to templesfromthecountryside.
A Xerox call center in Moosic plans to hire 200 customer service employees. Xerox’s Moosic facility at 52 Glenmaura National Blvd. provides call center outsourcing for other companies. New employees will be taking inbound calls for a health insurance company that has expanded its relationship with Xerox, said spokeswoman Coco Salazar. A year ago, the company hired 100 at the location, but “cycled through” those employees, she said, leaving employment at the facility flat at 250. But an expanding relationship with a health care client expanded the work at the facility, increasing the need for full-time, permanent staff. Ms. Salazar said the facility is gearing up to double the number of people employed there. “Our changing client needs will require us to add great talent capacity and expanded work,” she said. “We are not backfilling jobs. In our existing space we hope to double our workforce.” Candidates must have a high school diploma and a minimum of six months of customer service experience. Interested parties can apply online at www.xerox.com/careers for job number 15030159 or in person 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the week. A job fair will be held 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. For more information call 570-414-5470. Xerox Corp.’s Affiliated Computer Services Inc. acquired TMS Health in Moosic for $48 million in 2010 from a private equity firm. TMS was founded by Guy Amato, cousin of former race car driver Joe Amato, who has family in the area. The Moosic facility is one of 175 that Xerox operates around the globe, with 50,000 agents handling 2.5 million interactions daily. Contact the writer: dfalchek@timesshamrock.com
GM recalls SUVs, tells owners not to use windshield wipers Motors on some 2016 models can catch fire DETROIT — General Motors is telling owners of some SUVs not to use their windshield wipers because an electrical short could cause the wiper motor to catch fire. The company is recalling nearly GeNerAL motors viA AP 32,000 Buick Enclave, Chevrolet TraThe 2016 Chevrolet Traverse LTZ is verse and GMC Acadia SUVs from one of the models GM is recalling. the 2016 model to fix the problem.
Only 6,400 were sold and the rest are being held at dealerships until they are repaired. Most are in North America. GM says if weather stops owners from taking their SUVs to dealers, it will pick up the vehicles for service. It also will arrange rental cars if parts aren’t available. Dealers will replace faulty wiper motor covers that allow some electrical terminals to come in contact with each other. Parts are being shipped and will
be used first to fix customer vehicles and those that have been sold. The problem was discovered when a wiper motor overheated at a factory near Lansing, Michigan, where the SUVs are made. The plant’s quality manager reported the problem on Sept. 21 through GM’s “Speak up for Safety” program, and GM began investigating five days later. The company says no fires have happened outside the plant.
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Name
Last Chg Ticker
A-B-C ABB Ltd 18.71 +.26 ABB ACE Ltd 106.58 +1.60 ACE ADT Corp 34.08 +1.03 ADT AES Corp 10.76 +.23 AES AFLAC 60.81 +.52 AFL AK Steel 3.11 +.07 AKS AT&T Inc 33.40 +.28 T AU Optron 3.05 -.03 AUO AbbottLab 41.16 +.53 ABT AbbVie 56.04 +.41 ABBV AbengoaYd 20.74 +.89 ABY AberFitc 20.81 +.40 ANF Abiomed 82.51 -2.45 ABMD Abraxas 1.88 +.06 AXAS AcadiaHlt 61.83 -2.56 ACHC Accenture 105.01 +2.39 ACN Achillion 7.67 +.04 ACHN ActivsBliz 31.73 -.21 ATVI Actuant 23.61 +1.92 ATU Acuity 195.98 +13.10 AYI AdobeSy 82.26 +1.61 ADBE AMD 1.93 +.07 AMD AdvSemi 5.34 -.04 ASX Advaxis 10.24 -.27 ADXS Aegon 6.25 +.11 AEG AerCap 43.18 +.45 AER AeriePhm 18.78 -2.47 AERI Aeropostl .59 +.05 ARO AEtern g h .09 -.00 AEZS Aetna 109.61 +.05 AET Agilent 36.01 +.47 A Agnico g 27.50 -.66 AEM Agrium g 95.53 +.51 AGU AlamosGld 4.44 +.06 AGI AlaskaAir 75.76 -.21 ALK Albemarle 50.57 +1.66 ALB AlcatelLuc 3.78 +.01 ALU Alcoa 11.01 +.07 AA AlderBioPh29.36 -1.78 ALDR Alexion 164.31 -.47 ALXN Alibaba 67.70 +1.42 BABA AllegTch 18.27 +.72 ATI AllgnceBc n23.12 ... ABTX Allergan 276.16 +7.17 AGN Allete 51.85 +1.08 ALE AllscriptH 12.38 -.36 MDRX Allstate 61.12 +1.08 ALL AllyFincl 21.02 +.22 ALLY AlonUSA 19.11 -.11 ALJ Alphabet C 639.16 -3.20 GOOG Alphabet A667.00 -3.00 GOOGL AlpAlerMLP 14.11 +.09 AMLP AlteraCp lf 51.72 +1.05 ALTR Ambarella 56.16 -5.65 AMBA Ambev 5.15 ... ABEV Amedica h .32 -.02 AMDA Ameren 43.12 +.91 AEE AMovilL 17.92 +.28 AMX AmAirlines 39.74 +.43 AAL AmAxle 20.30 +.49 AXL ACapAgy 19.44 -.04 AGNC AmCapLtd 12.72 +.23 ACAS AEagleOut 16.05 +.67 AEO AEP 56.87 +.83 AEP AmExp 77.18 ... AXP AmIntlGrp 58.24 +.42 AIG AmTower 95.57 +1.33 AMT Ameriprise 112.05 +.19 AMP AmeriBrgn 93.54 +.60 ABC Ametek 55.91 +.76 AME Amgen 149.90 +1.85 AMGN AmicusTh 6.87 -.14 FOLD AmkorTch 5.01 +.06 AMKR Anadarko 72.33 +3.19 APC AnalogDev 57.72 -.15 ADI AnglogldA 9.06 +.31 AU ABInBev 110.69 -.27 BUD Annaly 10.19 -.04 NLY AnteroRes 25.83 +.63 AR Anthem 137.33 -2.08 ANTM Anworth 4.97 -.03 ANH Apache 47.15 +1.22 APA ApolloEdu 12.36 +.58 APOL Apple Inc 109.50 -1.28 AAPL ApldMatl 15.67 +.28 AMAT AquaAm 27.08 +.38 WTR Aramark 30.92 -.02 ARMK ArcelorMit 6.38 +.13 MT ArchCoal rs 4.32 +.32 ACI ArenaPhm 2.05 -.06 ARNA AresCap 15.46 +.08 ARCC AriadP 6.81 +.04 ARIA ArmHld 44.21 +.68 ARMH ArrayBio 4.96 -.02 ARRY ArrowRsh 5.76 +.07 ARWR AscenaRtl 14.20 +.01 ASNA AsecntSol .22 +.01 ASTI AssuredG 27.63 +.10 AGO AstraZen s 32.39 +.47 AZN AtlasRes 3.23 +.09 ARP Atmel 8.53 +.09 ATML AtwoodOcn 17.21 +.07 ATW Autodesk 47.31 +1.41 ADSK AutoData 85.12 +1.47 ADP AvagoTch 116.69 -1.95 AVGO AvisBudg 50.43 +1.75 CAR Avon 4.33 +.53 AVP Axalta n 27.40 -.04 AXTA Axiall 20.26 +2.52 AXLL B2gold g 1.25 ... BTG BB&T Cp 36.91 +.10 BBT BGC Ptrs 8.23 -.05 BGCP BHP BillLt 37.32 +1.65 BHP BP PLC 35.96 +.25 BP BRF SA 17.30 +.25 BRFS Baidu 141.26 -3.51 BIDU BakrHu 57.33 +.65 BHI BallardPw 1.54 +.07 BLDP BcBilVArg 9.00 +.07 BBVA BcoBrad s 6.35 +.11 BBD BcoSantSA 5.88 ... SAN BcoSBrasil 3.96 +.09 BSBR BkNYMel 40.87 +.32 BK BarcGSOil 9.32 +.33 OIL Barclay 15.81 +.08 BCS B iPVixST 21.28 -1.06 VXX BarnesNob 12.87 +.37 BKS BarrickG 7.16 -.08 ABX BasicEnSv 4.66 +.18 BAS Baxalta n 31.09 +.15 BXLT Baxter s 33.25 +.34 BAX BaytexE g 4.96 +.43 BTE BedBath 59.22 +.28 BBBY Bellatrix g 2.13 +.19 BXE BerkH B 133.75 +1.07 BRK/B BerryPlas 32.87 +.64 BERY BestBuy 37.25 -.04 BBY BBarrett 5.30 +.46 BBG Biocryst 9.75 -2.12 BCRX Biodel h .41 -.01 BIOD Biogen 279.88 +.64 BIIB BioMarin 100.72 -1.41 BMRN BioMedR 23.45 +1.86 BMR BlackBerry 7.29 +.13 BBRY Blackstone 34.01 -.69 BX BlockHR 35.38 +.57 HRB BloominBr 18.36 +.21 BLMN BlueBPet n 18.22 +.72 BUFF BluebBio 88.50 -5.80 BLUE Boeing 139.04 +2.02 BA BonanzaCE 7.68 +.38 BCEI BorgWarn 44.94 +.14 BWA BostonSci 16.79 -.03 BSX Box Inc n 12.00 +.91 BOX BoydGm 17.95 +.06 BYD Brandyw 12.81 +.04 BDN BreitburnE 2.79 +.04 BBEP BrMySq 60.51 -.04 BMY BrixmorP 24.62 +.27 BRX Broadcom 50.60 +.14 BRCM BrcdeCm 10.82 +.35 BRCD Brookdale 23.40 -.77 BKD Buenavent 7.18 -.19 BVN BldrFstSrc 14.55 +.14 BLDR C&J Engy 5.34 +.20 CJES CA Inc 28.78 +.15 CA CBL Asc 14.83 +.27 CBL CBRE Grp 33.16 +.84 CBG CBS B 43.86 +1.45 CBS CF Inds s 52.86 +.64 CF CH Robins 70.89 +.71 CHRW CME Grp 89.88 -.81 CME CMS Eng 35.91 +.51 CMS CNH Indl 7.24 +.04 CNHI CNO Fincl 19.20 -.23 CNO CSX 29.09 +.72 CSX CYS Invest 7.82 +.06 CYS Cabelas 46.43 -.45 CAB CblvsnNY 33.19 +.08 CVC
Cadence 21.37 -.03 CDNS Caesars 7.95 +.13 CZR Cal-Maine s54.50 -3.24 CALM CalAtlantic 41.22 +.34 CAA CalifRes n 4.42 +.36 CRC CallonPet 9.22 +.25 CPE Calpine 16.50 +.50 CPN Cameco g 14.15 +.26 CCJ Cameron u67.08 +.91 CAM CampSp 51.33 +.49 CPB Can-Fite 4.27 -.28 CANF CdnNRs gs 24.70 +.82 CNQ CdnSolar 20.60 +.29 CSIQ CapOne 75.05 +.09 COF CpstnTur h .26 -.01 CPST CardnlHlth 77.70 +.15 CAH CardiovSysd13.62 -3.01 CSII CarlyleGp 18.89 -.07 CG CarMax 59.96 +.48 KMX Carnival 49.62 +.37 CCL Carrizo 43.15 +2.47 CRZO Caterpillar 71.84 +1.46 CAT Celgene 117.97 +.99 CELG CelldexTh 11.74 -.22 CLDX Cemex 7.93 +.14 CX Cemig pf 1.90 +.06 CIG CenovusE 17.07 +.38 CVE Centene s 54.94 +1.03 CNC CenterPnt 18.74 +.17 CNP CentAl 5.94 +.37 CENX CntryLink 26.51 +.45 CTL Cerner 63.42 +.55 CERN ChambStPr 6.89 +.07 CSG CharterCm 187.76 +2.76 CHTR Chemours n 8.43 +.56 CC CheniereEn 53.29 -.73 LNG Chevron 89.91 +1.79 CVX ChicB&I 44.41 +1.27 CBI Chicos 15.24 +.21 CHS Chimera rs 14.11 -.02 CIM Chubb 125.14 +.77 CB CienaCorp 22.70 -.01 CIEN Cimarex 122.20 +4.53 XEC Cirrus 29.26 -.87 CRUS Cisco 27.91 +.37 CSCO Citigroup 51.65 +.33 C CitizFincl 23.52 +.08 CFG CitrixSys 74.54 +2.11 CTXS Civeo 2.01 +.04 CVEO CleanEngy 6.35 +.45 CLNE CliffsNRs 3.12 +.18 CLF CloudPeak 3.35 +.25 CLD ClovisOnc 89.98 -1.77 CLVS Coach 31.45 +1.10 COH CobaltIEn 7.75 +.20 CIE CocaCola 41.98 +.46 KO Coeur 3.00 -.12 CDE CognizTch 66.36 +.37 CTSH Colfax 31.98 +1.18 CFX ColgPalm 65.90 +.55 CL ColonyCap 20.79 +.47 CLNY ColuPpln n 20.25 +1.26 CPGX Comc spcl 61.60 +1.39CMCSK Comerica 43.46 +.48 CMA CmclMtls 15.91 +.48 CMC CBD-Pao 14.78 +.90 CBD ComstkRs 3.08 +.32 CRK Con-Way 47.50 +.03 CNW ConAgra 41.77 +.83 CAG ConchoRes116.43 +5.39 CXO ConocoPhil 56.28 +1.01 COP ConsolEngy 11.60 +.29 CNX ConEd 66.27 +.86 ED ConstellAu136.69 +2.12 STZ Constellm 6.31 -.25 CSTM ContlRescs 37.55 +1.18 CLR ContraVir 2.89 -.28 CTRV CopaHold 58.00 +3.89 CPA Corning 17.97 +.13 GLW Cosan Ltd 3.69 +.10 CZZ Costco 151.66 +3.70 COST Coty 27.37 +.77 COTY CowenGp 4.41 -.38 COWN CSVLgNG rs 6.02 +.06 UGAZ CSVLgCrd rs13.70 +1.12 UWTI CSVInvNG 8.14 -.10 DGAZ CSVInvCrd 79.50 -8.00 DWTI CSVelIVST 29.04 +1.37 XIV CSVixSh rs 8.36 -.86 TVIX CredSuiss 24.53 -.79 CS CrestwdEq 2.80 -.15 CEQP CrwnCstle 81.64 +.39 CCI CrownHold 50.00 +1.83 CCK Ctrip.com 68.27 -1.87 CTRP CubeSmart 27.60 ... CUBE Cummins 114.27 +1.74 CMI CurEuro 110.52 +.29 FXE CypSemi 9.34 +.12 CY CytoriTh h .40 +.01 CYTX D-E-F DDR Corp 16.33 +.23 DDR DHT Hldgs 8.40 +.15 DHT DR Horton 30.65 +.07 DHI DSW Inc 25.68 +.43 DSW DanaHldg 17.84 +.23 DAN Danaher 88.89 +.45 DHR Darden 66.76 +.33 DRI DarlingIng 11.75 +.40 DAR DeanFoods 17.76 +.32 DF Deere 80.91 +2.02 DE Delek 27.45 +.13 DK DelphiAuto 80.90 +1.16 DLPH DeltaAir 45.96 -.03 DAL DenburyR 3.86 +.42 DNR DenisnM g .51 +.02 DNN Dentsply 55.15 +.67 XRAY DeutschBk 28.39 -.40 DB DBXEafeEq 27.46 +.15 DBEF DBXEurHgd26.26 +.15 DBEU DBXHvChiA34.06 -.46 ASHR DevonE 44.67 +.81 DVN DexCom 77.99 -.67 DXCM DiamOffsh 20.17 +.22 DO DiamRk 12.71 +.47 DRH DicksSptg 50.74 -.51 DKS DxRsaBll rs17.97 +1.82 RUSL DirSPBear 18.55 -.50 SPXS DxEnBear 21.98 -1.35 ERY DxSCBear rs44.47 -1.26 TZA DxFnBr rs 46.13 -.77 FAZ DxGMBr rs 30.21 +1.69 JDST DxGBull rs 39.88 -1.61 NUGT DrxEMBull 15.63 +.51 EDC DxFnBull s 27.90 +.47 FAS DxBiotBull 17.09 -.65 LABU DirDGldBr 16.29 +.60 DUST DrxSCBull 69.60 +1.95 TNA DrxSPBull 79.77 +2.12 SPXL DirxEnBull 37.00 +2.06 ERX Discover 55.72 +.47 DFS DiscCmA 28.84 +.83 DISCA DishNetw h62.97 +1.93 DISH Disney 104.61 +1.22 DIS DollarGen 66.20 -1.25 DG DollarTree 62.08 -.82 DLTR DomRescs 70.71 +.93 D Dominos 102.64 -5.39 DPZ DonlleyRR 16.28 +.43 RRD Dover 63.84 +1.91 DOV DowChm 47.79 +.30 DOW DryShips h .20 -.00 DRYS DuPont 56.13 +.75 DD DukeEngy 73.00 +.33 DUK DukeRlty 20.55 +.18 DRE DyaxCp 22.36 -.23 DYAX Dynegy 23.70 +.41 DYN E-House 6.64 +.36 EJ E-Trade 26.54 +.10 ETFC eBay s 24.15 -1.53 EBAY EMC Cp 27.18 +1.22 EMC EOG Rescs 87.04 +3.27 EOG EP Energy 7.82 +.33 EPE EQT Corp 75.02 +1.85 EQT EstWstBcp 39.08 +.30 EWBC Eaton 55.30 +1.19 ETN EclipseRs 3.34 +.49 ECR Ecolab u120.53 +2.26 ECL Ecopetrol 10.63 +.34 EC EdisonInt 63.72 +.78 EIX ElPolLoco 12.28 +1.21 LOCO EldorGld g 3.74 -.13 EGO ElectArts 65.80 -.31 EA EliLilly 83.77 -.22 LLY Enbridge 42.91 +.13 ENB EnCana g 9.02 +.56 ECA Endo Intl 63.42 +.28 ENDP Energen 60.52 +2.98 EGN EngyTsfr 45.48 +.14 ETP EngyXXI 2.28 +.32 EXXI Enerpls g 6.41 +.16 ERF ENSCO 16.29 +.23 ESV Entergy 67.67 +.89 ETR EntProdPt 28.54 +.40 EPD EnvisnHlth 35.66 -.23 EVHC
EquityCmwu28.85 +.47 EQC EqtyRsd 77.35 +.63 EQR Ericsson 10.52 +.15 ERIC EsteeLdr 83.91 +.93 EL Euronav n 15.89 +.24 EURN EversrceE 51.07 +.65 ES EvokePhm 4.21 +.26 EVOK ExactSci h d7.80 -2.22 EXAS ExcoRes 1.21 +.06 XCO Exelixis 5.85 -.06 EXEL Exelon 30.88 +.75 EXC Expedia 122.88 -.05 EXPE ExpdIntl 49.44 +.17 EXPD Express 18.79 +.32 EXPR ExpScripts 82.71 +.14 ESRX ExterranH 23.54 +.75 EXH ExxonMbl 80.03 +.83 XOM FMC Corp 38.70 +1.37 FMC FMC Tech 34.77 +.58 FTI Facebook 92.47 +.07 FB FedExCp 155.55 +2.58 FDX FiatChry n 15.50 +.68 FCAU FibriaCelu 13.85 -.05 FBR FidNatInfo 71.30 +1.16 FIS FifthThird 19.15 +.11 FITB 58.com 49.86 +1.11 WUBA FinLine 19.85 +.32 FINL FireEye 31.50 -.62 FEYE FstHorizon 14.43 +.04 FHN FMajSilv g 3.67 -.16 AG FstNiagarau10.69 -.09 FNFG FstSolar 51.12 +1.21 FSLR FT DWF5 22.48 +.06 FV FT RNG 7.36 +.22 FCG FirstEngy 31.34 +.31 FE FstMerit 18.12 +.27 FMER Fiserv u91.34 +1.79 FISV Fitbit n 34.67 -.58 FIT Flextrn 10.92 -.01 FLEX FlowrsFds 25.82 -.06 FLO Flowserve 48.02 +2.26 FLS Fluor 47.37 +1.10 FLR FootLockr 71.30 +2.15 FL FordM 14.99 +.24 F Fortinet h 42.79 -.26 FTNT Fortress 5.72 -.11 FIG FBHmSec 50.29 +.67 FBHS Fossil Grp 57.89 +2.38 FOSL FrancoN g 47.90 -.55 FNV FrankRes 38.89 -.13 BEN FrptMcM 13.46 +.45 FCX Freescale 36.33 +.49 FSL FreshMkt 24.99 +.34 TFM Frontline 3.18 +.14 FRO FuelCellE h .92 -.02 FCEL G-H-I GameStop 43.98 +.54 GME Gannett n u15.20 +.26 GCI Gap 28.95 +.56 GPS GenElec 28.03 +.26 GE GenGrPrp 27.31 +.41 GGP GenMotors 33.43 +.38 GM Gentex s 15.94 +.12 GNTX Genworth 5.64 +.14 GNW Gerdau 1.74 +.07 GGB GeronCp 2.97 -.07 GERN GileadSci 100.81 +.54 GILD GlaxoSKln 40.16 +.44 GSK GlobPay u132.45 +4.25 GPN Globalstar 1.96 +.05 GSAT GluMobile 4.04 -.06 GLUU GolLNGLtd 33.48 +.11 GLNG GoldFLtd 2.85 -.07 GFI Goldcrp g 13.57 -.26 GG GoldmanS 181.07 -1.16 GS GoodrPet .81 +.05 GDP Goodyear 31.82 +.59 GT GoPro d27.60 -1.73 GPRO GranTrra g 2.91 +.21 GTE GraphPkg 13.27 +.08 GPK GrtBasSci .09 +.01 GBSN GtPlainEn 27.33 +.46 GXP GreenbCos 37.54 +2.61 GBX Griffon 17.46 +.10 GFF Groupon 3.86 +.04 GRPN GrubHub 29.96 +1.47 GRUB GpFnSnMx 7.77 +.02 BSMX GpTelevisa 27.11 +.17 TV GulfportE 34.94 +1.05 GPOR HCA Hldg 76.66 -.89 HCA HCP Inc 39.30 +.45 HCP HD Supply 30.80 +.70 HDS HSBC 40.79 +.22 HSBC HainCeles s 52.17 +.26 HAIN HalconRes .00 +.09 HK Hallibrtn 40.41 +.55 HAL Halozyme 14.29 -.03 HALO HancHld 28.05 +.07 HBHC Hanesbds s 29.44 +.49 HBI HarleyD 55.08 +.53 HOG Harmonic 5.76 -.55 HLIT HarmonyG .67 +.03 HMY HartfdFn 47.11 +.21 HIG Hasbro 73.80 +.38 HAS HawHold 26.09 +1.53 HA HlthcreT rs 25.81 +.40 HTA HlthSouth 38.61 -1.22 HLS HeclaM 2.31 -.02 HL HelixEn 6.44 +.37 HLX HelmPayne 59.58 +2.57 HP HeronTher 26.65 +.58 HRTX Hertz 19.80 +1.34 HTZ Hess 62.57 +2.59 HES HewlettP 29.18 +1.17 HPQ Hilton 24.89 +.68 HLT HimaxTch 7.44 -.23 HIMX HollyFront 51.24 +.70 HFC Hologic 37.20 -.28 HOLX HomeAway 27.51 -.20 AWAY HonwllIntl 101.07 +1.58 HON HorizPhm 18.32 -.03 HZNP HorsehdH 4.46 +.76 ZINC HostHotls 17.85 +.20 HST HovnanE 2.35 +.25 HOV HudsCity 10.04 +.08 HCBK Humana 180.30 -.62 HUM HuntBncsh 10.92 +.02 HBAN Huntsmn 13.27 +1.56 HUN IAMGld g 1.85 -.11 IAG ICICI Bk s 8.99 -.03 IBN ING 14.62 -.20 ING iShGold 11.01 -.05 IAU iSAstla 19.46 +.28 EWA iShBrazil 24.96 +.65 EWZ iShCanada 24.78 +.29 EWC iShEMU 36.44 +.23 EZU iShGerm 26.04 +.23 EWG iSh HK 20.31 +.26 EWH iShItaly 15.15 +.13 EWI iShJapan 12.07 +.04 EWJ iSh SKor 52.91 +.42 EWY iSMalasia 11.10 +.15 EWM iShMexico 54.61 +.78 EWW iSTaiwn 14.08 ... EWT iShSilver 14.99 -.30 SLV iShS&P100 89.08 +.69 OEF iShChinaLC 38.84 +.18 FXI iSCorSP500202.35 +1.84 IVV iShUSAgBd109.42 -.15 AGG iShEMkts 35.81 +.38 EEM iShiBoxIG 116.11 -.46 LQD iSh ACWI 57.11 +.50 ACWI iSSP500Gr 112.70 +.85 IVW iSh20 yrT 121.96 -1.03 TLT iSh7-10yTB 107.38 -.28 IEF iSh1-3yTB 84.96 -.02 SHY iS Eafe 60.94 +.48 EFA iShiBxHYB 85.10 +.35 HYG iShNsdqBio307.20 -.59 IBB iSR1KVal 98.80 +1.05 IWD iSR1KGr 96.81 +.63 IWF iSRus1K 112.39 +1.01 IWB iShR2K 115.51 +1.03 IWM iShShtTrB 110.31 -.01 SHV iShUSPfd 38.80 +.04 PFF iSUSAMinV 41.00 +.31 USMV iShREst 74.33 +.61 IYR iShHmCnst 27.88 +.29 ITB iShCrSPSm112.76 +1.23 IJR iShCorEafe 56.00 +.41 IEFA ITC Holdg 32.52 +.80 ITC ITT Corp 38.11 +2.13 ITT ITW 87.68 +1.31 ITW Illumina 140.37 -5.57 ILMN Incyte 103.44 -5.21 INCY Infinera 19.85 +.13 INFN Infosys s 19.16 +.15 INFY IngerRd 54.86 +1.11 IR IngrmM u29.28 +.28 IM InovioPhm 5.96 -.06 INO Insmed 17.12 -1.38 INSM IntgDv 21.74 +.03 IDTI Intel 32.52 +.21 INTC IBM 152.28 +2.19 IBM
Interpublic 20.89 +.63 IPG Intrexon 34.77 +1.06 XON Intuit 92.29 +1.33 INTU InvenSense 10.39 -.04 INVN Invesco 33.14 +.14 IVZ InvestBncp 12.57 +.05 ISBC IronMtn 32.30 +.47 IRM IronwdPh 11.12 -.06 IRWD iSh UK 17.67 +.19 EWU iShCorEM 43.27 +.47 IEMG iShCHEmu 26.12 +.11 HEZU iShCHGer 23.66 +.15 HEWG Isis 42.38 -.06 ISIS ItauUnibH 7.75 +.13 ITUB J-K-L JD.com 27.32 -.22 JD JPMorgCh 62.13 ... JPM JPMAlerian34.56 +.31 AMJ Jabil 22.48 -.21 JBL JacobsEng 41.26 +.87 JEC JanusCap 14.86 +.16 JNS Jarden s 51.05 +.48 JAH JetBlue 25.26 -.37 JBLU JohnJn 95.08 +.10 JNJ JohnsnCtl 44.39 +.53 JCI JournMda n11.96 +3.66 JMG JoyGlbl 18.51 +1.44 JOY Jumei Intl 10.97 +.03 JMEI JnprNtwk u29.80 +.38 JNPR KAR Auct 37.49 +.61 KAR KB Home 14.92 +.28 KBH KBR Inc 19.42 +.11 KBR KKR 18.76 +.14 KKR KLA Tnc 53.29 +.62 KLAC KC Southn 98.46 +1.73 KSU KateSpade 21.10 -.20 KATE Kellogg 69.24 +1.02 K KeryxBio 4.02 +.31 KERX KeurigGM 57.86 +1.68 GMCR KeyEngy .74 +.06 KEG Keycorp 13.34 +.03 KEY Kimco 25.71 +.34 KIM KindMorg 32.68 +.54 KMI KindredHlt d13.11 -.25 KND Kinross g 2.13 -.03 KGC KnightTr 25.14 -.14 KNX Knowles 21.70 +.16 KN Kohls 46.65 +.50 KSS KosmosEn 7.56 +.23 KOS KraftHnz n 74.43 +1.28 KHC Kroger s 38.00 +.49 KR L Brands u96.53 +1.83 LB LKQ Corp 28.89 +.06 LKQ LaQuinta 17.15 +.25 LQ LamResrch 67.31 +.75 LRCX LaredoPet 13.96 +.75 LPI LVSands 47.09 +1.27 LVS LendingC n 14.86 +.48 LC LennarA 51.07 +.58 LEN LeucNatl 21.11 +.16 LUK Level3 44.98 +.65 LVLT LexRltyTr 8.45 +.10 LXP LibtyGlobA 45.21 -.11 LBTYA LibtyGlobC 43.28 -.03 LBTYK LibQVC A 26.94 +.46 QVCA LincNat 49.67 +.43 LNC LinearTch 41.79 -.75 LLTC LinnEngy 3.41 +.03 LINE LinnCo 3.38 -.02 LNCO LloydBkg 4.77 -.01 LYG Loews 36.78 +.23 L LaPac 16.95 +.38 LPX lululemn gs 54.21 +.21 LULU LumberLiq 16.42 +1.84 LL LyonBas A 97.50 +1.91 LYB M-N-0 MBIA 7.28 +.28 MBI MFA Fncl 7.11 -.03 MFA MGIC Inv 9.80 +.02 MTG MGM Rsts 21.14 +.42 MGM MRC Glbl 13.24 +.64 MRC MSG Netw 20.08 +.12 MSGN MackCali 20.68 +.33 CLI Macys 51.47 +.34 M Magna g s 49.31 -.02 MGA MagHRes .59 +.00 MHR Mallinckdt 68.54 +3.27 MNK Manitowoc 17.31 +.33 MTW MannKd 3.01 -.06 MNKD Manulife g 16.60 +.21 MFC MarathnO 20.18 +1.01 MRO MarathPt s 51.08 +.79 MPC MVJrGold 20.97 -.40 GDXJ MktVGold 15.41 -.20 GDX MV OilSvc 32.01 +.61 OIH MV Semi 52.87 +.67 SMH MktVRus 17.28 +.60 RSX MarIntA 76.56 +2.39 MAR MarshM 53.75 +.58 MMC MarvellT lf 9.43 -.06 MRVL Masco 26.78 ... MAS Mastec 18.53 +.43 MTZ MasterCrd 95.87 +.69 MA MatadorRs 27.48 +.65 MTDR Mattel 22.33 +.51 MAT MaximIntg 35.31 +.50 MXIM McDrmInt 5.03 +.10 MDR McKesson 186.29 +1.31 MCK MeadJohn 72.13 -.22 MJN MediaGen 14.79 +.07 MEG MedProp 11.72 +.29 MPW MediCo 34.81 -1.19 MDCO Medivat s 39.23 -2.26 MDVN Medtrnic 72.05 +1.11 MDT MelcoCrwn 18.02 -.47 MPEL MemorialP 6.90 +.30 MEMP MemResDv 19.78 +.79 MRD Merck 51.02 +.07 MRK Methanx 44.01 +1.95 MEOH MKors 43.51 +.79 KORS Microchp 46.65 +.67 MCHP MicronT 18.72 +.10 MU Microsoft 47.45 +.65 MSFT MitelNet g 8.18 +1.16 MITL MitsuUFJ 6.50 +.05 MTU MobileTele 7.82 +.22 MBT Mobileye 47.89 -1.63 MBLY Mohawk 197.52 +2.70 MHK MolsCoorB 82.00 -.21 TAP MonogRs n 9.79 +.10 MORE Monsanto 89.25 +1.19 MON Moodys 98.38 -1.06 MCO MorgStan 32.99 +.06 MS Mosaic 33.89 +.40 MOS MotrlaSolu 69.50 -.29 MSI MurphO 29.96 +1.02 MUR Mylan NV 42.67 +.44 MYL NCR Corp 24.75 +.26 NCR NII Hldg n 6.64 -.32 NIHD NRG Egy 15.45 +.05 NRG NXP Semi 86.49 +1.55 NXPI Nabors 12.08 +.24 NBR NBGreece .69 +.06 NBG NOilVarco 40.77 +.30 NOV Nationstar 14.91 +.69 NSM Navient 12.10 +.12 NAVI Navistar 16.30 +.82 NAV NektarTh 10.78 -.37 NKTR NetElem h .14 -.03 NETE NetApp 32.27 +.74 NTAP Netflix s 114.93 +6.83 NFLX Neurcrine 43.60 +4.67 NBIX NwGold g 2.84 +.08 NGD NewOriEd 21.08 -.53 EDU NwResd rs 13.01 -.04 NRZ NY CmtyB 18.68 +.10 NYCB NY REIT 10.64 +.02 NYRT NY Times 12.76 +.17 NYT NewellRub 42.42 +.76 NWL NewfldExp 38.21 +1.11 NFX NewmtM 18.66 -.28 NEM NewsCpA 14.05 +.42 NWSA NewsCpB 14.10 +.41 NWS NextEraEn 100.85 +.92 NEE NiSource s 19.09 +.16 NI Nielsen plc 46.62 -.05 NLSN NikeB 124.91 +2.81 NKE NobleCorp 12.97 +.07 NE NobleEngy 37.27 +2.22 NBL NokiaCp 7.04 ... NOK Nordstrm 68.97 +1.01 JWN NorflkSo 82.98 +1.78 NSC NthStarAst 14.47 -.27 NSAM NthnO&G 5.71 +.22 NOG NorTrst 69.12 +.12 NTRS NorthropG 173.75 +2.55 NOC NStarRlt 12.54 +.02 NRF NovaGld g 3.69 -.08 NG Novartis 92.61 +1.01 NVS Novavax 7.61 +.35 NVAX NovoCure n18.94 +3.00 NVCR NOW Inc 17.82 +.17 DNOW NuSkin 35.48 +.86 NUS Nucor 41.26 +.68 NUE
Nvidia 26.17 +.15 OasisPet 13.76 +.87 OcciPet 74.07 +2.18 OceanRig 2.10 -.52 Oceaneerg 47.32 +1.85 OcwenFn 7.92 -.08 OfficeDpt 6.59 -.06 Oi SA s .90 -.05 OilStates 31.46 +1.15 OldDomFrt 61.87 -.40 OldRepub 16.53 +.34 Olin 18.37 +.70 OmegaHlt 35.98 -.10 Omnicom 70.95 +1.02 OmniVisn 28.61 +.07 OnSmcnd 10.30 +.02 ONEOK 39.10 +.23 OpkoHlth 8.64 -.15 Oracle 37.89 +.23 Orexigen 2.38 +.12 Organovo 3.16 +.35 OshkoshCp 41.51 +1.01 OwensCorn42.80 ... OwensIll 23.40 +1.03 P-Q-R PBF Engy 33.81 +1.89 PDC Engy 60.10 +1.23 PDL Bio 5.17 ... PG&E Cp 53.09 +.36 PHH Corp 15.61 +.16 PMC Sra 10.20 +.02 Paccar 55.80 +.75 PacBiosci 7.51 -.29 PacDrillng 1.63 +.08 PaciraPhm 40.50 +1.96 PaloAltNet169.59 -5.39 PanASlv 7.50 -.15 Pandora 19.53 -1.45 ParagOffsh .30 -.00 ParkerHan 106.81 +2.77 ParsleyEn 17.78 +.30 Patterson 45.99 +.98 PattUTI 16.97 +.72 Paychex 49.96 +.49 PayPal n 31.67 -.71 PengthE g 1.20 +.07 PnnNGm 18.74 +.17 PennVa 1.06 +.04 PennWst g 1.25 +.23 Penney 9.62 +.24 Pentair 57.53 +2.34 PeopUtdF 16.03 +.15 PepcoHold 26.48 +.10 PepsiCo 98.97 +.45 PetrbrsA 4.63 +.25 Petrobras 5.68 +.31 Pfizer 33.09 -.20 PhilipMor 84.15 +1.48 PhilipsNV 25.26 +.31 Phillips66 u84.58 +1.34 Pier 1 7.40 +.13 PilgrimsP 20.48 +.92 PionEnSvc 3.30 +.42 PioNtrl 138.53 +2.44 PitnyBw 20.85 +.10 PlainsAAP 34.03 +.92 PlainsGP 19.12 -.19 PlatfmSpc 13.40 +.46 PlatGpMet .28 +.03 PlugPowr h 2.19 +.04 Polycom 13.35 +1.91 Potash 21.90 +.12 PwshDB 15.69 +.07 PS USDBull 24.84 -.06 PS SrLoan 23.16 +.03 PS SP LwV 37.45 +.45 PwShs QQQ106.05 +.42 Praxair 108.59 +1.35 PrecDrill 5.25 +.05 PremGlbSv 13.80 +.07 PriceTR 72.04 +.06 ProLogis 41.23 +.48 ProShtDow 23.36 -.20 ProShtS&P 21.42 -.19 PrUltQQQ s 70.64 +.56 ProUltSP s 61.26 +1.09 ProUShD30 19.83 -.54 PrUltBio s 59.91 -.31 PrUltPQQQ 98.58 +1.19 PUltSP500 s60.30 +1.52 PUVixST rs38.20 -4.02 PrUCrude rs26.98 +1.54 ProVixSTF 14.18 -.72 ProShtVix 56.88 +2.68 PrUShCrde 71.24 -4.58 PrognicsPh 5.51 -.05 ProgsvCp u32.13 +.51 ProUShSP 21.08 -.36 PrUShDow 21.60 -.39 PUShtQQQ 33.99 -.29 ProUShL20 44.25 +.73 PUShtR2K 38.65 -.73 PrShtR2K 28.85 -.84 PShtQQQ 23.07 -.29 PUShtSPX 34.65 -.90 ProUShBi rs37.08 +.22 ProspctCap 7.57 -.02 PSEG 42.90 +.57 PulteGrp 20.21 +.21 PureStrg nd15.93 -.08 QEP Res 16.26 +.38 QlikTech 36.86 -.87 Qorvo n 45.26 -.29 Qualcom 57.66 +1.05 QuantaSvc 26.78 +.58 QntmDSS .76 ... Qunar 34.71 -1.19 RPC 11.97 +.56 RPM 43.71 -.22 RSP Perm 27.20 +.40 Rackspace 26.06 -1.16 RadianGrp 16.80 +.13 RadiusHlth 61.10 -5.58 RangeRs 37.41 +.78 RJamesFn 51.17 +.31 Raytheon 111.65 +1.87 RltyInco 47.65 +.22 RedHat 75.14 +.97 RegionsFn 9.26 +.05 RepubAir 5.99 +.05 RepubSvc 43.19 +.85 RexEnergy 3.10 -.09 ReynAm su46.26 +.80 RiceEngy 18.32 +.28 RioTinto 38.81 +.62 RockwlAut105.42 +2.30 RossStrs s 49.02 +.87 Rovi Corp 11.17 -.14 Rowan 20.11 +.14 RoyalBk g 57.16 +.46 RylCarb 91.92 +.83 RoyDShllB 56.70 +.86 RoyDShllA 55.88 +.91 Rubicon g .53 +.01 RuckusW 13.16 -.04 S-T-U SBA Com 110.52 +.56 SM Energy 41.29 +2.61 SpdrDJIA 170.37 +1.42 SpdrGold 109.14 -.56 SpdrEuro5035.90 +.18 SP Mid 261.89 +2.68 S&P500ETF201.21 +1.80 SpdrBiot s 63.65 -.65 SpdrHome 36.35 +.44 SpdrBarcCv45.94 +.21 SpdrShTHiY27.23 +.05 SpdrLehHY 36.30 +.13 SpdrS&P RB42.50 +.35 SpdrRetl s 46.30 +.69 SpdrOGEx 40.53 +1.43 SpdrMetM 19.60 +.40 SPX Cp 12.46 +.42 SABESP 4.57 +.12 SabreCorp 28.84 +.04 StJude 63.19 +.09 Salesforce 75.09 +.09 SallyBty 23.75 +.38 SanchezEn 8.07 +.98 SanDisk 64.11 +2.42 SandRdge .49 -.01 SangBio 5.56 -.14 SantCUSA 21.12 +.36 SareptaTh 37.81 -.16 Schlmbrg 76.64 +1.29 Schwab 28.33 +.20 SciGames 11.44 +.60 ScorpioTk 10.08 -.08 ScrippsNet 55.75 +1.13 SeadrillLtd 7.49 -.19 SeagateT 48.33 +1.04 SealAir 48.71 +.31 SeattGen 38.51 -.99 SeaWorld 19.12 +.17
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 A5
NVDA OAS OXY 52-WK RANGE YTD 1YR VOL ORIG NAME TICKER CLOSE CHG %CHG LO HI %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV OII OCN AEP Indust AEPI 64.91 +.26 +0.4 35.20 0 66.00 +11.6 +71.0 71 19 ... ODP Advance Auto Parts AAP 187.35 -3.00 -1.6 130.14 9 194.61 +17.6 +42.4 970 25 0.24 OIBR Air Products APD 137.91 +3.74 +2.8 118.20 5 158.20 -4.4 +9.2 1446 28 3.24 OIS MO 56.37 +.47 +0.8 44.59 0 56.70 +14.4 +26.0 5219 22 2.26f ODFL Altria Group AMZN 533.16 -8.78 -1.6 284.00 9 580.57 +71.8 +71.0 4570 dd ... ORI Amazon.com Inc OLN Amer Water Works AWK 56.84 +1.49 +2.7 47.58 0 57.48 +6.6 +17.0 1142 23 1.36 OHI Amerigas Part LP APU 44.25 +.61 +1.4 39.13 4 52.72 -7.7 +3.1 146 61 3.68 OMC Arch Dan Mid ADM 45.13 +.82 +1.9 40.66 4 53.91 -13.2 -8.4 3149 14 1.12 OVTI AZO 735.31 -.69 -0.1 491.93 0 758.14 +18.8 +43.8 261 20 ... ON AutoZone Inc BAC 15.75 ... ... 14.60 3 18.48 -12.0 -5.5 78618 17 0.20 OKE Bank of America OPK Big Lots BIG 49.50 -.02 ... 38.15 9 51.75 +23.7 +15.7 971 18 0.76 ORCL Bon Ton Store BONT 3.36 -.09 -2.6 2.89 1 9.80 -54.7 -59.4 84 dd 0.20 OREX Brookfield Renew En BEP 27.32 -.25 -0.9 26.11 2 33.63 -11.7 -4.9 38 1.66 ONVO CSS 26.19 +.30 +1.2 23.40 3 33.00 -5.2 +11.1 53 16 0.72 OSK CSS Industries CVS 102.17 +1.16 +1.1 77.40 7 113.65 +6.1 +26.3 5088 25 1.40 OC CVS Health Corp COG 23.15 -.10 -0.4 20.86 2 35.64 -21.8 -25.1 8117 37 0.08 OI Cabot Oil & Gas Chesapk Engy CHK 9.34 +.19 +2.1 6.01 2 24.43 -52.3 -55.0 22532 dd ... PBF Cigna Corp CI 133.63 -3.00 -2.2 85.75 6 170.68 +29.9 +53.4 2148 17 0.04 PDCE Cintas Corp CTAS 89.27 +1.93 +2.2 66.75 0 89.74 +13.8 +29.6 778 25 0.85f PDLI Coca-Cola Ent CCE 50.27 +.38 +0.8 39.05 8 53.79 +13.7 +19.8 899 20 1.12 PCG CMCSA 60.98 +1.29 +2.2 49.33 8 64.99 +5.1 +14.0 12380 18 1.00 PHH Comcast Corp A CBU 38.76 +.49 +1.3 32.84 8 40.50 +1.7 +20.2 119 17 1.24f PMCS Community Bk Sys PCAR Community Hlth Sys CYH 43.84 -.40 -0.9 40.52 2 65.00 -18.7 -18.9 1377 14 ... PACB Dunkin Brands Grp DNKN 42.26 -.35 -0.8 41.55 1 56.79 -0.9 -0.3 1321 23 1.06 PACD Emerson Elec EMR 47.52 +1.17 +2.5 42.21 3 65.94 -23.0 -20.9 3167 13 1.88 PCRX ETE 24.65 -.04 -0.2 18.62 4 35.44 -14.1 -8.3 7198 30 1.06f PANW Energy Transfer Eqty FNB 13.30 +.25 +1.9 11.50 6 14.80 -0.2 +14.9 1313 15 0.48 PAAS FNB Corp PA FCS 14.80 +.22 +1.5 12.01 4 20.84 -12.3 -0.9 845 cc ... P Fairchild Semicond PGN Fastenal Co FAST 39.03 +.99 +2.6 34.45 4 48.43 -17.9 -12.7 4141 22 1.12 PH Frontier Comm FTR 5.41 +.03 +0.6 4.19 3 8.46 -18.9 -6.1 12601 dd 0.42 PE GD 141.91 +1.55 +1.1 114.73 7 153.76 +3.1 +19.0 1016 17 2.76 PDCO Gen Dynamics GIS 56.48 +.76 +1.4 47.43 8 59.87 +5.9 +15.3 2702 27 1.76 PTEN General Mills GEF 35.20 +.65 +1.9 27.58 4 48.59 -25.5 -15.7 187 15 1.68 PAYX Greif Inc A PYPL Harte Hanks Inc HHS 4.19 +.34 +8.8 3.38 2 8.27 -45.9 -30.7 312 19 0.34 PGH Hershey Company HSY 97.00 +1.33 +1.4 82.41 6 111.35 -6.7 +5.7 983 25 2.33 PENN HD 121.06 +1.41 +1.2 86.35 0 123.80 +15.3 +31.8 4461 24 2.36 PVA Home Depot IP 41.09 +.80 +2.0 37.11 2 57.90 -23.3 -10.7 2753 17 1.60 PWE Intl Paper JJSF 119.82 +.48 +0.4 90.71 0 119.99 +10.2 +30.6 96 31 1.44 JCP J&J Snack Foods PNR Kemper Corp +0.8 32.66 6 40.28 +1.9 +13.3 115 17 0.96 KMPR 36.78 +.28 PBCT Lockheed Martin LMT 214.37 +1.42 +0.7 166.28 0 214.02 +11.3 +26.5 772 19 6.60f POM Lowes Cos LOW 73.17 +1.38 +1.9 49.85 9 76.25 +6.4 +36.8 3943 25 1.12 PEP MTB 120.20 +.58 +0.5 111.50 4 134.00 -4.3 +1.2 971 16 2.80 PBR/A M&T Bank MCD 102.95 +1.18 +1.2 87.50 0 102.30 +9.9 +13.3 7971 23 3.40 PBR McDonalds Corp PFE MetLife Inc MET 48.62 +.43 +0.9 44.49 4 58.23 -10.1 -3.6 5044 9 1.50 PM Mondelez Intl MDLZ 45.31 +.98 +2.2 31.83 9 48.58 +24.7 +32.5 6387 36 0.68f PHG NBT Bncp NBTB 27.49 +.41 +1.5 22.22 0 27.72 +4.6 +25.7 112 18 0.88 PSX NCS 11.28 +.06 +0.5 9.55 2 20.85 -39.1 -38.9 368 59 ... PIR NCI Building Sys NPBC 12.11 +.08 +0.7 9.17 9 12.80 +15.1 +32.0 540 17 0.44 PPC Natl Penn Bcs PES Nexstar Bdcstg Grp NXST 51.61 -.83 -1.6 36.41 7 60.31 -0.3 +35.0 509 21 0.76 PXD PNC Financial PNC 90.97 +.41 +0.5 76.69 6 100.52 -0.3 +11.1 1793 13 2.04 PBI PPG Inds PPG 95.77 +1.46 +1.5 82.93 4 118.95 -17.1 +2.7 1216 20 1.44 PAA 29.18 5 38.14 -1.8 +9.5 6069 11 1.51f PPL 33.09 +.46 +1.4 PAGP PPL Corp PSO 18.76 +.35 +1.9 16.55 4 22.47 +1.7 +1.1 641 0.80e PAH Pearson PLC 41.18 +.62 +1.5 39.53 2 49.73 -16.4 -0.5 4 14 1.88 PLG Penns Woods Bancorp PWOD PLUG Procter & Gamble PG 74.40 +.68 +0.9 65.02 4 93.89 -18.3 -8.2 6412 29 2.65 PLCM Prudential Fncl PRU 78.28 +.50 +0.6 73.19 3 92.60 -13.5 -5.5 1916 9 2.32 POT DGX 63.00 +.32 +0.5 56.27 3 89.00 -6.1 +8.1 1399 19 1.52 DBC Quest Diagnostics RAD 6.25 +.08 +1.3 4.42 4 9.47 -16.9 +23.4 13170 24 ... UUP Rite Aid Corp SLM 7.15 -.17 -2.3 6.80 1 10.76 -29.8 -16.5 5263 14 ... BKLN SLM Corp SPLV Sanofi SNY 48.72 +.39 +0.8 43.57 5 55.03 +6.8 -7.1 2434 1.62e QQQ Sears Holdings Corp SHLD 26.16 +.62 +2.4 19.08 3 48.25 -20.7 -15.7 531 dd ... PX Silgan Holdings Inc SLGN 55.10 +.60 +1.1 46.50 7 59.26 +2.8 +18.1 194 19 0.64 PDS SWN 13.59 +.11 +0.8 11.84 1 37.26 -50.2 -61.1 12096 10 ... PGI Sthwstn Energy SVU 7.66 +.21 +2.8 6.75 2 12.00 -21.0 -15.1 2532 10 ... TROW Supervalu Inc PLD TJX Cos TJX 72.23 +.33 +0.5 59.22 8 76.93 +5.3 +21.7 2360 22 0.84 DOG Talen Energy Corp TLN 10.68 +.20 +1.9 9.71 1 27.00 -48.5 ... 4323 ... SH 21st Century Fox B FOX 28.90 +.39 +1.4 22.85 5 37.83 -21.7 -11.9 3803 7 0.30 QLD TYC 36.23 +.65 +1.8 33.06 3 44.84 -17.4 -14.2 2692 39 0.82 SSO Tyco Intl plc UGI 35.94 +.19 +0.5 31.54 6 39.74 -5.4 +7.1 776 26 0.91 SDOW UGI Corp BIB UPS class B UPS 103.38 +1.14 +1.1 93.64 5 114.40 -7.0 +9.0 2574 24 2.92 TQQQ Verizon Comm VZ 44.23 +.38 +0.9 38.06 5 51.73 -5.5 -6.2 10001 18 2.26f UPRO WalMart Strs WMT 66.88 +.52 +0.8 61.50 2 90.97 -22.1 -11.6 5436 14 1.96 UVXY WM 52.95 +1.13 +2.2 45.50 8 55.93 +3.2 +14.2 2307 22 1.54 UCO Waste Mgmt Inc WMK 42.29 +.20 +0.5 38.61 3 51.91 -11.6 +11.4 28 20 1.20 VIXY Weis Mkts WFC 52.54 +.35 +0.7 46.44 5 58.77 -4.2 +5.0 15215 13 1.50 SVXY Wells Fargo & Co SCO Williams Cos WMB 43.80 +.24 +0.6 34.64 4 61.38 -2.5 -14.9 9500 80 2.56f PGNX PGR Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular SDS last rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in DXD arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. QID r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. TBT PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. TWM SRTY SempraEn 99.66 +1.87 SRE TASER 25.34 -.32 TASR VangSP500184.48 +1.61 VOO SQQQ SenHous 17.06 -.08 SNH TataMotors 26.67 +.19 TTM VangREIT 79.12 +.66 VNQ Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg SPXU SensataT 45.31 -1.07 ST TeckRes g 7.31 +.52 TCK VangAllW 45.54 +.40 VEU DIMC $1.52 12.34 $37.75 $0.00 0.00% BIS Sequenom 2.10 +.07 SQNM TeekayTnk 7.68 +.07 TNK VangEmg 35.98 +.46 VWO FDBC $1.08 12.55 $34.00 $0.00 0.00% PSEC ServiceCp 28.22 +.44 SCI Tegna 26.43 +.84 TGNA VangEur 52.12 +.48 VGK FKYS $1.08 13.99 $25.25 $0.00 0.00% PEG ServcNow 73.02 -1.95 NOW TelefBrasil 10.37 +.25 VIV $0.00 11.26 $5.20 $0.10 1.96% VangFTSE 37.85 +.31 VEA FNCB HONT $1.08 N/A $67.00 -$1.00 -1.47% PHM SevSevEn 1.69 +.09 SSE TelefEsp 12.82 -.05 TEF Vantiv u47.01 +.79 VNTV NWFL $1.24 13.81 $28.72 $0.36 1.27% PSTG Sherwin 244.21 +5.09 SHW TelData 26.53 +.30 TDS $1.24 14.81 $37.46 -$0.44 -1.16% 57.84 +.27 VTR PFIS QEP SibanyeG 5.60 +.02 SBGL Tenaris 28.09 +.90 TS Ventas 8.14 +.01 VER QLIK SiderurNac 1.30 +.08 SID TenetHlth 37.26 -.95 THC Vereit VeriFone 30.21 +1.30 PAY QRVO SilvStd g 6.92 -.57 SSRI Teradata 29.76 -.17 TDC 81.41 +.47 VRSK QCOM SilvWhtn g 14.18 -.25 SLW Teradyn 19.09 +.07 TER Verisk NYSE NASD NYSE MKT PWR Sinclair 28.75 -.63 SBGI Terex 20.56 +.99 TEX VertxPh 109.03 -.37 VRTX Vol. (in mil.) 3,777 1,912 66 QTM SiriusXM 3.89 ... SIRI TerraFm n 7.84 +.68 GLBL ViacomB 47.92 +.47 VIAB 4,404 2,040 85 QUNR SixFlags 48.24 -.69 SIX TerraFmP 19.81 +.04 TERP VimpelCm 4.15 +.03 VIP Pvs. Volume 2442 1802 249 RES Skechers 124.88 -1.40 SKX TeslaMot 226.72 -5.24 TSLA Vipshop s 18.63 -.40 VIPS Advanced Declined 695 965 115 RPM SkywksSol79.43 -4.18 SWKS Tesoro 104.41 +1.44 TSO Visa s 73.90 +.68 V New Highs 60 65 RSPP SolarCity 47.11 -.23 SCTY TevaPhrm 59.24 +.69 TEVA 2 Vivus 2.00 +.18 VVUS New Lows RAX Solera 13 34 54.14 +.08 SLH TexInst 51.52 +.48 TXN 1 RDN SonyCp 26.42 -.34 SNE Textron 41.10 +.88 TXT VMware 77.30 -4.79 VMW Vodafone 32.41 +.32 VOD RDUS Sothebys 34.00 -.55 BID ThermoFis 125.85 +.65 TMO RRC SouFun 7.14 -.04 SFUN Thoratec 63.50 +.05 THOR VoyaFincl 40.17 +.20 VOYA LAST CHG %CHG RJF SouthnCo 45.15 +.39 SO 3D Sys 13.75 +.58 DDD W&T Off 3.63 +.24 WTI NAME RTN SthnCopper28.93 +.04 SCCO 3M Co 149.48 +1.94 MMM WEC Engy 52.45 +.79 WEC GoodrP pfD 3.55 +1.32 +59.2 O SwstAirl 38.76 +.05 LUV Tidwtr 17.15 +.20 TDW WPCS Int rs 1.78 +.16 WPCS GoodrP pfC 3.60 +1.28 +55.2 RHT SparkTh n 47.44 +2.63 ONCE TW Cable 188.44 +2.43 TWC Wabash 11.45 -.06 WNC WaferGen 2.24 +.72 +47.4 RF SpectraEn 30.38 +.27 SE TimeWarn 72.98 +1.18 TWX Wabtec 92.86 -.32 WAB 11.96 +3.66 +44.1 RJET Spectranetd10.91 -.94 SPNC Timken 31.00 +1.16 TKR WaddellR 35.00 +.01 WDR JournMda n EducDevel 8.97 +2.54 +39.5 RSG SpectPh 6.13 +.35 SPPI TollBros 36.89 +.32 TOL REXX SpiritAero 50.14 -.01 SPR TorDBk gs 41.14 +.21 TD WaferGen 2.24 +.72 WGBS RAI SpiritRltC 9.78 +.08 SRC Total SA 51.60 +.36 TOT WalgBoots 84.28 -.16 WBA RICE Splunk 56.37 -1.07 SPLK TotalSys 47.65 +.58 TSS WeathfIntl 10.62 +.19 WFT NAME LAST CHG %CHG RIO Sprint 4.55 -.04 S TrCda g 35.24 -.05 TRP WebsterFn 37.78 +.43 WBS 15.22 -5.11 -25.1 ROK Sprouts 22.99 +.66 SFM Transocn 16.30 -.04 RIG Welltower 69.66 +.04 HCN ProUShHm ROST SP Matls 44.17 +.61 XLB Travelers 103.09 +.92 TRV Wendys Co 9.17 +.30 WEN ExactSci h 7.80 -2.22 -22.2 ROVI SP HlthC 68.13 +.20 XLV TriPointe 14.43 +.20 TPH WestarEn 39.10 +.77 WR OceanRig 2.10 -.52 -19.8 RDC SP CnSt 49.35 +.58 XLP TriangPet 1.72 +.08 TPLM WDigital 85.27 +.78 WDC SkylineM rs 2.40 -.55 -18.6 RY SP Consum 77.63 +.94 XLY TrimbleN 17.50 +.24 TRMB WstnRefin 46.83 -.03 WNR CardiovSys 13.62 -3.01 -18.1 RCL SP Engy 69.39 +1.30 XLE TrinaSolar 10.33 +.05 TSL WstnUnion 19.20 +.40 WU RDS/B SPDR Fncl 23.39 +.14 XLF Trinity 26.98 +1.15 TRN WestlkChm 60.77 +1.69 WLK RDS/A SP Inds 53.20 +.73 XLI TripAdvis 69.58 +1.85 TRIP CLOSE PVS %CH %YTD RBY SP Tech 41.30 +.19 XLK Tronox 7.66 +1.05 TROX WestRock n 54.19 +.13 WRK FUELS RKUS SP Util 6.48 -.47 TRUE Weyerhsr 28.55 +.40 WY Crude Oil (bbl) 44.00 +.54 XLU TrueCar 49.43 47.81 +3.39 -7.2 WhiteWave 41.71 -.05 WWAV Staples 12.62 -.02 SPLS TurqHillRs 2.99 +.06 TRQ Heating Oil (gal) 1.60 1.58 +1.41 -13.3 WhitingPet 22.20 +.78 WLL 21stCFoxA 28.57 +.37 FOXA Starbucks su59.46 +.68 SBUX SBAC Natural Gas (mm btu) 2.50 2.47 +0.97 -13.5 SM StarwdHtl 71.25 +.94 HOT 21stCFoxB 28.90 +.39 FOX WholeFood 34.15 +.21 WFM 30.32 +.49 TWTR WmsCos 43.80 +.24 WMB METALS DIA StarwdPT 21.39 +.01 STWD Twitter 1144.70 1149.00 -0.37 -3.3 GLD StateStr 69.45 +.43 STT TwoHrbInv 9.12 -.04 TWO WillmsPtrs 34.54 -.46 WPZ Gold (oz) 28.78 -1.11 TWOU Windstm rs 6.66 +.22 WIN Silver (oz) FEZ Statoil ASA 17.63 +.26 STO 2U 15.76 16.09 -2.04 +1.3 MDY StlDynam 19.08 +.15 STLD TycoIntl 36.23 +.65 TYC WT EurHdg 57.85 +.27 HEDJ Platinum (oz) 953.30 944.50 +0.93 -21.1 u45.99 +1.37 TSN WisdomTr 16.68 -.04 WETF Copper (lb) SPY Steelcse 19.20 +.21 SCS Tyson 2.35 2.37 -1.03 -17.3 XBI SterlingBc u15.29 +.09 STL UBS Grp n 19.89 -.08 UBS WTJpHedg 51.79 +.23 DXJ Palladium (oz) 701.80 698.15 +0.52 -12.1 35.24 +.13 UDR XHB StillwtrM 11.82 +.53 SWC UDR WT India 20.75 ... EPI AGRICULTURE CWB StoneEngy 9.53 +.90 SGY US Silica 17.67 +1.64 SLCA 27.58 +.18 USG WolvWW 21.61 -.11 WWW Cattle (lb) 1.31 1.29 +1.41 -20.8 SJNK Stratasys 31.89 +1.63 SSYS USG JNK StratHotels 14.02 +.02 BEE UTiWrldwd 4.72 -.16 UTIW Workday 75.86 -.50 WDAY Corn (bu) 3.91 3.96 -1.14 -1.5 Wyndham 78. 1 8 +1.73 WYN 97.35 +1.35 SYK UltraPt g 7.62 +.18 UPL KRE Stryker Cotton (lb) 0.62 0.62 -0.53 +2.2 Wynn 75.91 +3.92 WYNN Umpqua 17. 1 1 +. 1 6 UMPQ XRT Suncor g 28.53 +1.39 SU Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 237.50 235.40 +0.89 -28.3 UA XL Grp 37.07 +.46 XL Soybeans (bu) XOP SunEdison 9.16 -.56 SUNE UnderArmr 101.14 +2.08 8.81 8.91 -1.09 -13.5 XME SunOpta 5.36 +.59 STKL UnilevNV 42.07 +.29 UN XOMA h .95 +.01 XOMA Wheat (bu) 5.12 5.17 -1.02 -13.3 SPXC SunPower 25.22 +.90 SPWR UnionPac 97.05 +1.94 UNP XPO Logis 29.47 +.29 XPO 18.09 +.39 UNT XcelEngy 35.51 +.48 XEL SBS SunstnHtl 14.99 +.42 SHO Unit SABR SunTrst 39.85 +.30 STI UtdContl 52.26 +.68 UAL Xerox 10.53 +.18 XRX Currency to U.S. dollar Yesterday Prev. STJ SupEnrgy 16.84 +.68 SPN UtdRentals 70.53 +2.63 URI Xilinx 45.14 +.67 XLNX Canadian dollar .7687 .7656 CRM SwftEng .70 +.06 SFY US Bancrp 41.90 +.11 USB Xylem 34.99 +.95 XYL SBH SwiftTrans 16.48 +.34 SWFT US NGas 11.44 +.05 UNG Chinese yuan .1573 .1574 YPF Soc 19.58 +.44 YPF SN Symantec 21.04 +.19 SYMC US OilFd 16.04 +.47 USO Euro 1.1272 1.1252 Yahoo 32.37 +.50 YHOO USSteel 12.62 +.33 X SNDK Synergetc 6.64 -.05 SURG Japanese yen .008334 .008339 SD SynrgyPh 6.14 -.23 SGYP UtdTech 94.33 +.82 UTX Yamana g 2.33 +.11 AUY 12.00 +.17 YNDX Stocks on bold changed 5% or more in price from previous SGMO SynergyRs 12.12 +.22 SYRG UtdhlthGp 116.08 -.35 UNH Yandex SC SynovusFn 30.17 +.14 SNV UrbanOut 31.45 +.58 URBN Yelp 23.61 +.11 YELP day. Underlined stocks are the 50 most actively traded. SRPT Sysco 40.95 +.39 SYY V-W-X-Y-Z YoukuTud 20.14 +.40 YOKU SLB T-MobileUS39.56 -.81 TMUS VF Corp 71.33 +1.66 VFC YumBrnds 67.46 -.25 YUM Stock Footnotes: d - New 52-week low. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continuedSCHW TD Ameritr 32.15 +.11 AMTD Vale SA 5.27 +.11 VALE ZillowA s 32.74 +1.46 ZG listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a SGMS TE Connect 61.90 +.03 TEL Vale SA pf 4.18 +.10 VALE/P ZillowC n u31.60 +1.61 Z new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures STNG TECO 26.78 +.05 TE ValeantPh 171.17 +1.34 VRX ZionsBcp 28.76 +.04 ZION date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock SNI TIM Part 10.33 +.16 TSU ValeroE 65.71 +1.12 VLO issue. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at SDRL TableauA 79.56 -3.53 DATA VlyNBcp 10.12 +.08 VLY Ziopharm 10.60 +.13 ZIOP least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at 43.22 +.55 ZTS STX TahoeRes 9.41 -.11 TAHO VandaPhm 11.02 -.38 VNDA Zoetis least 20 percent within the last year. u - New 52-week high. SEE TaiwSemi 22.25 +.32 TSM VangTotBd 81.78 -.13 BND Zumiez 18.69 +1.73 ZUMZ un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in 2.46 +.05 ZNGA bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the SGEN TalenEn n 10.68 +.20 TLN VangTSM 103.69 +.89 VTI Zynga bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. SEAS Target 78.69 +.13 TGT VangValu 80.81 +.77 VTV
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FLYING: Low-fare, high-fee model creates unhappy customers From Page a4
accommodate stranded passengers on bigger airlines. It can add up to long delays as crews try to wait out the weather or fix planes to avoid canceling flights. In June, several hundred Spirit passengers were stuck at the airport in Las Vegas after cancellations. Airport officials handed out water and diapers. The same month in Atlantic City, New Jersey, two state troopers
bought 15 pizzas to feed stranded Spirit passengers whose flight had been diverted there because of bad weather. Another source of irritation: tight legroom. Frontier added 12 seats to its current planes by installing seats with less padding. Its new Airbus A321 jets arriving next year will have 230 seats. Spirit flies the A321 with 218 seats, JetBlue with 190, American with 181. Unhappy customers also
complain about being nickeland-dimed — all the fees offset the cheaper base fare. Heidi Kerr-Schlaefer, a Colorado travel writer, said she was a loyal customer of Denver-based Frontier Airlines for more than a decade. She “loved, loved, loved” the hometown airline with its wild-animal logos and friendly staff. But when the airline switched to mimic Spirit’s low-fare, high-fees model last year, calculating the cost of a trip got too complicated.
“I had to sit down and say: This is what I’m paying for the flight, then they’re charging me $3 or $5 for a seat (assignment), and I need to figure out how much baggage I’ll bring both ways,” she said. “It became a mathematics game and that’s ridiculous.” The discount airlines, however, have their fans. Traffic jumped 77 percent on Spirit and 39 percent on Allegiant from 2011 through 2014. Travel is up by double-digits again this year on both airlines.
Just being on time not good enough WaSHINgToN — more flights are arriving on time but complaints about the airlines have risen sharply. most complaints concern delayed flights, but baggage or ticketing problems, customer service and fares are also included. Consumers filed 1,633 complaints about U.S. airlines with the government, up from 1,107 a year earlier. Spirit had the highest complaint rate by a wide
margin, with nearly twice as many omplaints as Frontier airlines, the carrier with the second-worst record. many more travelers complain directly to the airlines, so the government report does not fully capture consumer displeasure. The Department of Transportation report can be found at http://1.usa. gov/1NpZ2YP — AssociAted Press
WB_VOICE/PAGES [A06] | 10/08/15
A6 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
18:44 | BOONELAURA
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
h
ROAD TO THE WHITE HOUSE
h
Trade deal, Keystone open Clinton to flip-flop charges By Ken Thomas and Lisa Lerer Associated Press
Jose Luis MAgANA / AssociAted Press
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. speaks in Washington last month.
Rubio’s presidential bid boosted by secret-money commercials By Julie Bykowicz Associated Press WASHINGTON — Voters are beginning to learn about Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio. What they’re not learning, however, is who is paying to promote his candidacy. The Florida senator is benefiting in unprecedented ways from a nonprofit group f u n d ed by an onym ous donors. While other presidential candidates also have ties to secret-money groups, the Rubio arrangement is the boldest. Every pro-Rubio television commercial so far in the early primary states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina has been paid for not by his campaign or even by a super PAC that identifies its donors, but instead by a nonprofit called Conservative Solutions Project. It’s also sending Rubio-boosting mail to voters in those same states. Rubio is legally prohibited from directing the group’s spending, and he has said he has nothing to do with it. But there’s little doubt that Conservative Solutions Project is picking up the tab for critical expenses that the campaign itself might strug-
gle to afford. Although Rubio is rising in national polls, his fundraising has so far been dwarfed that of by several rivals. For one, Jeb Bush and his super PAC had amassed $114 million — more than quadruple what Rubio and his super PAC collected — by the end of June. Ahead of what is expected to be a disappointing fundraising report next week, Rubio’s aides have stressed that their thriftiness gives them a competitive advantage over campaigns with more money. Left unsaid is that a secretmoney group is giving him at least an $8 million assist, according to advertising tracker Kantar Media’s CMAG. The candidate has presented himself as being opposed to such unaccountable money. “I have always supported disclosure,” Rubio said at a New Hampshire campaign stop last month, in response to a question about money in politics. “And I think that as long as people know who is giving you money, and why it is, people can make judgments on why you are doing what you are doing.”
WASHINGTON — Martin O’Malley was blunt when he learned Hillary Rodham Clinton had announced her opposition to a Pacific Rim trade deal. “Wow, that’s a reversal,” he told reporters minutes after Clinton announced her shift. The Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal is just the latest in a long line of issues that Clinton has shifted her views on in recent weeks, giving Democratic rivals like O’Malley, the former Maryland governor, and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an opportunity to brand her as a flip-flopper on the eve of the first Democratic presidential debate. Leading up to the Oct. 13 primetime encounter in Las Vegas, Clinton has announced her opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline, a project she said she was “inclined” to support back in 2010 as President Barack Obama’s secretary of state. She touted her support for gay marriage during a weekend appearance before the Human Rights Campaign — yet she opposed same-sex marriage for more than two decades in public life. And her opposition to the Asian trade deal, which was finalized last week, came nearly three years after she traveled to Australia as secretary of state and lauded the proposed pact as the “gold standard” of trade deals. Video clips of Clinton talking about the trade deal are stored on YouTube, giving her opponents made-for-TV footage that could be used in television ads to highlight her shifting positions.
NAti HArNik / AssociAted Press
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks Wednesday during a campaign stop in Council Bluffs, Iowa. “Whether it is the Keystone pipeline, whether it is TPP, these are issues that I have had a very strong opinion on from Day One,” Sanders told reporters. “I am delighted that Secretary Clinton is on board in opposition to the TPP. To be very frank with you, it would have been more helpful to have her on board a few months ago.” Clinton’s repositioning is aimed at a Democratic primary electorate eager to find a new liberal standard-bearer in the post-Obama era. Her comments on the trade deal won quick praise from labor unions and environmentalists credited her opposing the Keystone pipeline, a sign that she is securing her left flank heading into the first contests in Iowa and New Hampshire next February. But Republicans have already signaled her reversals will trail her into the general
election, where her opponents have already spent months casting doubt on her trustworthiness. Many Republicans remember how Democrats successfully used the flip-flopping charges to undercut Mitt Romney’s appeal during his 2012 campaign ag ainst Obama. “Hillary Clinton reversed her position after admitting she hadn’t even read the final agreement,” said Republican National Chairman Reince Priebus, who said in a statement her “painful waffling” was “a case study in political expediency.” Even a series of tough on Wall Street policy positions, released late Wednesday, come as some liberals have questioned whether she’s too cozy with the financial industry, which she’s had relationships with since before her days as a New York senator. The series of shifts marks
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MONTHLY MEETING YATESVILLE BOROUGH COUNCIL
LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that a Meeting of the Forty Fort Borough Civil Service Commission will be held on Thursday, October 15, 2015 at 5:00 PM for general purposes at the Forty Fort Borough Building, 1271 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort, PA 18704. Anthony Smith, Secretary Civil Service Commission NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Letters Testamentary have been issued to David Lloyd Baird, 1066 Scott Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18705 in the Estate of George A. Baird, Deceased, who died on September 22, 2015, late of the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. All creditors are requested to present their claims and all persons indebted to the decedent will make payment to the aforementioned Executor or his attorney. ROSENN, JENKINS & GREENWALD, LLP 15 South Franklin Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711 NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Letters Testamentary have been granted in the Estate of Margaret E. Tomascik, Deceased, of Wilkes-Barre City, Luzerae County, Pennsylvania, who died on September 9, 2015. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to George Kmetz, Jr., Executor, in care of his attorney: JOHN J. TERRANA, ESQUIRE 400 Third Avenue, Suite 216 Kingston, PA 18704 NOTICE OF GRANT OF LETTERS ESTATE OF MARY LOUISE KITCHEN BUCKALEW, late of Benton (died June 11, 2015). Judith Scavone, Executrix; Anthony J. Lumbis, Esquire, P.O. Box 129, Sweet Valley, PA 18656. NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Letters Testamentary have oeen granted in the Estate of Maurizio Maurice DiBiasi, a/k/a Marizio DiBlasi, a/k/a Maurice DiBlasi, deceased, who died July 15, 2014, late of Hazle Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, to Antonietta Peterson, Executrix. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make payment and those having claims to present the same without delay to the Executrix, c/o John P. Rodgers, Esquire 15 Public Square, Suite 210 Wilkes Barre, PA 18701. NOTICE OF CHANGE OF DAY FOR THE NOVEMBER MONTHLY MEETING YATESVILLE BOROUGH COUNCIL
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NOTICE is hereby given that the date of the regularly scheduled November monthly meeting of the Yatesville Borough Council has been changed in recognition of Election Day. The meeting previously scheduled for Tuesday, November 3, 2015 will now be held on Monday, November 2, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. prevailing time, at the Yatesville Borough Municipal Building, 33 Pittston Avenue, Yatesville, Pennsylvania. The meeting is being rescheduled in that the Yatesville Borough Building serves as a polling place for Yatesville Borough residents. SAMUEL A. FALCONE, JR., ESQUIRE Solicitor NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE CITY OF WILKES-BARRE ZONING HEARING BOARD A public hearing will be held in City Council Chambers, Fourth Floor, City Hall, 40 East Market Street, WilkesBarre, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, October 21, 2015, at 4:30 p.m., Daylight Savings Time, relative to the following zoning appeal applications: a) Continued Hearing: Leroy A. Charles for the property located within an R-1 zone at 3-5 Glen Street for a variance to display the inventory for a used motor vehicle sales business. A variance to waive all the requirements in Article 10 (Off-street Parking and Loading) of the Zoning Ordinance, in order to use a vacant lot as an unimproved display and storage area for the proposed used motor vehicle sales business. A variance to waive Section 316 (vision obstruction at corner lots) to allow a motor vehicle to park within the visual obstruction triangle formed by the intersecting property lines of a corner lot. A variance to waive section 702.03 (B) of the Zoning Ordinance in order to waive the screening requirement for a landscaped planting strip and to use an existing 6 foot opaque fence instead of the required 8 foot perforated fence. b) North End Heritage Parking Cooperative, LLC for the property located within a C-N zoning district at 621-623 North Main Street for variances to waive all required setbacks from 10 feet down to 0 feet for a proposed limited parking lot. A variance to waive the required planting strip screening for the parking lot. A variance to waive the 6 foot fence screening requirement along the entire northwesterly side and along the front portion of the southeasterly side of the proposed parking lot. c) Zoning Appeal REMANDED: Thomas J. Greco, Appellant vs. ZONING HEARING BOARD OF THE CITY OF WILKKES-BARRE and RENAUD, LLC d/b/a VESUVIO PIZZERIA & RISTORANTE, Appellees. An Order by the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County: AND NOW, this 30TH day of December, 2014, upon consideration f h
Thursday.........Wednesday 5 p.m. Friday.....................Thursday 5 p.m. Saturday.......................Friday 2 p.m.
THE CITY OF WILKES-BARRE IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER THOMAS M. LEIGHTON, MAYOR NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ZONING HEARING BOARD A public hearing will be held in City Council Chambers, Fourth Floor, City Hall, 40 East Market Street, WilkesBarre, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, October 21, 2015, at 4:30 p.m., Daylight Savings Time, relative to the following zoning appeal application: Joseph D. McDonough for the property located within an R-1 zone at 180182 East Thomas Street for a variance to construct a 26 x 40 garage/storage building on a vacant lot. A variance to waive the front yard setback from the required 25 feet down to 17 feet in order to construct the garage-storage building. ALL INTERESTED PERSONS MAY APPEAR AT SUCH HEARING. CASES WILL NOT NECESSARILY BE CALLED IN THE ORDER LISTED ABOVE. DISABILITIES NOTICE: This Hearing is being held at a facility which is accessible to persons with disabilities. Please notify Ms. Ellen Meehan, Human Resources Director, if special accommodations are required. Such notification should be made within one (1) week prior to the date of this hearing. Ms. Meehan can be reached at (570) 2084173 or by FAX at (570) 208-4124 or by e-mail at emeehan@wilkes-barre.pa.us
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1. The matter is REMANDED to the Zoning hearing Board of Wilkes-Barre City which shall allow any additional evidence from the parties as it deems appropriate. 2. The Prothonotary of Luzerne County is directed to enter this Order of record and mail a copy of this Order to all counsel of record pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. No. 236.
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e-mail at emeehan@wilkes-barre.pa.us By Order of the Zoning Hearing Board of the City of Wilkes-Barre William C. Harris, Director of Planning & Zoning/Zoning Officer THE CITY OF WILKES-BARRE IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER THOMAS M. LEIGHTON, MAYOR Sealed bids and/or request for proposals (RFP's) will be received by Mr. Anthony Ryba, Secretary, Hazleton Area School District, 1515 West 23rd Street, Hazle Township, Pennsylvania 182021647, until 11:00 A.M., Wednesday, October 21, 2015, for the following: 1)
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December, 2014, upon consideration of the Motion to Allow Additional Evidence into the Record filed by Appellee, Renaud, LLC d/b/a Vesuvio Pizzeria & Ristorante, Appellants Answer thereto, Briefs in support thereof and in opposition thereto, and oral argument before this Court, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED as follows:
ALL INTERESTED PERSONS MAY APPEAR AT SUCH HEARING. CASES WILL NOT NECESSARILY BE CALLED IN THE ORDER LISTED ABOVE. DISABILITIES NOTICE: This Hearing is being held at a facility which is accessible to persons with disabilities. Please notify Ms. Ellen Meehan, Human Resources Director, if special accommodations are required. Such notification should be made within one (1) week prior to the date of this hearing. Ms. Meehan can be reached at (570) 2084173 or by FAX at (570) 208-4124 or by e-mail at emeehan@wilkes-barre.pa.us
another way that Clinton has recalibrated her campaign strategy after her failed president bid eight years ago. In 2008, Clinton refused to apologize for voting to authorize the war in Iraq, even as then-Illinois Sen. Barack Obama hammered her for it. Advisers feared that if she called the vote a mistake, she’d be tagged a “flip-flopper,” a charge that devastated Democratic nominee John Kerry in 2004. “It’s important for all Democrats to keep the word ‘mistake’ firmly on the Republicans,” said chief strategist Mark Penn, at the time, according to the book, “Her Way: the Hopes and Ambitions of Hillary Rodham Clinton.” Clinton’s supporters say some shifts are the natural outcome of decades of public service and changing public opinion. Much of the Democratic Party opposed gay marriage for decades, including Vice President Joe Biden and Obama. Only in the last few years, as public opinion has shifted in favor of same-sex rights, did their stance change. She’s credited gay rights activists with changing her views on the issue. “You helped change a lot of minds,” she told the Human Rights Campaign. “Including mine.” On immigration, just days after formally entering the race, Clinton quickly declared her support for state policies that give drivers licenses to undocumented immigrants — an issue that tripped her up during in an October 2007 Democratic primary debate. Since that campaign, 10 states have embraced the policy, with relatively little controversy.
Snow Plowing, Cindering & Removal (Bid)
Public Bid / RFP Opening: Date: Wednesday, October 21, 2015 Time: 11:05 A.M. Location: HASD Administration Building First Floor Conference Room 1515 West 23rd Street Hazle Township, PA 18202-1647 A copy of the specifications for these bids/contracts/RFP's may be obtained at the office of the undersigned or call (570) 459-3111 ext. 3106. In addition, bids / RFP's may be obtained off of the school district website (http://www.hasdk12.org/webbids). Questions regarding the bid specifications should be directed via email to Robert J. Krizansky (krizanskyr@hasdk12.org). All proposals must be submitted in a sealed envelope, which shall be plainly identified as a bid and/or RFP. Where indicated, bids / RFP's shall be accompanied by a certified check or bid bond in an amount specified within the specifications of the proposal to be drawn in favor of the Hazleton Area School District. Emailed or faxed bids will not be accepted. The Hazleton Area School District reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids / RFP's received and the right to waive any informalities. /s/ Anthony Ryba Secretary / Business Manager NOTICE The Fairview Twp. Board of Supervisors will hold a special meeting on Tuesday, October 13, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. at the municipal building, 65 Shady Tree Drive, Mountain Top, Pa. The purpose of this meeting is to begin preparation of the 2016 budget, and for any other business that may come before the Board. Barbara Wasiakowski Secretary/Treasurer PUBLIC NOTICE Luzerne County invites qualified agencies and individuals to submit a BID to provide the following:
$24.99
provide the following: THIN CLIENT HOST SERVERS Ref #10615BIT Responses for the listed BID must be submitted to The Luzerne County Purchasing Department, c/o Mark Zulkoski, 20 North Pennsylvania Avenue, Suite 203, Wilkes Barre, Pa by 4:00 p.m. (prevailing time) October 20, 2015, packets may be obtained at the offices of Luzerne Purchasing Department in the Penn Place Building, 20 North Pennsylvania Avenue, Wilkes Barre, Pa 18711, and also on the County website at www.luzernecounty.org. Failure to follow these instructions may result in BID rejection. BIDs may be received weekdays between the hours of 9:00 AM and 4:00 PM. only excluding holidays. The County Of Luzerne does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, family, and handicapped status in employment or the provision of services. The County of Luzerne is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Dave Parsnik Director of Administrative Services Advertisement published by order of: Luzerne County Manger Robert C. Lawton NOTICE David A. York, Esq., P.O. Box 9036, Pittsburgh, PA 15224. Notice is hereby given that Articles of Incorporation were filed with the Department of State of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on August 28, 2015, with respect to a nonprofit corporation, Valley Community Church of Drums, which has been incorporated under the Nonprofit Corporation Law of 1988. The purposes for which it was organized are as follows: Religious, Charitable, Social, Literary, and Educational purposes, including the operation of a Christian Church. PUBLIC NOTICE YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW and be informed of the functions of your government are embodied in public notices. In that self-government charges all citizens to be informed, this newspaper urges every citizen to read and study these notices. We strongly advise citizens seeking further information to exercise their right of access to public records and public meetings. PUBLIC NOTICE DEADLINES Saturday by 4 PM Thursday Sunday by 12 Noon Friday Monday by 12 Noon Friday Tuesday by 4 PM Friday Wednesday by 4 PM Monday Thursday by 4PM Tuesday Friday by 4 PM - Wednesday Lengthier notices may require additional notification. Email your public notice to
$15.00
Email your public notice to cthompson@citizensvoice.com. CLEARLY typed notices may be mailed to 75 N. Washington St., W-B, PA 18711 or faxed to (570) 301-2189. For additional information regarding scheduling of public notices, contact Chantel at (570) 821-2046. LEGAL NOTICE Luzerne Schuylkill Workforce Investment Board, Inc. For Luzerne and Schuylkill Counties The Youth Council of the Luzerne Schuylkill Workforce Investment Board, Inc. (WIB) is seeking qualified providers to operate programs for youth in grades nine through twelve in Luzerne and Schuylkill counties. The purpose of this Request for Proposal (RFP) is to solicit proposals to plan, coordinate, and implement career awareness and preparedness programs called CareerLinking Academies during the 2015-2016 school year. All academies must be completed on or before June 30, 2016. The CareerLinking Academy model and its components can be innovatively integrated into the school year curriculum, can be offered as a week-long continuous project, and/or any combination that best meets the needs of the students. This solicitation covers the period from 12/4/15 - 6/30/16. Interested proposers may secure the Request for Funding (RFP) through written mail request to Luzerne Schuylkill Workforce Investment Board, 22 E. Union Street, Suite 115, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701, by fax (570) 970-4050, or email at information@lswib.org. Proposals must be received by the WIB Office no later than Friday, November 13, 2015 at 12:00 noon.
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ATTORNEY COLLEEN METROKA BANKRUPTCY Payment Plan! Free Consultation 570-592-4796 www.cmetrokalaw.com FREE BANKRUPTCY CONSULTATION Payment plan available. Weekend appointments available. Atty. Carol W. Baltimore 570-283-1626
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NOVENA TO ST. JUDE O Holy St. Jude, Apostle and Martyr, great in virtue rich in miracles, near kins-man of Jesus Christ, faithful intercessor of all who invoke your special patronage in time of need, to you I have recourse from the depth of my heart and humbly beg to whom Gad has given such great power to come to my assistance. Help me in my present and urgent petition. In turn, I promise to make your name known and cause you to be invoked St. Jude and pray for us all who invoke your aid. Amen. Say three Our Fathers, Hail Marys and Gloria's. Publication must be prompt. The Novena has never been known to fail. I have had my request granted. Thank you Jesus, Blessed Mother and Saint Anthony. P.S.
A large architectural woodworking company located in Kingston, PA is looking for Experienced Cabinet Makers/Wood Workers, Metal Worker & Finishing Help. Great pay & benefits. Only solid, mature & positive people should apply. Call: 570-283-5934, email: agata@4daughters.net General
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Childcare experience , references and background check required upon hiring.. Email resume to dshybloski279@juno.com or apply in person at The Royal Academy Child Care located 75 North Mountain Blvd. Mountain Top , PA18707 570-474-9695 General
All black, short hair. Wearing no collar. Missing from Wyoming Ave. & Schooley Ave., Exeter. Any information, please call 570-362-0516. Reward offered!
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DURYEA BOROUGH IS SEEKING A PART-TIME
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Interested parties could fill out an application at the Borough Building at 315 Main Street, Duryea Mon-Fri 8am-4pm. Applications will be accepted through Wednesday, October 14, 2015.
4 CEMETERY PLOTS
Washburn Cemetery on Washburn St. Pine - 4th street Space # 1, 2, 3 & 4, Lot # 7. $400 each. $45 transfer fee. 570-346-0977 EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
ABINGTON HILLS CEMETERY 4 lots. $1,000 for all or 2 for $600. Call 570-967-2637
CHAPEL LAWN MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery plot & vault for sale. Resurrection Center of Memorial Park. Asking $1,650. Price Negotiable.
570-574-3422
FAIRVIEW MEMORIAL PARK ELMHURST
On corner of Garden of Prayer section, Lot 310-A, spaces 2, 3, 4. Includes 44” x 13” Signature Rose on a granite foundation headstone 48” x 17” with vase. Beautiful view. Spaces overlook reservoir, train & mountains. Includes $95 transfer tax. Value $5,450. Asking $3,995. 210-542-6317. FAIRVIEW MEMORIAL PARK, Elmhurst 2 lots in the Garden of Faith, side by side. Lot 55. Value $2,000. Asking $1,800. Call 570-343-2573. MAUSOLEUM CRYPT 1 FOR SALEMother of Sorrows Cemetary, Finch Hill. Top row of 6, Walk of The Immaculate Conception. Valued at $3,600, will sell for $3,200.Call 570-357-5587
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Drivers
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1 or 2 days a week. Call 570-735-4100
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FANELLI BROTHER'S TRUCKING COMPANY
1298 Keystone Blvd. Pottsville, PA 17901 Phone: 570-544-3140 Fax: 570-544-8084 Due to increased business volumes, Fanelli Bros. Trucking Co. is adding both regional and local drivers to our Pittston, PA and Pottsville, PA operations. Drivers are home most nights throughout the week. Drivers must have 2 years of OTR experience, acceptable MVR and pass a criminal background check and drug screen test. The pay package offers: Up to .45 cpm for qualified drivers $2,000 sign on bonus Up to $2,000 Recruiting Bonus Paid vacations and holidays Health/Dental/Vision Insurance 401K Plan Contact Gary Potter by e-mail at gpotter@fanellitrucking.com or apply on-line at www.fanellitrucking.com
GARAGE DOOR INSTALLER
Residential, commercial, and rolling steel. Polite, honest. Customer and quality oriented. Self-disciplined team player. Benefits, paid holidays. Competitive salary, steady work. Contact Rowe Door Sales 570-655-7701 Looking For A New Car? Check Out: The Citizens Voice Call 570-821-2020 to place a classified ad
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PA CHRISTMAS SHOW BUS TRIP December 2, 2015. Cost $45 (Transportation, admission, driver gratuity). Call 570-5750-261 for info/reservations.
Abington Hills Cemetery, lots 41 Kalmia section, lots 3,4,5,6. Flat marker section, 2nd row off the road. $350 each plus $45 transfer fee. 727-771-5526
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Valid PA drivers license required, CDL not necessary. Starting salary is $11.70/hour without benefits. Hours will be between Mon-Fri 7am-3pm, as needed on a part-time basis.
in Dallas. $750 for both. Call 570-823-2251 4 AVAILABLE CEMETERY LOTS
FOCUS GROUP
We are a law firm looking for jurors to take part in a mock trial on October 20, 2015 in Wilkes-Barre from 8:30 a.m. To approximately 5:00 p.m. Breakfast, lunch and a $25 gift card will be provided. Contact us at focus.group.contact@gmail.com if you are interested.
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STREET DEPARTMENT LABORER
Chapel Lawn Memorial Park
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Local cleaning company hiring for a part time, evening position in Wyoming. For more details and an application, please go to www.combatcleanerz.com No phone calls please
PENN STATE FANS
Do you have tickets but don't want to drive? Party bus departs Plymouth. HOT TAILGATE BEFORE AND AFTER THE GAME. All home games $65 per person. Space is limited. Reserve your games now. Call Ed 570-954-0582
LACKAWANNA COUNTY DELINQUENT TAX SALE LIST NOVEMBER 16, 2015@ 10:00 A.M.
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TO: ALL OWNERS OF PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THIS NOTICE AND ALL PERSONS HAVING LIEN, JUDGMENT, MUNICIPAL OR OTHER CLAIMS AGAINST SUCH PROPERTIES. TERMS OF SALE: CREDIT CARD, CERTIFIED CHECK OR MONEY ORDER PAYABLE TO THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU AT THE TIME THE PROPERTY IS STRUCK DOWN. NO PERSONAL CHECKS OR CASH ACCEPTED. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN BY THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF LACKAWANNA UNDER THE ACT OF 1947 P.L. 1968, AS AMENDED THAT THE SAID BUREAU WILL EXPOSE AT PUBLIC SALE IN THE LACKAWANNA COUNTY ADMINISTRATION BLDG., 200 ADAMS AVENUE, SCRANTON PA 18503 AT 10:00 A.M., ON NOVEMBER 16, 2015, OR ANY OTHER DATE TO WHICH THE SALE MAY BE ADJOURNED. READJOURNED OR CONTINUED FOR THE PURPOSE OF COLLECTING UNPAID TAXES, MUNICIPAL CLAIMS AND ALL COSTS THERETO THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE FOR AT LEAST THE UPSET PRICE IN THE AMOUNT HEREIN BELOW APPROXIMATELY SET FORTH. PURSUANT TO 72 P.S. SECTION 5931, ALL SALES BY THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU ARE SUBJECT TO THE RULE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. IN EVERY CASE, THE PROPERTY IS OFFERED FOR SALE BY THE BUREAU WITHOUT GUARANTY OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER, WHETHER AS TO EXISTANCE, CORRECTNESS OF OWNERSHIP, SIZE, BOUNDARIES, LOCATION, STRUCTURES OR LACK OF STRUCTURES UPON THE LAND, LIENS, TITLE OR ANY MATTER OR THING WHATSOEVER. THE SALE OF THESE PROPERTIES MAY AT THE OPTION OF THE BUREAU BE STAYED IF THE OWNER THEREOF OR ANY LIEN CREDITIOR OF THE OWNER ON OR BEFORE THE DATE OF SALE, ENTERS INTO AN AGREEMENT WITH THE BUREAU TO PAY THE TAXES, CLAIMS AND COSTS IN INSTALLMENTS IN THE MANNER APPROVED BY SAID ACT AND THE AGREEMENT TO BE ENTERED INTO. INSTRUCTIONS: PROPERTIES MAY BE LOCATED BY COMPARING THE PARCEL NUMBER OF THE PROPERTY WITH THE MAPS OF THE LACKAWANNA COUNTY ASSESSORS OFFICE. A PROPERTY TITLE SEARCH AND A REVIEW OF LACKAWANNA COUNTY ASSESSMENT RECORDS IS RECOMMENDED TO ALL BIDDERS FOR ALL TAX DELINQUENT PROPERTIES IN LACKAWANNA COUNTY. NOTICE ON CITY OF SCRANTON TAX DELINQUENT PROPERTIES ALL CITY OF SCRANTON PROPERTIES LISTED HEREIN WILL BE OFFERED WITHOUT DELINQUENT CITY TAXES. BUYERS MUST CONTACT THE CITY TREASURERS OFFICE FOR DELINQUENT CITY TAX AMOUNTS. THESE TAXES ARE IN ADDITION TO THE SCRANTON SCHOOL DISTRICT AND LACKAWANNA COUNTY DELINQUENT TAXES. ALL COUNTY AND SCHOOL DISTRICT TAXES ARE INCLUDED IN THE MINIMUM BID PRICE. THE AMOUNT SHOWN IN THIS LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT IS AN ESTIMATED MINIMUM BID ONLY AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE. THE ACTUAL MINIMUM BID WILL BE ANNOUNCED AT THE UPSET TAX SALE. THE CITY OF SCRANTON COLLECTS DELINQUENT TAXES UNDER THE MUNICIPAL CLAIMS ACT. ALL DELINQUENT TAXES ARE FILED AS MUNICIPAL LIENS ON THE TAX MAP NUMBER. THE MINIMUM BID FOR CITY PROPERTIES WILL BE HANDLED IN THE SAME MANNER AS ALL OTHER OFFERED PROPERTIES. NOTICE TO PROSPECTIVE TAX SALE BIDDERS IN ACCORDANCE WITH ACT NO. 133 P.L. 1368, NO. 542, PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT ALL TAX SALES ARE NOW REQUIRED TO CERTIFY TO THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU AS FOLLOWS: 1. A SUCCESSFUL BIDDER SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE CERTIFICATION TO THE BUREAU THAT, WITHIN THE MUNICIPAL JURISDICTION, SUCH PERSON IS NOT DELINQUENT IN PAYING REAL ESTATE TAXES OWED TO TAXING BODIES WITHIN LACKAWANNA COUNTY AND 2. A SUCCESSFUL BIDDER SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE CERTIFICATION TO THE BUREAU THAT WITHIN THE MUNICIPAL JURISDICTION SUCH PERSON IS NOT DELINQUENT IN PAYING MUNICIPAL UTILITY BILLS OWED TO MUNICIPALITIES WITHIN LACKAWANNA COUNTY. IT IS STRONGLY URGED THAT PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS HAVE AN EXAMINATION MADE OF THE TITLE TO ANY PROPERTY IN WHICH THEY MAY BE INTERESTED. EVERY REASONABLE EFFORT HAS BEEN MADE TO KEEP THE PROCEEDINGS FREE FROM ERROR. HOWEVER, IN EVERY CASE, THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU IS SELLING THE TAXABLE INTEREST ONLY AND THE PROPERTY IS OFFERED FOR SALE BY THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU WITHOUT ANY GUARANTEE OR WARRANTY WHATEVER, EITHER AS TO STRUCTURES OR LACK OF STRUCTURES UPON THE LAND, LIENS, TITLE OR ANY OTHER MATTER WHATEVER. LACKAWANNA COUNTY TAX CLAIM BUREAU 135 JEFFERSON AVENUE • SCRANTON PA 18503 YOUR PROPERTY IS ABOUT TO BE SOLD WITHOUT YOUR CONSENT FOR DELINQUENT TAXES. YOUR PROPERTY MAY BE SOLD FOR A SMALL FRACTION OF ITS FAIR MARKET VALUE. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS AS TO WHAT YOU MUST DO IN ORDER TO SAVE YOUR PROPERTY, PLEASE CALL YOUR ATTORNEY, THE TAX CLAIM BUREAU AT THE FOLLOWING NUMBER (570) 963·6734, OR THE COUNTY LAWYER REFERRAL SERVICE AT (877)953-4250.
Ronald J. Koldjeski, Deputy Director TAX CLAIM BUREAU SCRANTON Pataki Most Rev Andrew JCL D D 310 Mifflin Avenue Scranton PA 18503
General
Great Employment Opportunities with the River Run Rehab and Nursing Center Team!!!! We are seeking a contracted
LICENSED BEAUTICIAN for our Long Term Care facility Jump Start Your Career Today! Email resumes to: sgrohowski@riverrunrnc.com Subject: River Run/ Licensed Beautician Or apply in person at:
River Run Rehab & Nursing Center
Attn: Sue Grohowski 615 Wyoming Ave Kingston, PA 18704
EXPERIENCED STYLIST
248,731.47
340 47775
1.1A Bldg & Land 320 Mifflin Ave
06410010001
158x305x155x318
5,497.91
MAYFIELD Nardella Giovanni 1401 Route 6 Mayfield PA 18433
900 10150
Norman Lee TR
Nardella Giovanni 1401 Route 6 Mayfield PA 18433
0641001000101
47,396.40
900 10151
150x318x328 Bldg& Land Rte 6
Nardella Giovanni 1401 Route 6 Mayfield PA 18433
06410010002
75x298x35x304
10,607.55
900 10082
State Hwy
0740601000102
30x86x30x83 Land Hill St L 2
1,149.64
60x150 Bldg & Land 824 Hill Street L 7
4,741.56
51x144x103x136 Bldg & Land 238 Main St
10,963.95
25x102x25x107 Bldg & Land 1234 S Main St
8,954.48
Bachak Michael 824 Hill Street Mayfield PA 18433
900 84189
Bachak Michael 824 Hill Street Mayfield
07406010002 900 12741
MOOSIC 18416020012 250 070742
OLD FORGE
With clientele. For new upscale salon in Plains. High commission paid. Great opportunity! Call 570-472-1371
SHENANDOAH - 17 APARTMENTS-2 BLDGS. ALERT “INVESTORS OR CONTRACTORS” 2 FOR 1 PRICE ASKING: $17,000.00 OR BEST OFFER. AUCTION: OCTOBER 17TH AT 2:00 P.M.
14574010003
McAndrew James & Loretta Revo Tr 238 Main Street Moosic PA 18507
General
237-239 East Coal Street 12 Apartments
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 A7
221-223-235 East Center Street 5 Apartments
OPEN HOUSE: Oct. 10th at 2:00 p.m. or by appointment- close end of month. Meet at 227-239 E. Coal St. for Open House and Auction
Robert L. McAloose, Inc. Realtor and Auctioneer (570)668-5755 robertmcaloose.com
Sapa Extrusions Mountain Top, PA
Sapa is the world leading supplier of value added aluminum profile solutions to the construction, transportation, domestic, office and engineering sectors. We offer exciting employment opportunities with significant upward potential for motivated individuals. Sapa is a multinational company that has over 23,000 employees in operations in 40 countries. Seeking self motivated individuals that work well in a team environment and are safety-focused. Requirements include H.S. Diploma or GED, good mechanical and technical aptitude, ability to use a tape measure, basic math and reading skills, good attendance and work history and the ability to frequently lift 50 lbs.
Currently seeking Material Handler, Press Crew Helpers, Shipper/Packers, Rackers Training positions begin at $13.18/hr. + shift diff. Pay increase after probationary period is complete. Yearly Increases Safe Work Environment- Health Benefits from Day 1- Greath Growth Potential - Competitive Wages - Drug free workplace Applications will be available from 8:00 a.m until 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Interested applicants must apply in person during the specified hours at:
Sapa Extrusions 330 Elmwood Avenue Mountain Top, PA 18707 (No phone calls, please)
Sapa Extrusion North America is an Equal Opportunity Employer where all phases of employment are based strictly upon the qualifications of the individuals as related to work requirements of the position. This policy is applied without regard to race, sex, religion, national origin, ancestry, age, disability, veteran status or marital status.
Galletti Fred & Rena %McAndrew P 1234 South Main St Old Forge PA 18518
18411010032 290 71968
2015 Area companies from all around our regionn will be on hand
TO MEET YOU!
Random Drawings! $100 GIVEAWAY Every Hour
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21 • 10 AM - 4 PM GENETTI MANOR 1505 N. MAIN AVE., DICKSON CITY, PA 18447
Sp ponsored Byy
Co-Sponsored By
&
DON’T MISS THE BEST JOB FAIR IN THE ENTIRE REGION!
Directions...
Genetti address to 1505 N. Main Ave, Dickson City, PA 18447 From Wilkes-Barre 81 North to Exit 190, Take a right at the end of the ramp onto Main Ave. Take Main Ave for 1.7 Miles, Entrance to Genetti Manor is on the left. From Scranton 81 North to Exit 190, Take a right at the end of the ramp onto Main Ave. Take Main Ave for 1.7 Miles, Entrance to Genetti Manor is on the left. From Clarks Summit 81 South to Exit 190, Make a right at the end of the ramp onto Main Ave. Take Main Ave for 1.7 Miles, Entrance to Genetti Manor is on the left.
FREE ADMISSION • FREE ADMISSION
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [A08] | 10/08/15
A8 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
General The City of Nanticoke is seeking bids for
Restaurants/Clubs
Office/Clerical
SNOW PLOWING, SALTING, & REMOVAL SERVICES
General
General
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS AVAILABLE
ROOFERS & LABORERS
Great Employment Opportunities with the River Run Rehab and Nursing Center Team!!!!
Evening & Weekend Interviews available by Appointment Some shingle and/or rubber experience a plus. Willing to train the right person. Apply in person or phone: Roof Pro, Inc 58-62 West 8th St, Wyoming, PA 570-693-4544 roofproinc1@aol.com Serious inquiries only
RN/LPN
Full Time – Evening Shift Part Time – Day, Evening and Night Shifts PRN – Day, Evening and Night Shifts
General
LICENSED COSMOTOLOGIST
CNA
Full Time – Evening Shift Part Time – Day and Night Shift PRN – Day, Evening, and Night
Tosi's Hair Replacement Clinic Exeter Hair replacement experience preferred but not necessary. Will train. Salary + Commission. Benefits. hairbytosi.com Please call: 570-905-0353
RN's - $1000 Sign-On Bonus LPN's - $750 Sign-On Bonus CNA's - $500 Sign-On Bonus
CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
Must have current Lic/Cert plus LTC exp Email resumes to: platinumhrm_mail@ luceosolutions.com Subject: River Run/ Position Title
for the 2015-2016 winter season. Services will be procured on an as needed basis by the City to supplement existing personnel and/or equipment. Bidders are required to be flexible and available on nights and weekends. Bid(s) by mail or hand delivered will be accepted until 3:00PM EST, Wednesday, October 19, 2015. City of Nanticoke, Attn: City Manager, 15 East Ridge Street, Nanticoke, PA 18634 Please submit the following information: Minimum requirements to be considered include: ¾ ton, 4x4, 8' plow Year, make, and model of truck including weight classification. Manufacturer, model, size of plow Manufacturer, model, size spreader if applicable. Hourly Rate $___ Year, make, and model of front loader. Hourly Rate $ ___ Certificate of Insurance: Minimum $1Million per occurrence, $2 Million aggregate Selected contractors must also add the City of Nanticoke as an additional insured Bid opening will take place on Oct. 19, 2015 at 3:30PM in Council Chambers.
Healthcare A local non-profit dental clinic is looking for an enthusiastic, organized and compassionate
Dental Assistant
at over 100 area locations every time you show your
EFDA preferable for our busy practice. This opportunity is for an experienced professional who wants to take lead in providing great customer service, focuses on being a team player and understands how to efficiently run a patient-focused health-centered clinic. Must be X-Ray certified. EMR experience helpful.
PRESS PASS
Please email resume and cover letter to: vimwb@hotmail.com
Or apply in person at:
River Run Rehab & Nursing Center 615 Wyoming Ave Kingston, PA 18704
Save 20%
Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
570-821-2108
In-Home Care Positions Available
Companionship and Personal Care Flexible Schedule, Incentives, Benefit Packages, Training available ComfortKeepers.com 888-450-0890 224 Wilkes-Barre Twp Blvd Wilkes-Barre, PA
General
HOME HEALTH AIDE
Healthcare
General
Part Time morning / evening. Dallas Area 570-675-0065.
Get Better Results Pet Grooming Salon Part-Time; Possibly Full-Time
Top grooming salon in region is looking for person to bathe dogs/cats – some previous pet grooming background would be a significant plus – however, is not necessary. Must assist in brushing, drying dogs/cats, clean up of salon, etc. Hourly pay rate depends on experience & skill level. Significant opportunity for the right candidate! Applicant must love pets, since loving & grooming pets is our ONLY business! Self-starter, high energy, personable, & interacting well with others are musts! Please do not apply if you are not people & pet friendly! Apply in person at: 1255 Wyoming Avenue Forty Fort Tues. - Fri., 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. No Phone Calls!
When you place your ad with a photo. Call today for pricing!
570-821-2020
General
IMMEDIATE OPENING AVAILABLE!
CARPENTER'S HELPER / LABORER Tool belt and power saw required. Reliable transportation. Call now: 570-819-0681
Professional
CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Full Time
Due to a retirement and recent growth, The Citizens' Voice has an opening for a full time Customer Service Representative in the Circulation Department. The right candidate will have excellent customer service and communication skills and be able to handle interaction with customers via telephone, email and our office. Use of Microsoft Word and Excel programs as well as general computer knowledge is a must. This position includes a competitive hourly wage plus performance based commission as well as Health Care, 401K, Vacation and Paid Holidays Drug-Free Workplace E.O.E. Interested candidates should send their resume to:
DIETARY AIDES Full Time & Part Time
APPLY ONLINE: https://home.eease.adp.com/ recruit/?id=14025841 OR IN PERSON: THE MEADOWS MANOR 200 Lake St, Dallas, PA 18612 EOE
Professional
Legal Secretary
30-35 hours per week. Back Mountain Law Firm Email resume to cjbufalino3@epix.net
Full Time Coal City Tavern 75 Main Street Luzerne PA APPLY WITHIN
Earn Extra Cash The Citizens' Voice has A delivery route open in the following areas:
FORTY FORT
Welles, Slocum, River, Snowdon Potential $580/month
WYOMING
Owen, Maltby, Noyes, Hughes Potential $1,000/month
Full Time & Part Time
Applications will be available at the Edwardsville Borough Building, 470 Main St., Edwardsville, PA on October 13, 2015. Applications must be returned no later than 4:30 p.m., October 27, 2015, accompanied by a non-refundable testing fee of fifty dollars ($50.00). Check or money order can be made payable to the Borough of Edwardsville. Submit completed application along with additional documentation required for the position of police officer, which will be attached to the application, and the required testing fee to: Luke Sowick, Secretary Civil Service Commission Borough of Edwardsville 470 Main Street Edwardsville, PA 18704 The Borough of Edwardsville is an Equal Opportunity Employer
EXPERIENCED LINE COOKS
For The Latest Job Postings!
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
POLICE OFFICER
Restaurant/Clubs
General
Monument, Butler, Dorrance 1st - 10 th St., Sharp, Susquehanna Potential $840/month
Healthcare
The Borough of Edwardsville is accepting applications for a Civil Service Examination for the position of
circulation@citizensvoice.com or apply in person at: The Citizens' Voice 75 North Washington Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18201
Check Out The Citizens' Voice's Classified Section
Pick It Up On Newsstands or call 570-821-2010 or circulation@citizensvoice.com For Our Great Home Delivery Packages!
EXPERIENCED COOKS
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION BOROUGH OF EDWARDSVILLE NOTICE OF EXAMINATION FOR POLICE OFFICERS
SWOYERSVILLE HUGHESTOWN
Center, Rock, Parsonage Potential $520 / month
PITTSTON
The Citizens' Voice is on Facebook! “Like” our page to be the first to find out about the latest breaking news and sports headlines, weather alerts and traffic updates. www.facebook.com/citizensvoice Restaurants
COOKS & DISHWASHERS NEEDED Apply in Person Austie's Restaurants 2333 San Souci Parkway Wilkes Barre, PA 18706
Now Hiring
Part-Full Time Excellent pay rate Fast Growing Restaurant in Area APPLY IN PERSON JJ BANKO'S SEAFOOD 39 ALLEN ST., W. NANTICOKE 570-735-5550 Ask for Lynn Sales START MAKING MONEY TODAY!
Newspaper Kiosk Sales Reps Wanted RMS has a fun and rewarding opportunity to join a growing team of enthusiastic, money motivated, entrepreneurial-minded agents enjoying a change of scenery each week working a wide variety of prescheduled in-store grocery & retail sales promotions & local events on behalf of The Citizens' Voice • Immediate Interviews • Full Time: Average $800-$1,200+ weekly • Part-Time: Average $400-$800+ weekly • Weekly Bonuses & Sales Contests • Advancement Opportunities • Paid Weekly Flexible Hours No startup costs No Telemarketing No door to door selling Qualifications: • Minimum 1 Year Sales, Marketing or Management • Professional Appearance & Positive Attitude • Honest, Hardworking and Reliable • Strong Communication Skills • Willing to work some weekends • Driver's License & Reliable Vehicle Required • Basic Background Check CALL NOW:
888-502-5521
(leave message on ext. 1) Learn more and apply online: realmediasolutions.com Serious inquiries only, please Please mention where you saw the ad Find us on Facebook: facebook.com/RMS.Promos General
Restaurants
PART TIME HELP WANTED
Friend, Tompkins, Johnson Potential $620/month
PITTSTON
Market, Vine, Pine Potential $540/month Early Morning Hours. 7 Days per Week Reliable transportation & valid vehicle insurance required If interested contact Marie @ 570-266-9025 or email at: mbidwell@citizensvoice.com
Get The Latest News Updates!
www.thecitizensvoice.com
Fast paced sub and sandwich shop. 20 – 30 hours per week. Apply in person: Dagwoods Deli 418 Market St, Kingston Restaurants/Clubs CHECKERBOARD INN is hiring!!
DINNER CHEF / LINE COOK (Full Time)
& DISHWASHER Apply within: 385 Carverton Rd, Shavertown Any time after 2pm, Wed - Sun
Earn Extra Cash The Citizens' Voice has A delivery route open in the following area:
SOUTH WILKES-BARRE
Potential $640/month Some streets include: Hanover St., Barney St., Wood St., ElizabethSt., S. River St., Carey Ave., Academy St. & Riverside D plus more Early Morning Hours. 7 Days per Week Reliable transportation & valid vehicle insurance required If interested contact Shannon@ 570-760-4753 or email at: slipinski@citizensvoice.com
Why Sign Up For
EZ-Pay?
Saves Time Saves Money Saves Stamps It's Convenient The Citizens' Voice The Sunday Citizens' Voice Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
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General
JOB OPPORTUNITY ARE YOU CREATIVE AND LOOKING FOR AN EXCITING CAREER CHANGE?
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• SUBSCRIBER BONUS: Subscribers can place 2 FREE ads each week!
If you are goal oriented and self motivated, then we are the one for you! Shamrock Communications is looking to add to it’s team of Sales Professionals. Work with local businesses to show how Rock 107, ESPN Radio & Fuzz 92.1 can be an important part of their marketing plan. Ideal candidate must be able to work in a fast paced environment, have B2B sales experience and be results-driven.
• Deadline: Submit your FREE ad by Friday at 5:00 p.m. for the following Tuesday’s edition.
We offer a competitive salary package that includes health care, 401K and paid vacation.
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If you are ready for this exciting opportunity, contact Steve Borneman at sborneman@ShamrockNEPA.com. DRUG FREE WORKPLACE
Email your FREE ad with all the information below by 5:00 p.m. Friday to:
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The Citizens’ Voice 75 North Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711 Deadline: Submit your FREE ad by Friday at 5:00 p.m. for the following Tuesday’s edition. Subscriber: yes __ no __
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SUBSCRIBE TODAY! CALL 570-821-2010
Earn Extra Cash The Citizens' Voice has delivery routes open in the following areas:
LARKSVILLE
Potential $680/month
COURTDALE/PRINGLE Potential $600/month
KINGSTON/EDWARDSVILLE Potential $600/month
LUZERNE
Potential $900/month Reliable transportation, valid drivers license & current vehicle insurance required. 7 days a week required. Work early morning hours, self motivated & hard-working. Call Terry at 570-760-4752 or email: tborger@citizensvoice.com
The Times-Tribune has an opening for a part time Customer Service Associate in our Circulation Call Center. Duties will include, but are not limited to; handling inbound customer calls, making outbound sales calls, updating current files, assisting in daily dispatching and processing daily updates. The candidate must also have a strong desire to provide exceptional customer service, be able to work in a fast paced environment, be a team player and must be well organized. Previous outbound sales experience a plus, but not required. Weekends Required/Flexible Schedule Weekends Required/Flexible Schedule - Total hours per week 15. Competitive wage and salary with opportunities for weekly bonuses. Interested applicants should send cover letter and resume to: The Times-Tribune Attention: Amanda Lutz 149 Penn Avenue, Scranton PA 18503 Email: alutz@timesshamrock.com EOE • DRUG FREE • WORKPLACE ONLY APPLICANTS CONSIDERED WILL BE CONTACTED
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [A09] | 10/08/15
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
SHAVERTOWN
General
ATTENTION BUYERS & SELLERS!
BUY AND SELL YOUR HOME WITH JERRY BUSCH JR.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 A9
DALLAS
DALLAS
11 Dorchester Dr. 3 BR, 1 ½ story well built home w/inground pool. Motivated seller. $249,000. MLS #15-2907. Richard Long 570-406-2438
8 Doe Drive Upscale living in ''like new'' 5000 sq.ft. home; family & entertainment friendly w/outstanding LL & commercially equipped bar, French door access to exterior, & storage. Call Pat at 570-885-4748
Your Neighborhood Realtor! Call 570-709-7798
The Citizens' Voice Field Representative (Recovery Driver) Part-Time 10 hours per week. $10 per hour plus mileage. Flexible work schedule. Must be able to work weekends & holidays. Customer relations practice required. Reliable transportation, valid drivers license & current vehicle insurance required. Knowledge of the Wyoming Valley is a plus. Applications available at The Citizens' Voice Office 75 N. Washinton St., Wilkes-Barre Call Terry at 570-760-4752 or email: tborger@citizensvoice.com
4 Marilyn Drive Well maintained 2,300 sq ft home with 4 bedrooms, 1.75 baths, attached 2 car garage on 1.09 acre in the Lake-Lehman school district. Finished basement with laundry room. Hardwood floors and carpeting. New roof (8/2012), Guardian 17 kW automatic backup generator, large wrap-around deck. Located on quiet cul-de-sac with wooded surroundings. Adjoining 1 acre wooded lot is also available for purchase. Asking $220,000 Call 570-357-8126
Pat Busch Can Make Buying or Selling Your Next Home "STRESS FREE!" Pat's over 32 years of experience will go to work for you! Call Pat At: 570-885-4165.
25 Years Experience in Real Estate
(570) 288-2514
(570) 288-2514
AVOCA
BUYING? SELLING?
(570) 696-3801
DALLAS
SWOYERSVILLE DALLAS
Trades/Construction
AVOCA BOROUGH FULL TIME PUBLIC WORKS Now accepting applications for full time public works position. Drivers license and prior experience with snow plowing a must. Heavy equipment operation preferred, not necessary. Regular weekly hours are Mon- Fri, 8am until 4:30 pm. You may pick up an application at the Municipal Building, 752 Main Street, Mon- Fri from 9am 2:30pm
EXETER
8 Valley St. Good 2 story with 3 bedrooms, modern bath. Large kitchen, 2 zone gas heat. Ductless AC. Walk up floored attic. Nice yard with shed. $62,500. 570-654-5443
Miss A Sunday,
MISS A LOT Investigations State Politics Local News Opinion Savings Obituaries Entertainment Puzzles Comics Special Occasions Find all of this and so much more only in
GO TO THE TOP... CALL JANE KOPP
245 Slocum Street OPEN HOUSE! SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 th Noon - 5PM Meticulously maintained single family home with large living room, TV room, Florida room. Kitchen opens into dining area & has solid cherry cabinets, granite counter, travertine backsplash. 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ baths with Corian vanity & shower surround. Home features decorative ceilings throughout. New exterior doors, windows and roof. Basement ready for finishing. Large lot. Professionally landscaped. 12X24 shed. A must see! $199,900. By Owner, 570-332-4919
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
BACK MOUNTAIN
WEST PITTSTON
WILKES-BARRE
Save 20%
PRESS PASS
Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
131 Hemlock Drive Situated on .42 acre corner lot in Oak Hill (Lehman S.D.), this home features hdwd flrs in the LR & all 3 BR. Lge modern eat in kit, 2 baths, LL FR & basement playroom or den. Lge patio is just outside sliding doors from the FR. There's abundant storage including 2 cedar lined closets. Recent improvements include: Gas HW heater (2014), insulated overhead garage door (2014), new roof (2013), new kit counters (2010). MLS #15-3098. $184,900. Call Mary Ellen at 570-690-0375 or Walter at 570-690-0464 to schedule a private showing.
570-821-2108
570-283-9100
“A Full-Time Professional Associate Broker Wants to Help You”. WILDFLOWER VILLAGE 3 bedroom townhouse for rent. 1.5 baths. Basement. Gas heat & central air. $109,900. 570-693-3989
BEAR CREEK
GET YOUR HOME SOLD!
MOUNTAIN TOP
Private Country Home on 1.8 acres. Large 3 bedroom, 1 bath. Large country kitchen and 2 decks. 2nd floor large space with loft. Can be made into rental. Can be zoned commercial. $170,000. 570-474-6502
NANTICOKE
62 and 63 Honey Pot Street (Minden Court)
Call ME Today For Your FREE Market Analysis.
EXCEPTIONAL BUY!!! 62 Residence:
Carol A. Shedlock YOUR REALTOR FOR LIFE! Move in Ready, Large Bathroom, Newly Remodeled Eat-in Kitchen with Appliances, 3 Bedrooms, Hardwood Floors, Monitored Alarm System, 2 Car Garage on Large Lot 63 Residence: Great Fixer Upper, Possibilities are Endless, with Very Large Lot
Associate Broker Regional Sales Manager Office: 570-718-4959 Cell: 570-407-2314
575 Pierce St., Suite 101 Kingston
ASHLEY
575 Laurel Run Road Exceptional ranch home. Main level w/3 BRs 2 full Baths, modern kit. W/all appliances, DR w/sliders to 3 season rm, walk up attic & 2 car garage. LL has 27x27 FR w/wet bar, ½ BA, den & tons of storage. 3 enclosed patios/sunrms, lg patio w/retractable awning. Replacement windows, quality B-dry system, radon system, central A/C electric BB & propane heat. 1.15 acre lvl lot w/woods beyond; community playground, close to golf course, Turnpike, Interstates. MLS#15-3158 $267,900. Call Mary Ellen at 570-690-0375 or Walter at 570-690-0464 to schedule a private showing.
570-283-9100 CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
Buying or Selling A Car? Priced to Sell by Owners $102,000.00 Call Bard/Ed 570-735-5168 570-574-2026
NANTICOKE
Double block for sale. 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms. Kitchen, dining room and living room each side. Off Street parking. Call for details. 570-735-0448.
DUPLEX 256 Ridge St Nice up & down duplex w/separate porch/decks. 2 car detached garage. MLS #15-1421. $55,900. Dana Distasio 570-715-9333
NANTICOKE 570-474-9801
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ASHLEY
LIMITED TIME AT LOW PRICE!!! $99,999 Outstanding Condition! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Nice lot. Move in before the holidays. 570-735-1259
John J. Vacendak, Broker
“Your Neighborhood Professional”
PITTSTON
143 Union St. A country atmosphere in the city. Well cared for 10 year old home 3 bedroom, 2 ½ bath, Great room, dining room, living room, Large basement 2nd floor laundry, 2 car garage, gas hot air & central air, large yard. $195,000. 570-760-3622
Call Today! CAPITOL REAL ESTATE Very well kept 3 BDR home on a fenced corner lot. Nice front porch,deck. 2 car garage that has been converted to a work shop but easily reconverted. Gas heat. Updated electric. All appliances included. Walk up, floored attic. Worth seeing. $49,900 MLS#15-2719 Call Dale Williams 570-256-3343
JANE KOPP REAL ESTATE 570-288-7481
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Distressed property. Fire damaged single family home. Selling as is. Owner will pay closing costs. Lot size 40'x123'. We are anxious to sell quickly. Price is $5 or best offer. 800-537-5406
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Quiet street, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, new oil furnace, 8-replacement windows, off street parking, garage, currently a duplex, easily converted to a single. $55,000 570-908-9196
The Sunday Citizens' Voice
EXETER
277 Gedding St. Extra large 4 BR updated bi-level W/ great room sizes on almost 1/2 acre lot. Like new condition, with 2 gas FP's cozy den w/cherry wood flooring, modern kit w/granite counters and backsplash, w/stainless steel appliances & tile flr., huge family room in lower level w/wet bar, seating for 8, 4 ductless AC units, covered patio, 2 1/2 car garage. Must see home! MLS#154517 $234,500. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
Phone: Nanticoke • 570-735-1810 Appraisals: Wilkes-Barre • 570-823-4290
www.capitol-realestate.com
Call John TODAY for your FREE MARKET ANALYSIS!
390 Midway Lane $224,900 Beautiful home w/expansive newer addition featuring great room w/doublesided FP, lge DR w/parquet flooring, master bath, large walk-up attic w/ plenty of storage & enclosed Florida room. Secluded location on over one landscaped acre in the Dallas school district w/circular driveway. MLS #15-4023. Call or email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
Charming ranch, private setting. Located on 2.7 acres. 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, formal dining room, living room, large kitchen with stainless steel appliances. Private well and sewer on site. 2 car garage. Asking $208,00. 570-690-5872
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WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [A10] | 10/08/15
A10 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
DALLAS
DURYEA
FORTY FORT
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Beautiful 3BR 4B home, excellent condition. Many upgrades including Yorktowne Brookhaven cabinets, quartz countertops, high efficiency HVAC system, gas FP, 2 car over sized, heated garage. Close to shopping, industrial park, major highways & schools. Very low heating costs. MLS#15-3313 $299,000. Pat Silvi 570-283-9100 x21
Quality upgrades in this 4 BR include custom cherry kit w/stainless steel appliances, island & tile flr, LR w/gas FP, ductless air, Hdwd flrs, finished attic & partially finished basement, 3 baths, fenced yard, deck & 2 car garage. Many special touches throughout. $187,000. MLS #15-4090
Beautiful 4 BR, 5 bath home in Liberty Hills. This home has it all. Central Air, 2 car garage, Mud room, Wine cooler, Cortez kitchen counters, Large L shaped inground pool, Pool house w/ toilet, Fenced yard, Porch, Deck, Patio, Fire Pit, BBQ area & so much more. This is a must see property. MLS# 153405. $274,999.
Great location in the center of Dallas, close to all conveniences. Well maintained home w/2 decks, large bsmtgarage , shed, & large 21x36 pole barn w/ two Approx. 9'X12' overhead doors. zoned R-2. MLS#15-4334 $144,900. Call Charlie, 570-690-2168
HUGHESTOWN
KINGSTON
271 Parsonage St. $56,900 Sweet 2 BR home w/ many updates including new roof, electric, hot water heater & plumbing. 1st floor has nice hardwood floors. Move in ready. Detached oversized block garage & OSP. MLS #15-3162 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
56 Second Ave. Great neighborhood of nicely maintained houses. 3 BR, 1 bath. Aluminum siding. 3 season porch. 12X20 covered patio, fenced yard, shed. MLS #153933. $79,900.
Call John Polifka 570-704-6846 Call Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
DALLAS TOWNSHIP
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
Five Mountains Realty 570-542-2141
HANOVER TWP NEW LISTING
570-283-9100
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HUNLOCK CREEK
Call 570-822-5126 Ask for Bob Kopec
KINGSTON
annmarie@custom-computers.com
EXETER 265 42ND ST E Spacious 3 BR split level, set on large lot. Nicely sized rooms with HW floors throughout, eat in kit. W/ large FR set up for entertaining, One Attached 2 car garage & one detached 2 car garage. MLS#15-4068 $189,900. David Rubbico Jr (570) 885-2693 David Rubbico (570) 881-7877
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600
HANOVER TOWNSHIP 79-81 Simon Block Ave Great opportunity for Mr. Fix it. Double Block; each side 6 rooms (3BR) aluminum sided, gas heat, double lot. MLS#15-4302 $60,000.
GO TO THE TOP.... CALL JANE KOPP
29 Penn Ave Remodeled 2 BR ranch, Modern eat in kit w/granite countertops, tile backsplash & tile flrs. LR, DR, remodeled bath w/huge tile shower, lge master BR, full unfinished basement w/3/4 bath, gas heat, OSP. $126,500. MLS #15-3924, for additional information and photos go to www.atlasrealtyinc.com Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
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188 Ferguson Ave. Great location & price; Cape Cod home features many amenities inside & out. Great yard, mostly level. Large cover porch in rear & very private. Master BR & bath on the 1st flr, 2 BR on the 2nd flr. Additional features, semi-modern kit DR LR newer replacement windows & vinyl siding. Gas heat, 1 car detached garage. MLS#15-4145 $120,000. Call Theresa Vacendak, CRS, GRI Cell: 570-650-5872
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE (570) 822-1133
DURYEA
FORTY FORT
18 Allenberry Dr. Priced to Sell at $111,700 Beautiful Townhomes at Hanover 3 level end unit, 2 BR, 2 baths, office/loft, gas, central air, laminate flooring. Nest thermostat, rec rm, garage & much more! Very low $22 per month maintenance fee. Excellent condition! Must see! Move right in! MLS #15-1566. Call Donna Fromel 570-406-0731
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Well built & maintained brick ranch w/FR & FP. On 10 acres of cleared & wooded land. $199,000. MLS #15-3069. Call Charlie, 570-690-2168
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
KINGSTON
65 John St. So Nice To Come Home To! This spacious home features a good size LR, DR, modern eat-in kit, laundry room, 1.5 baths, deck for the grill, rocking porch, garage & comfortable gas heat. Call or Text Today To See This Well Kept Home! MLS #15-4030. $94,900.
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3142 Main St. South $49,900 Spacious 4 BR, 1 ½ bath home w/very lge. Kit., hdwd flrs throughout almost entire home. 1st flr laundry & newer furnace. Lge. Front porch w/awning & pretty backyard. Parking for 3 cars in front of home. Close to LCCC w/easy access to hwys. Buyer's 1 yr Home Warranty included. Make an appointment to see it today! MLS #15-3562
1182 Main St. Modern 2-story w/ 3 BR, 2 modern full baths, modern eat-in kitchen w/ pantry, large addition family room, 1st floor laundry room, gas heat, large double lot, Shed, OSP. MLS 15-1846. $129,900. Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
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73 Poplar St. Charming, spacious,bright 2 story w/ 3 BR, 2 BA, in nice quiet neighborhood Open concept FLR plan w/ wood style laminate flrs & tile on 1st level & new carpeting & remodeled full bath on 2nd level, lg kitchen w/separate eating area & stainless steel appliances; lg BR's, Enclosed 3 season front porch & roof covered patio in backyard. Gas heat, central A/C & fenced yard. Make appt. to see this well maintained home. MLS#15-3915 $88,500. Call Nancy Palumbo 570-714-9240 or Donna Fromel 570-406-0731
THEN CALL ME, Patty Lunski! My only job IS REAL ESTATE! When you have decided to buy or sell real estate -Call Patty Lunski - let's work together to get the job done! Patty Lunski, REALTOR Antonik & Associates, Inc. 570-735-7494 x304 Office 570-814-6671 Cell
570-288-9371 58 Friend St. $65,900 Neat and clean, newly carpeted and painted 2 story. LL w/family room, BDR & full modern bath. Electric fireplace, central AC. MLS#15-4229. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
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109 Fort St. Meticulously maintained 3 BR w/ modern kitchen & family room. Vinyl siding, deck & garage. Wonderful open front porch. Seller paid $144,200, but sacrificing for $125,000. Extras! MLS# 15-1817. Call 570-822-5126 Ask for Bob Kopec
KINGSTON
33 Steele St. $79,900 Nice 3 BR, 1 bath home. Updated kit, update bathroom. 1st fl laundry. Lge fenced in yard. Gas heat. New HW heater. Low taxes. MLS #15-4002. Call Keri (570)885-5082
(570) 288-2514
KINGSTON
58 Lincoln St. Attractive 22 yr old Ranch w/open layout & HW flrs. Handicap accessible, oversized 2 stall carport, 2 bathrooms. $325/yr lake rights to Worden Place Beach. MLS#15-2919 $129,900. Call Steve Shemo @ 570-793-9449
JENKINS TWP
FORTY FORT
DURYEA
Call 570-822-5126 Bob Kopec
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
570-696-3801
28 Virginia Terrace Charming 3-Story Colonial, hugely deceiving w/expanded space, HW floored LR w/built-ins & FP modern kit w/cooking island laundry closet, 4 spacious BR's & 2nd flr office, Master Suite w/walk-in closet, large 3rd flr. BR w/open sitting area, inground pool & patio w/built-in gas grill. MLS#15-404 $189,900. Call Steve Shemo @ 570-793-9449
HUNLOCK CREEK
Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
Call Donna Fromel 570-406-0731
102 Hallstead St. Well maintained split level on a corner lot. 3 car garage,LL LR, bonus room that is plumbed for a hot tub, Nice outdoor entertainment area, Large rooms. This is a must see. Not in the flood zone. MLS#15-3207 $205,000. Call Shirley 570-237-1430
Wonderful curb appeal and premier neighborhood. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath house has been gutted and insulated. Modern kitchen. Fireplace. Formal DR. Central A/C. Vinyl siding. Gas heat. 2 car garage with multiple use “Man Cave”attached. MLS#15-5031 $175,000
HARVEYS LAKE
570-696-3801
O: (570) 288-9371 D: (570) 714-9230 Email: Judyrice@epix.net
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225 Pauline Street, Nothing in this price range matches the luxury you will find inside this home! Taking cues from HGTV kitchen renovations. We've added rich granite & stainless steel appliances. The bathroom remodel is the retreat you will want to come home to. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, large backyard, mountain views, upstairs bonus room, and country feel. 5 minutes from West Pittston. $129,900. 201-705-7930
(570) 718-4959
For more than 25 years Judy Rice, Associate Broker GRI, ABR, CRS
104 Lincoln St Move in ready, 3 BR, 1 ½ modern baths, modern eat in kit w/SS appliances, 1st flr floor laundry, hdwd flrs & and open stairway w/beautiful woodwork, pull down attic , gas heat, sun porch, vinyl fenced in yard, one car garage, OSP. $134,900, MLS #15-4088 for additional information & photos go to www.atlasrealtyinc.com, www.atlasrealtyinc.com Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
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632 Westmoreland Avenue 981 Swamp Rd. Beautiful 5BR log home on a private 5.71 acre estate. MLS#15-3936 $349,000. Call Charlie or Richard today for details. 570-406-2438
HARDING
17 Circle Drive Live rent free. Rent one side & live in the other. Beautiful “Townhouse” type, side by side double, set on large lot in quiet area of nice development. Each side w/3BR 1 ½ modern baths & kitchens. MLS#13-3799 $165,000. Contact John Piszak for details 570-313-8586 JOSEPH P. GILROY REAL ESTATE 570-288-1444
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JANE KOPP REAL ESTATE 570-288-7481
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80 Miner St. $59,900 Nice size 2 story home w/3 BR, fenced in yard, detached garage w/rear alley access. Back up wood stove in basement. MLS #15-3498. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
37 N. Landon Ave. Wonderful neighborhood of well kept houses. 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ baths. First floor laundry. Central air. Rear porch. Great rear yard. Gas heat. Aluminum siding. Move in condition. Extras! MLS #15-2111. $95,000. Call 570-822-5126
KINGSTON AREA
Here's The STARTER Home For You ! This home features spacious room sizes, 1.5 baths, replacement windows, walk up attic for storage,fenced yard, great porch, comfortable gas heat, all located on a very nice quiet street. See it For Yourself ! MLS#15-1198. $49,900 Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
www.atlasrealtyinc.com Ask for Bob Kopec www.atlasrealtyinc.com
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
HUGHESTOWN
CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
(570) 288-2514
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KINGSTON
(570) 718-4959
FORTY FORT 195 Evans St. $214,900 Gorgeous totally rebuilt home w/ gas FP, huge new addition, gas heat, central air, extra large kitchen w/ granite counters & back splash, laminate floors, new carpeting on 2nd floor, 2 full baths, 1 car garage, partially finished basement, & built-in central gas grill in stone surround. MLS #15-3078. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
NEW LISTING
147 Fort St. Two-story 7 rooms (4 BR) gas heat, AS IS CONDITION. MLS#15-4410 $59,900.
GO TO THE TOP.... CALL JANE KOPP
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JANE KOPP REAL ESTATE 570-288-7481
53 Lyndwood Ave. Split level. Modern kitchen. 3 BR, 1½ baths. FR. Central a/c. Gas HWBB heat. Vinyl siding. Replacement windows. Enclosed rear patio. Garage. Major exterior improvements. MLS 15-1302. JUST REDUCED TO $98,000 Call 570-822-5126 Ask for Bob Kopec
123 New St. Newer 3 BR, 2 full bath split-level home. Finished family room in LL, gas heat, central air, large deck, fenced-in yard, storage shed. $196,000, MLS#153113 Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
42 S. Atherton Ave. Nicely maintained 3 BR, 1 ½ bath w/remodeled kit. & bath. FR, vinyl siding. 12X16 rear deck. MLS#15-5175 $112,900. Call 570-822-5126
Ask for Bob Kopec
Just listed this 2 BR is just minutes from WVW Middle School & offers, a semi-modern kit & bath, partially finished basement with ¾ bath, sunroom leading to deck, fenced yard, drive & Great potential. $71,500. MLS #15-4089. Call Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
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WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [A11] | 10/08/15
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
KINGSTON NEW LISTING
LAFLIN
LARKSVILLE
LARKMOUNT MANOR
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 A11
PITTSTON
NANTICOKE REDUCED AGAIN! PITTSTON
237 Reynolds St. Lge 2 story will accommodate a growing family. This home features 4 BR & 3 baths, LR & DR w/hdwd under carpets, eat-in kit & den. Additional conveniences include central air & gas forced air heat & walk-up attic for storage. PRICED TO SELL! MLS #15-4053. $129,900. Call Mary Ellen at 570-690-0375 or Walter at 570-690-0464 to schedule a private showing.
570-283-9100
KINGSTON TOWNSHIP
36 Circle Drive Beautiful, move in condition 3 BR Ranch. 2 baths, tile & hdwd flrs. New roof & windows. New drive exterior , New Cabinets, Granite counter tops. Also new electrical service, hot water heater & well tank. Tastefully landscaped. In-Ground Pool w/new pump / filter & fenced yard. MLS #15-3630. $179,000. David Rubbico Jr (570) 885-2693 David Rubbico (570) 881-7877
29 Old Mill Rd. Desirable Oakwood Park location! This home can be 3-4 BR, whichever is preferred. Situated on professionally landscaped lot w/ modern kitchen/dinette, large FR, LR, DR, central air & 2½ bath-Natural decor, tile & hardwood floors. LL has jacuzzi tub, Lshape rec. room w/ french doors leads to rear patio. Perfect for entertaining year round. 2-car attached garage & privacy. Convenient location to most amenities. Come see!! MLS#15-2293. $223,500. Call Theresa Vacendak, CRS, GRI Cell: 570-650-5872
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE (570) 822-1133 LAFLIN
7 Cherrywood Dr. $324,900 Fantastic home in great neighborhood. Gorgeous kit w/high end features, granite counters, SS appliances & tile flrs. Kit is open to FR which has a gas FP, built in shelving, hdwd flrs, crown molding. Extra lge master BR suite w/huge walk-in closet, master bath w/jacuzzi tub, separate shower. MLS #15-3842. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600
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130 Market St. $74,900 Priced to sell! Imagine the freedom of living mortgage-free & building equity in this 2-unit property featuring 3 BR on each side. A very solid investment. MLS #15-3431 Carmen Winters 570-650-8673
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PITTSTON
570-474-9801
NANTICOKE
Spacious Dream Kitchen ! This home features a modern eat-in kit, 2 modern baths, 3 BR, laundry area, carefree vinyl siding, Pella windows, huge fenced in yard, detached 25' x 25' concrete block garage w/auto opener, shed, COOL central air & comfortable gas heat. Freshly painted interior. Call Or Text Us Today For All The Details ! MLS #15-3828. $82,900. Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
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PITTSTON
570-288-9371
LARKSVILLE
See this beautiful 4 BR home in the Alden section of Newport Twp. This home has replacement windows, HW floors, 1st flr laundry, walk up attic, & a pellet stove. This home also has a porch, deck, fenced in yard w/a pool & 1 car garage. MLS#15-4799 $129,900. Call John Polifka 570-704-6846
Five Mountains Realty 570-542-2141
NANTICOKE
179 Johnson St. Very nice 2 BR home w/updated modern kit., 1st flr laundry, large full 4 piece bath, includes double lot. Must see, move in ready! MLS#15-3890 $89,900. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
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PITTSTON
This 3 BR, 1 bath home has replacement windows, carport, private driveway, fenced yard & walk-up attic w/3 rms that can be turned into additional living space. MLS #15-3674. $69,900 Call John Polifka 570-704-6846 Convenient To Almost Everything ! This double block home is close to the shopping center, restaurants, bus stop and park. It has 2 nice eat-in kitchens, 2.5 baths, enclosed porch, good sized fenced in yard, private driveways, full concrete basement, walk up attic, economical gas heat. Very affordable Price. $53,900. Call Jerry Busch 570-709-7798
Five Mountains Realty 570-542-2141
NEW PRICE SWOYERSVILLE
PITTSTON
Sunday Oct 11th 1 - 3pm 34 Grand Ave. Enjoy seasonal or year round living in this 3 BR & bath ranch w/ modern eatin kitchen. Full basement. Deeded lake access to Lake Silkworth. MLS#152037. $82,500. Joseph Moore: (570) 288-1401
Charm & space galore in this recently updated home! Large eat-in kitchen w/new tile floor & island. Both baths remodeled. Private driveway + add. OSP. Home has extra lot - may be possible to build on. MLS#15-1933. JUST REDUCED TO $109,000. Call Pat Busch (570) 885-4165
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(570) 288-2514
OLD FORGE 35 Pine Ridge Drvie This unique contemporary offers an st open 1 fl plan w/cathedral ceilings, pellet stove, tile flrs, laundry/powder rm & FR. There are 3 BR & modern bath on 2nd level. Located on nicely landscaped lot w/fenced yard, covered patio & garage. Priced at $149,000. MLS #15-3379. Call Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
331 Drake St. $129,900 Brick front ranch. 3 BR, 2 baths. Vaulted ceiling in LR. Eat-in kitchen. 1st floor laundry. Plenty of storage. Patio. Extra lot included. MLS#15-3185. Call Keri 570-885-5082
PITTSTON
191 Vine St. $46,900 Well kept 3 BR home w/hdwd fls, replacement windows & newer furnace. Low, low taxes. Seller will install new roof prior to closing for qualifid buyers. MLS #15-3659. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
96-98 Carroll St. $109,900 This lge. & fully occupied double block boasts plenty of character w/gorgeous trim throughout & unique pocket doors! A spacious corner lot affords OSP options. One unit has been recently remodeled & each side offers 3 BRs & 1.5 baths. MLS #15-3461
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Carmen Winters 570-650-8673
PITTSTON
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LAFLIN
111 Laflin Road $114,900 Nice 3 BR, 1½ bath, Split Level home w/hardwood floors, 1-car garage & large yard w/covered patio in very convenient location near highways, airport, casino. Great curb appeal. NEW furnace. MLS # 14-666 Call Keri 570-885-5082
61 W. Columbus Ave. $94,900 Spacious 3 BR, 1 ½ bath home in great shape. Loads of living space, large Kit w/all appliances & W/D. A must see. MLS #15-3655. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
(570) 288-2514
KINGSTON TWP
LARKSVILLE
19 Elizabeth St. $39,900 Nicely kept ½ double, 3 BR, 1½ baths, beautiful oak staircase, newer gas boiler, newer windows. Own for less than rent! MLS #15-3378. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
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59 Pine St. $50,000 Starter home, very clean & neat. Priced to sell! Replacement windows, newer roof, modern bath & large kitchen with all appliances, enclosed rear porch. SELLER WILL PAY CLOSING COSTS. MLS#14-3655. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
PITTSTON
MINERS MILLS
With a new roof, windows, heat & AC this ultra modern 4 BR is move in ready. It offers new kit. W/granite tops, stainless steel appliances, tile flr & backsplash, 2.5 modern baths, HW Flrs, Master suite w ¾ bath, walk in closet & patio doors leading to rear deck, FR, laundry, office & more. MLS#15-3579 $224,000. Call Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
163 W. Noble St. 3-4 BR home w/ 2-car detached garage & additional OSP. New gas furnace, paved alley, & separate living area in rear of home could be great bonus area. 1 yr. Home Warranty provided to buyer. MLS#15-930. THIRD PRICE REDUCTION: NOW $36,900! Dana Distasio 570-715-9333
(570) 288-2514
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220 Greenwave Blvd., $239,900. This Wonderful home features 4 BR w/ 1 BR on the main floor & 3 more BR upstairs + 3 baths . Modern eat-in Kit, formal DR, FR w/FP, LR, laundry rm on 1st floor. Swim in your gorgeous 18x36 Inground Pool for entertaining. Finished basement w/office & recreation room. 4 zone Gas heat. 2 car garage w/oversize driveway for extra parking. MLS #15-4009. Call Nancy Palumbo 570-714-9240
58 E. Columbus Ave. $109,900 Large 4 BR home w/ nice room sizes, LL family room w/ walk-out to basement. 1½ baths, walk-up attic, new roof & furnace. Newly remodeled & move in ready. MLS #15-3396. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
225 Nesbitt St. Opportunity Is Knocking ! This home features a gorgeous light oak kitchen w/ island, dining area w/ French doors that lead to spacious deck, den w/ cozy gas FP, good size LR, gleaming hardwood floors, fenced in yard, carport, full concrete basement & comfortable gas heat. Don't Miss Out, Call Today ! MLS#15-1058. Just Reduced to $99,900 Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
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198 Middle RD. One of a kind, Split offers spacious living w/outdoor ''resort like'' atmosphere. Home features gas HHW & AC, mod. Eat in formal DR & LR great rm w/fireplace French doors to patio & inground pool. ''Very unique.” MLS#15-848 $220,000. Call Lynda @ 570-696-5418
Iconic stone bi-level in Larkmount Manor. 4 BR & 1¾ baths. Large family room on LL w/ gas FP. 2230 sq. ft. of living space. Semi-modern kitchen w/ tile floor connecting to DR. Large deck off back & shed in side yard. MLS#152457. $169,000. Call 570-406-2429 Email beseckera@gmail.com
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LARKSVILLE
LAFLIN
32 Church St. $79,900 This property is big enough for the whole family w/5 BRs & 1.5 baths! Hdwd flooring is present throughout most of the home. Also features recently updated utilities & replacement windows. MLS #15-3037. Carmen Winters 570-650-8673
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PITTSTON
98 John St. $84,900 4-5 BR home w/ 2 baths, carport, 10 rooms, ductless a/c, gas heat. MLS #15-2953. Call Tom 570-262-7716
PITTSTON
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NANTICOKE
BESECKER REALTY 570-675-3611
LARKSVILLE
152 Haverford Drive $119,900 Relax & enjoy life in easy townhome living. This well cared for 3 BR, 1 ½ bath property is located in desirable neighborhood. SS appliances. New carpet. Finished lower level. Plenty of closets & storage. Patio for Summer BBQs. Gas heat. Central air. Association maintains lawn care & snow removal. MLS#15-3576. Call Keri 570-885-5082
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578 Rear E Main St.
LARK MOUNT MANOR New Construction Central air, gas. Huge bi-level; 7 rooms. 28 ft. deep family room & garage. 2 ½ baths. Large lot. Walks & 2 decks. $258,000. Armory Realty, 570-824-1995
This 3 BR 1-1/2 bath home is conveniently located in downtown Nanticoke close to LCCC & shopping. Ceramic tile kit/DR combo, wall to wall carpeting on 2nd flr & LR. MLS#15-3747 $49,900.
10 Defoe St. $34,900 3 BR, 2 story home w/ 1½ baths, economical gas forced air heat. Price to allow you to upgrade, needs TLC. MLS #15-3380 Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
53 Nafus St. $99,500 Large 2-story w/ central air & gas heat 2-car garage & add'l OSP. Currently used as a duplex & could easily be converted back to a spacious single. MLS #15-61. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
99 E. Oak St. Beautifully maintained Brick front ranch, 3 BR, modern kit & bath, finished basement, central air, private yard, pavilion, shed, 1 car garage & carport. $179,900 MLS#15-4231 www.atlasrealtyinc.com Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
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www.atlasrealtyinc.com
Call Dawn 570-715-9320
570-474-9801
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [A12] | 10/08/15
A12 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
18:27 | STAHLLERSA
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
Just a lot better ...
HOMES!
Whether it’s a split-level, bi-level, ranch, cape, contemporary or traditional ... more home buyers and sellers use The Citizens’ Voice. When there’s no place like home, turn to your hometown newspaper, The Citizens’ Voice to help you in your search for the perfect home.
New listings every day! Call 821-2020 to advertise. Call 821-2010 to subscribe.
Your Special Occasion Here’s the help you need to plan your special event!
To Advertise call Susan at 570-821-2024 Banquet Hall
Catering
Event Planning
Photography
St. Maria Goretti Church THE LOOKOUT HOUSE Laflin Road, Laflin
An Elegant and Polished Atmosphere for All Your Special Events
570-655-8956
www.stmariagoretti-laflin.org Banquet Room
Friendly, personal service, reasonable package rates, seating up to 120 people, plenty of parking 1373 State Route 93, Drums
“CLUB 79” 79 Blackman Street Wilkes-Barre, PA Small Parties, $200 Fri. & Sat., 7 p.m. - 2 a.m. 570-793-9390 or 825-8381
570-788-5229
www.lookouthouserestaurant.com Disc Jockey
Banquet Room HOLY TRANSFIGURATION CHURCH HALL BOOKING NOW FOR: Graduations, Communions, Weddings, Birthdays and MORE! Catering Available OR bring your own food! Hanover Section of Nanticoke • Affordable Hall Rental • 570-256-7883 Candies/Favors
MICHAEL MOOTZ CANDIES
Music For Any Occasion Karaoke Completely Digital Rockin' Since '76 Competitive Prices Rich Nordheim 570-829-2744 Cell: 570-406-4100 Email: rockinrichdj@aol.com Disc Jockey
Custom Wedding Favors
Choose from a variety of chocolates, boxes and ribbons. Make your wedding extra sweet by customizing your own unique favor for your special day! 1246 Sans Souci Parkway Mon.- Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Closed Sunday Hanover Township, 570-823-8272 www.MichaelMootzCandies.com
FAIR HOUSING REGULATIONS
BUDD'S PIZZA CAFE & SPORTSHUB NOW OPEN
Kingston, PA 18704 3 blocks behind Kingston Corners 570-285-3555 or 570-735-1000 Any parties. Pizza with soda, $8.95 pp. (minimum 25 people). Music. DJ. Lights. 9 pool tables. Patio. Parking. 3 Bars. Full menu available. 30 TVs. Games. Easy access. Karaoke weekly. Singers Wanted
www.lyonsphoto.com 570-824-0906 Private Party Rentals We will plan your event from beginning to end! Also providing same-day coordination, candy displays & display showers. Have an event unique to you? Call Us & We Will Plan It For You! 570-760-3952 or 570-690-0864 creativeconcepts.withoutlimits @gmail.com
CLASSIFIEDS 570-821-2020
Jewelry
DUNAY JEWELERS
$9.95 Per Person (Minimum of 100 Guests)
Expert Watch & Jewelry Repairs
105 North Main Street across from Kings College Call for info & Private Parties
Need a DJ for your party on a Small Party Budget?
Special Occasion Dresses
Ga Bree's Boutique
115 Gateway Shopping Center Edwardsville, PA 570-718-4040
Weekend Vendor: Wear At Your Own Wrist- October 24th (During store hours) Introduction to Evidential Spirit Art Workshop w/ Joseph Shiel- October 24th @ 10:00- 3:30 pm
Oyster Weddings
"Nothing But The Best" * New Outdoor Poolside Cabana * Ceremonies * Photo Opportunities with White Silver Cloud Rolls Royce * Customized Stations & Elegant 5 Course Meal Packages
Portraits From Heaven w/ Joseph Shiel- October 24th @ 7-8:30 pm Seven Sacred Flames Reiki Workshop w/ Anthony Wojnar- October 25th @ 9:30 - 4:00 pm Natural Solutions w/ Essential OilsOctober 29th @ 7:00 pm Spirit Circle & Halloween Party- OctoOctober 30th @ 7:00 pm If you would like to attend any of the events or classes, please concontact Inner Peace at: 570-208-1511 Tuxedos
Genetti Weddings
TUXEDO JUNCTION
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MISS A LOT
BIG Party Experience!
Parrish Limousines
Proudly providing premium transportation for over 3 Generations!
HARPIST
Medium Gallery w/ Cheryl Rae EvansOctober 8th @ 7:00 pm
Miss A Sunday,
All Genre – Full Lighting 570-472-8230 Bob
Music for Banquets, Weddings, Christmas Parties & More! Sherri L. Trometter, 570-988-1972 Email: harpingalong@wildblue.net Website: harpingalong.homestead.com
Come Experience The Ultimate In Wedding Services
570-825-0000 (Mark)
www.DJSmallParty.com
Music
INNERPEACE Health, Healing, & Wellness
Sweet 16 Parties
Graduation Parties Guys 16th Birthday Bash Incudes: *Pizza & Soda *DJ, Sound & Lights *Setup/Cleanup
428 Hazle Avenue Wilkes-Barre, PA 570-822-5511 Limousine Service
GENETTI'S
Wilkes-Barre, PA www.genetti.com 570-820-8505
Natural Solutions w/ Essential OilsOctober 17th @ Medium Gallery w/ Cheryl Rae Evans- October 22nd @ 7:00 pm
Gemstones Diamonds-Watches-European Beads Grandfather Clocks – Gifts For All Occasions Buying Gold – Silver – Silver Coins - Old Paper Money – Diamonds Silverware Sets & any Unwanted or Broken Jewelry
The Times-Tribune, Citizens' Voice, Electric City & Diamond City Classifieds reserves the right to edit any copy that does not conform to Fair Housing Regulations. Catering
SENIOR PORTRAITS
Dates Available For The Finest In Showers, Rehearsal Dinners, Wedding Receptions & Holiday Parties
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56 West End Rd. Hanover Township 570-829-4999 Looking For A New Car? Check Out: The Citizens Voice Call 570-821-2020 to place a classified ad
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Who Does It? A Directory of Services Eco1Appliances.com
PRO CONSTRUCTION Fall Specials
ECO-FRIENDLY APPLIANCE TECH. 25 Years Experience repairing all major household appliances. Free in home estimate. All Work guaranteed. No service charge for visit. 570-706-6577
VITOs & GINOs WANTED:
Junk Cars & Trucks Highest Prices
PAID IN CA$H!!! CALL ANYTIME!
FREE Pickups! 288-8995 Call Classifieds 570-821-2020
Roofs, Renovations, Kitchen, Baths, Additions & Windows. Also Earth Works, Foundations, Masonry & Construction. Serving, Lackawanna, Luzerne & Monroe Counties. Licensed & Insured. Call now for Free Estimates. 570-823-3737.
REMODELING AT IT'S BEST! Kitchens, bathrooms, roofing, siding, electrical, plumbing 570-823-4663 or 570-466-9234
J & J AUTO DETAILING Hanover Twp. 570-820-7692 Wash Machine Wax & Rug Shampooing by "The THERMINATOR"!... Extracts 85-90% of the solution.
Complete Detailing Starting @ $60!
KEYSTONE BLACK-TOPPING, INC PAVING-SEALING-EXCAVATING NO JOB TOO SMALL! Since 1976 570-829-5403
Daycare In my Kingston home Licensed. 20+ years experience. References available. 570-283-0336
CAVUTO CHIMNEY SERVICE & GUTTER CLEANING Free Estimates & Insured 570-709-2479
CHIMNEY CLEANING SPECIAL
$39.95 Oil and Gas Flue Spring Hill Chimney 570-471-3742 1-800-943-1515 PA 022281
CHRIS MOLESKY Chimney Specialist - PA058322 New, Repair, Rebuild, Cleaning. Caps, Liners installed. 570-328-6257
EMLAW CONCRETE AND PAVING Sidewalks, driveways & more. We accept credit cards. 570-466-9929 Ron
FRANK HUNTZINGER No job too small. Free estimates. frankhuntzinger2@aol.com.Credit cards accepted.570-822-1182 PA106557 P.A. CONSTRUCTION Small Job Specialists. All types of construction. Roofing, Siding, Windows, Doors, Tile, Plumbing, Etc. 570-703-3510 or 570-335-8985
UBER DRIVER
$20 off 1st Ride. Download Uber.com, enter promo code a80vc.
! (144 "5,.3%&.%,%$ 20 "5,.3%&.%,%, -2 +)*'0-#/' FLOORING INSTALLATION PROFESSIONALS
15 years experience. Carpet, vinyl, tile, wood, laminate installation & repairs. If you walk on it, we know how to install it! All Work Guaranteed Fully Insured. 570-574-8953
GARAGE DOOR Sales, Service, Installation & Repair Fully Insured! PA065008. Call Joe: 570-735-8551 or 570-606-7489
CV GUTTER CLEANING Window cleaning, Pressure Washing Insured. 570-288-6794 EMERGENCY ROOF & GUTTER REPAIRS 40 years experience 570-417-1538
Classifieds Work! ALL MAINTENANCE Plumbing • Electrical • Painting All Home Repairs • Insured 570-814-9365
ALL PHASE SERVICES
AFFORDABLE ELECTRIC Master electrician anything residential no job too small. Licensed and insured 570-881-1623
R N I ELECTRIC LLC
Residential/Commercial. Generators. Licensed & Insured. PA 029575 Retired Veteran 570-814-8979 SLEBODA ELECTRIC Master Electrician PAHIC 008719 Service Changes. Generator Installations Licensed & Insured. 570-868-4469
PA-1 Pest Control
Mice, Bedbugs, Termites, Ants, and Much more. Licensed/Insured. Visa & MasterCard Accepted 570-500-2414
EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
PISANO FENCE & MFG. CO. 1399 Susquehanna Avenue, Exeter 40+ years in Business. Free Estimates. Fully insured. PVC, Chain Link, Custom Wood, Aluminum or Iron Ornamental Fencing. Also porch railing. PA#O77748 570-654-2257 or 570-654-2286
BRIAN ESTOCK Give me a call! I do it all! 570-362-8368 BOB'S RELIABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE. Decks, carpentry, basic carpentry, plumbing & electrical. Call for a FREE ESTIMATE – 570-709-1496
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, plumbing, dry wall, Plus all types of home repairs. 570-829-5318
EVANS HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Lending a hand since 1975. All types of repair & remodeling projects. PA002722. 570-824-6871
EYESORE?
We'll Haul It Away! Same Day Service Best Rates – Free Estimates 570-266-8771 PHILLIPS HAULING Will clean out and haul anything. One piece to entire estate. Free Estimates. Mark 570-740-2076 or 570-592-2904 RON'S AFFORDABLE LAWN CARE SERVICE Junk, leaf, yard clean-up. Lawn cutting, shrub trimming, tree cutting, weed wacking high weeds & brush. Pressure Washing. Above ground pool removal. Commercial & Residential. House and Estate Clean Outs. Licensed. Fully insured. 570-233-3461 VERY CHEAP JUNK REMOVAL Cheapest in the Wyoming Valley! Free estimates. 570-693-3932 We take TV's. We Recycle! verycheapjunkremoval.com
KAP ALUMINUM
Replacement Window Repairs, New Window Installation, Awnings, Patios, Carports, & Decks. 570-855-4636
BRIAN ESTOCK
LANDSCAPING & LAWNCARE MAINTENANCE. 570-362-8368 EJ'S HEADSTONE & LAWNCARE EXTRAORDINAIRE Fall Cleanup Specials Now Avail. Mulch Placement, Shrub & Hedge Trimming, Grass Cutting, Landscape and Patio Design. Headstone Care Packages for your Grave Site. Free Estimates. Contact Ed 570-362-0872.
W. Peters Enterprises
Landscape & Excavation Services, AND MORE! www.wpetersenterprises.com Contact Us at 570-735-6150
COVERT & SONS CONCRETE
A. A. A. ED's HAULING
Always cleaning attics, cellars; 1 piece or whole house. Also available 10 & 20 yard dumpsters. Call: 570-655-0695 570-287-8302 or 570-592-1813
AL'S HAULING
Yards, Basements, Garages. Same Day Service. Free Estimates. 570-388-6915 or 570-947-9633
Always Ready To Haul Anything, Junk Removal One Piece or Clean outs Free Estimates 570-266-2122
CASTAWAY HAULING Junk removal. Fast, free estimates 570-823-3788, 570-817-0395
FABIAN MASONRY All types masonry construction Small jobs welcomed! FREE Estimates. 570-262-9736
STEVE WARNER
MASONRY & CONCRETE Custom work; all types. Free estimates. PA #087944. 570-561-5245
Roofing, Siding and Carpentry 40 Years Experience Licensed & Insured. Reg. PA026102 Call Dan, 570-881-1131
HARDENS IMPROVEMENTS
570-288-6709 NEW ROOFS & REPAIRS Shingles Rubber Slate, Gutters & Chimney Repairs. Credit Cards Accepted. EMERGENCY SERVICES AVAILABLE FREE Estimates! Licensed & Insured PA#025188
STESNEY CONCRETE & MASONRY
Brick, Block, Stucco, Stone, Steps, Chimneys, Concrete, etc. Licensed & Insured. PA101061. 570-328-1830
MISTER V CONSTRUCTION Specializing in all types of roofing, siding, gutters, and chimney repairs. Licensed and Insured. Free estimates. 30 years experience. PA License # 020810 570-829-5133 or 570-855-0343
M. PARALIS PAINTING Interior & exterior, powerwashing Professional work at affordable rates. Free estimates 570-288-0733
SMITH & MILLER ROOFING, INC.
QUALITY SERVICE PAINTING & MORE Power Washing Ask about our Interior Painting Special Discounted Rate! Exterior Painting – Residential/ Commercial - Gutter Cleaning Free Estimates. Insured. PA#109254 570-332-0780 or 570-718-8911
Flat Roofs * Shingles Roof Repairs * Siding Free Estimates. Insured. PA005521 Credit Cards Accepted 570-655-6710
POOL CLOSINGS
Call Classifieds 570-821-2020
Above ground starting at $99. Inground starting at $150.Liner replacements, safety covers. Pool deck restorations with stamped concrete coating. 570-655-7689.
ALL TYPES OF PLUMBING
New Furnaces, Water Heaters, Bathrooms, Kitchens. Get Ready for Winter. Call Today. 570-592-0900. LCM120. JOE'S PLUMBING AND HEATING Gas & oil boiler installation & repair. Water heaters, faucets & repairs. 25 yrs experience. Reasonable. Master Licensed & Insured. 570-200-5425
SHEFLER CONSTRUCTION Concrete, Masonry, all types of brick & block work. Specializing in chimney & foundation repair. Discounts for Veterans & Senior Citizens. Call: 570-696-2589 or 570-239-2780 D PUGH CONCRETE All phases of concrete & masonry. Senior citizen discount. Free estimate. Licensed & insured. 570-288-1701 or 570-655-3505
CORNERSTONE CONSTRUCTION
OLD TIME MASONRY Voted #1 Masonry Contractor Brick, Block, Concrete, Decorative Stamped Concrete, Stone, Chimneys, Foundation Repair, Stucco, Retaining Walls, Patios, Pavers. Fully Insured PA 039701 Certified Retaining Wall Installer Workmanship Guaranteed Roy, 570-466-0879 www.oldtimemasonry.com
APEX TREE AND EARTH Serving Wyoming Valley, Back Mountain & Surrounding Areas Tree Removal, Lot Clearing, Pruning. Stump Grinding. Insured. Now Accepting All Major Credit Cards. apextreeandearth.com 570-550-4535
TOM'S TREE SERVICE
For all your building and remodeling needs. Insured PA#110216 – 570-406-0091
Tree stump & hedge removal. Lot clearing, Commercial snow removal. Fully insured & licensed. Serving Wyoming Valley for 30 years. We take credit cards. Call 570-283-3553 for a free estimate!
*J.R.V. Roofing*
WOODCHUCKERS TREE SERVICE Tree Removal, Trimming, Stump Grinding, Spring & Fall Cleanup, Lot Clearing. Call Today! 570-855-8585
570-824-6381 24 HOUR EMERGENCY CALLS FREE Estimates All Types Roof Repairs & New Roofs; Shingle, Slate Hot Built Up, Rubber, Gutters & Chimney Repairs. Year Round. Insured. PA025775 Absolutely Free Estimates E-STERN CO. 30 year architectural shingles. Do Rip off & over the top. Fully insured. PA014370 570-760-7725 or 570-341-7411
We Do It!
Looking For A Buyer, Seller, Employer or Employee? Citizens Voice Want Ads Will Help You. Call us at 570-821--2020
No job too Big! Get it Done! Ask about Color!
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B01] | 10/08/15
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
PLAINS PITTSTON
99½ Searle St. $64,500 Large family style w/good room sizes! 3BR, 1 bath, gas heat, fenced yard, 2 car garage. MLS #15-373. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
Call Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
WEST PITTSTON
PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH
21 Henry St. Charming 3 BR. Updates include bath,roof, replacement windows, updated electrical, refinished flrs, newly painted interior. Centrally located on a 200' deep two tier lot, it offers a view overlooking valley and casino. Move in ready and less than typical rent. MLS#15-4001 $82,500 Main Street right onto Henry, home is on right. SELLER OFFERING BUYER BONUS AT CLOSING.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 B1
166 Davenport St. Wow! Picture perfect ranch home in superb condition. 7 rms w/3 BR & 1 ¾ baths. Very well maintained. Lge lot offers paved parking for 3-4 cars. Central air, eat-in kit, new vanities, 1st flr laundry. Office in LL. Owner says SELL! Directions: Rte. 11 W. Main St. to Davenport St., proceed to home on right. MLS #15-2471. $134,500. Call Ted Poggi 570-283-9100 ext 25
SHICKSHINNY
Jesse James Would Like This Super Buy ! This home features an eat-in Kit., bath w/shower, carefree vinyl siding, comfortable gas heat, private deck & porch. All located on a nice street. Call Before Its To Late! MLS #15-2858. $24,900. Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
296 Main Road 4 BR bi-level. Lake Rights included. $164,000. Call John Thomas, 570-714-6124
517 Luzerne Ave. 2 first flr units that can be used for apts. or commercial. One side gutted & the other side is set up for an office space. there are 3 units on the 2nd floor. 1 two BR unit & 2 1 rm. BR's. Two BR unit occupied. Rear lot included in sale. Building completely remodeled. MLS#15-4381 $185,900. Ron Viglone 570-825-2468
(570) 288-2514
PLYMOUTH
570-287-1196
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
PITTSTON
MULTI-FAMILY
annmarie@custom-computers.com
PLAINS
26-28 LaGrange St. $119,000 Very well kept 2 family home. 1 tenant occupied, 1 ready for new owner w/great rm addition, FP, private patio. All separate utilities. MLS #15-3884. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
36 E. Stanton St. $59,000 Larger than it looks! This home has generous rm sizes w/some original woodwork, staircase, built-ins, hdwd flrs, lge. walk up attic, newer roof, carport & shed. MLS #15-3862. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
SWEET VALLEY
570-283-9100
PLYMOUTH
234 McGinnis St. Low taxes make this AFFORDABLE. Owner's updates make it ATTRACTIVE! Newly remodeled bath w/ 2 48” cherry vanities, walk in closet, DR, wood flrs, large yard-priced to sell @ $46,000 MLS#15-4226. Don't delay, Call Pat TODAY! 570-287-1196
Move-In-Condition & Affordable! This home has a very nice eat in kit. good size LR & DR, 3 BR, full tile bath, concrete basement, comfortable gas heat, fenced yard & garage w/auto opener. Call the listing agent about the first time home buyer programs available to purchase this nice house! MLS#152681 $51,900. Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
Great 3 BR, 1 ¾ bath ranch home on level One+ acre corner lot w/2 car attached garage. $169,900 MLS #15-3340. Call Richard 570-406-2438
608 Jenkins St. 3BR - 2Bath good starter home. Gas Heat and off street parking for four cars. MLS#15-4337 $74,900. Call Tom @ 570-262-7716
SWOYERSVILLE
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
(570) 288-2514
Get Better Results
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PITTSTON
PLAINS
WEST PITTSTON PLYMOUTH When you place your ad with a photo. Call today for pricing!
570-821-2020
Rear 240 S. Main St. $84,900 Pristine 3 BR, 2 bath home w/ plenty of charm in private setting. New roof. New electrical panel. New furnace. New carpets. Patio. OSP. MLS#153178. Call Keri 570-885-5082
45 Warner St. $$$ MONEY MAKER! Affordably priced this double unit is in a great location with good size lot, 2 car garage and ample parking. Unit 1 is larger w/kit, LR & 2 BR. Unit 2 smaller side has kit, LR & 2 BR. Could use some TLC so add your own touches & make it yours! $65,900. MLS#15-3018. Call Michele Hopkins 570-540-6046
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
280 Temperance Hill FEELS LIKE COUNTRY LIVING! Secluded 2 BR home offers an open flr plan w/formal DR, updated modern kit w/ beautiful authentic hdwd flrs, antique 1920ish Othello 6 burner coal/wood stove (additional heat source), 1st flr laundry area, 4 yr old furnace, 3 yr old hot water heater, fenced yard, OSP & low taxes.TERRIFIC BARGAIN FOR THE PRICE! MLS# 15-2616. $30,000
PLYMOUTH
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600 RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600
570-283-9100
WEST PITTSTON This 2-story vinyl clad home w/6 rooms, 3 BR, 1 bath is ready to move in. Freshly painted, new carpeting. Gas heat & gas FP in the LR. An additional dbl lot across the street is included in sale...for tons of parking!!! $55,000 MLS#15-3929 Call Karen Altavilla 570-283-9100 ext 28
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PRESS PASS Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
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Check Out The Citizens' Voice's Classified Section
PLAINS
Pick It Up On Newsstands or call 570-821-2010 or circulation@citizensvoice.com For Our Great Home Delivery Packages!
PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
659 Suscon Rd. $116,900 Well cared for 3-4 BR Cape Cod. FP. Large private back yard. Patio. New Geothermal hot water heater. Newer roof. MLS #15-1422. Call Keri (570)885-5082
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
REAL ESTATE APPRAISALS OFFERED FOR:
at over 100 area locations every time you show your
305 Stephanie Dr . Don't miss this well-maintained all brick ranch in a unique location on a large lot. 6 rooms, 3 BR, modern kitchen & 1¾ tiled baths. Massive stone FP in LR. Large clean open basement. Oversized 2-car garage w/ concrete circular driveway. JUST REDUCED TO $149,900. Frank Alansky 570-954-5616
JOSEPH P. GILROY REAL ESTATE 570-288-1444
PLYMOUTH
• Estate Settlement • Divorce Settlement • Bankruptcy • Tax Appeals • PMI • Buying or Selling a Home
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE 570-822-1133 Call Theresa Vacendak, CRS, GRI Cell: 570-650-5872
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE (570) 822-1133 PLAINS TOWNSHIP
54 Jay St. Gorgeous home on an excellent street. This home features a lge modern eatkit, good size LR, cozy gas FP, gleaming hdwd flrs, bright sunroom, 1.5 modern baths, deck, carefree vinyl siding, fenced in yard, private driveway & very low heat cost. Call or text the listing agent about the many updates to this immaculate home! #15-3963. $124,900. Call Jerry Busch (570)709-7798
(570) 288-2514
SWOYERSVILLE
Michael G. Vacendak, CRS, GRI Certified Residential Appraiser 570-262-1761 centralr@epix.net
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE 570-822-1133
SHAVERTOWN 80 West Carey St. MULTI-USE-BUILDING Great location & great price to sell! Beautiful 2 levels of spotless living in this recently updated 2 story house Open flr plan featuring LR, DR, flex room wood flrs throughout. Modern kit w/all appliances, 1/2 bath w/a laundry rm off kit. 2nd flr has 3 BR & modern bath. Main flr consists of commercial space w/ 3/4 bath. OSP on site. Very convenient location. Call me now for more details & your private tour! MLS#15-3697 $78,000.
Call John Polifka 570-704-6846
Five Mountains Realty 570-542-2141
CITIZENS' VOICE CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call Today To Place Your Ad! 570-821-2020 PLYMOUTH
100 E. Center St. Conveniently located to Kingston Twp. Rec. Park, Shopping & Bus Route, this nicely maintained 3 BR, 2½ bath Cape Cod w/ garage & carport, has a Bath on each level. LL family room. 1st floor laundry. Parquet flooring. MLS#151010. $134,500 Joseph Moore: (570) 288-1401
Super Swoyersville Buy At $69,900! This 1 won't last! Modern eat-in kitchen, full modern bath w/shower, DR w/wood floors, good sized deck, concrete block garage, OSP, comfortable gas heat & huge yard. Bonus: All appliances are included! Call Today! MLS#15-3089. Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
SELL YOUR HOUSE Place Your Ad With The Citizens' Voice And Get Results! 570-821-2020 Thinking of Selling Your Home? LISTINGS NEEDED!!!
SHAVERTOWN
Price reduced to $44,900 Two-story home w/ spacious eat-in kitchen, formal DR, 2-3 BR's private back deck & fenced-in yard. 1½ baths. MLS#144309. Call Judy Rice 570-714-9230
(570) 696-3801
WEST PITTSTON
Sunday Oct. 4 & 11th 12 – 1:30 p.m.
(570) 288-2514 Enjoy a beautiful view of the valley! Home has 3 BR & 1 bathroom. 1-car garage & OSP for a least 5 cars. Washer/dryer hookup on 1st flr. Enjoy huge covered deck off back that overlooks the valley. Large yard offers a great place to entertain outdoors. Call for an appointment today! MLS#15-2830 $52,900.
Out of flood area. 2-unit could be 3 , over 3,000SF bldg in nice area, close to country club, off street parking for 4 cars, possibility of in home business. MLS#15-2853 $79,900 Pat Silvi 570-283-9100 x21
Sunday Oct 18th 1 p.m. - 3 p.m.
570-283-9100
For The Latest Job Postings!
(570) 718-4959
SWOYERSVILLE
PLYMOUTH
110 Oak St. $52,500 Nice size home w/ 3 BR, OSP, large yard w/ rear access, eat-in kitchen, porch, 1st floor laundry, walk-up attic. MLS #15-2143. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
72 Chestnut St. Good starter home in quiet neighborhood out of flood zone. 3rd bedroom on 1st flr, eat-in kitchen, gas fired space heaters. MLS#15-2318 $32,500. Call Steve Shemo @ 570-793-9449
Call Michele Hopkins 570-540-6046
CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
WEST PITTSTON
208 Exeter Ave. $164,900 Well cared for classic home w/3 BR, 1 ½ baths, lge. Rms, beautiful woodwork, pocket doors, full walk up attic, detached garage, nice yard, huge driveway. MLS #15-3612. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
Looking For A Buyer, Seller, Employer or Employee? The Citizens' Voice Classified Ads Will Help You! 570-821-2020
classified@citizensvoice.com
WEST WYOMING
Call Me, I CAN HELP!
PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
88 Winter St. $119,900 3 BR, brick front ranch w/finished basement, 1-car garage & carport. Nice location, priced to sell quick! MLS #144185. Call or email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
250 Bear Creek Blvd $130,000 Classic 4 BR ranch home in convenient location is move in ready! Close to all major highways as well as the Wyoming Valley Mall & Mohegan Sun Casino. MLS #15-2900 Call Mike, 570-357-5496
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
How Long Have You Wanted Your Own Home! It's easy to buy this well maintained home which features 3 nice size BR's eat-in kit.,good size LR, FR , tile bath w/shower, enclosed sitting porch, pretty yard, full concrete basement, parking & comfortable gas heat. Call About The Available Low Down Payment Programs! $34,900. MLS#14-1619 Call Jerry Busch (570)709-7798
(570) 288-2514
• 25 Years of Experience • Commission Negotiable 87 West Mount Airy Road $74,900 1 BR bungalow on large lot w/large LR, large BR. Gas heat. Nice area. Garage could be converted to 2nd BR. MLS #152345. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
Theresa Vacendak, CRS, GRI Associate Broker/ Appraiser 570-650-5872 centralr@epix.net
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE 570-822-1133 wwwatlasrealtyinc.com
120 West Brady St. Million Dollar View! This home features a private & peaceful location nestled on over 1 acre. Gorgeous kitchen, good sized LR w/ full length windows for lots of sunshine, cheerful DR, good size master BR w/ walk-in closet, 2½ modern baths, finished basement & 2-car garage. Call For Your Private Showing! MLS#15-3074. $249,000. Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
(570) 288-2514
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B02] | 10/08/15
B2 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
WEST WYOMING
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
WILKES-BARRE
WILKES-BARRE
WILKES-BARRE
OPEN HOUSE 129 Brown Street Sunday October 11th 11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. $58,500 Negotiable.
EXETER
905 Shoemaker Ave. $119,900 2 Bedroom brick front ranch with large rooms, freshly painted, super clean & modern. This beauty has a full unfinished basement that could double it's size. Features include gas boiler, sunporch and all appliances. MLS #153406. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
262 Scott St ''MODERN,TRENDY & AT A BARGAIN'' Stylish 3 BR house w/foyer entrance & great open flr plan was completely renovated 4 yr ago. Newer Furnace, Electrical Panel Box, Hot Water Heater, Pex Plumbing, Hard Wired Smoke Alarms, Carbon Monoxide Detectors, Small Yard, Low Taxes. Close To Everything. MLS #14-5253. $51,000. Call Michele Hopkins 570-540-6046
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
WILKES-BARRE
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600
Classifieds WORK!
WILKES-BARRE
128 N. Empire St. $47,900 Very neat & clean 3 BR home w/ newer gas furnace, front walk-out basement, large yard w/ rear alley access. MLS #15-2480. Call Colleen 570-237-0415
86 Diebel St. Attractive 3 BR, 2 bath Ranch w/ garage & large level lot w/ pool & deck tucked away in a much sought after location. Close to school, sports & fitness trails. Master BR w/ bath, spacious LL rec room & storage galore. A must see & priced to sell! MLS#15-606. $117,000 Don't delay, Call Pat TODAY! 570-287-1196
396 S Sherman St $89,900 Well kept, was a 2-family and easily converted back to single, 4BR - 3Baths, 2-car detached garage, security system, satellite dish. MLS#15-4213 Call Tom 570-262-7716
WILKES-BARRE
FAIR HOUSING REGULATIONS
The Times-Tribune, Citizens' Voice, Electric City & Diamond City Classifieds reserves the right to edit any copy that does not conform to Fair Housing Regulations.
WILKES-BARRE
Brick front 2 story home that is move in condition on 1st flr. w/large room sizes & big eat-in kit w/modern oak cabinets. Relax on the big back porch or play in the huge yard! Gas BBHW heat. 2nd flr needs TLC. MLS#15-4217 $49,000.
(570) 288-2514
WILKES-BARRE JUST LISTED
Call 570-822-5126
Several 2 & 3 bedroom homes for sale & lots available for rent. Pending park approval, moving assistance is provided for all qualified applicants with homes. 814-414-8600/570-550-5425
41 Flood Dr. End unit townhome w/ 3 BR, 2½ baths. Upgrades include new cherry kitchen (2013) w/ granite counters, SS appliances. 1st floor den/office. Gas warm air heat w/central air. Security system. New Price: $132,500. MLS#15-1723. Joseph Moore: (570) 288-1401
LAUREL RUN
Priced to sell!
1982 Burlington 2 bedroom, 2 bath, all appliances, some furniture. On tires; ready to move. $5,000. LAUREL RUN ESTATES 570-823-8499 NEW 3 bedroom, 2 bath on secluded lot with many extras. $44,900 Sale or Lease LAUREL RUN ESTATES 570-823-8499 When you start “flashing” your you'll start saving money immediately! You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot! Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe
BACK MOUNTAIN • 63 acres in Dallas Twp. Large road frontage. Wooded. Reduced to $295,000.
JANE KOPP REAL ESTATE 570-288-7481
WILKES-BARRE New Listing!
436 Scott St. Substantial Reduction from $149,900 to $125,000 Lovely family home w/5 BRs & 1 ½ baths. Everything in love condition. Lge LR, DR, modern eat-in kit, den & powder room on 1st fl. The best part is there are 2 garages: a 2 car & a 4 car. For an appointment call Ruth K. Smith 570-696-5411
305 New Grant St. 3 BR, 1 bath 2 story on fenced DOUBLE lot. Full front porch & lge deck. Alley access to rear could accommodate a garage or OSP. Inside you'll enjoy a lge LR & DR, kit w/breakfast bar & a partially finished LL w/laundry & rec room. Lge storage room also on LL & walk-up attic. GREAT house at a GREAT price! MLS #15-4003. $59,900. Call Mary Ellen at 570-690-0375 or Walter at 570-690-0464 to schedule a private showing.
570-696-1195
WILKES-BARRE
Being a VIP Subscriber has its privileges When you start 'flashing' your you'll start saving money immediately! You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot!!
LUZERNE
Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
KINGSTON
375 Bennett St. Great opportunity! Auto sales business complete w/glass front showroom, service garage, inspection bay, large car lot w/detail auto storage bldg. Includes 3 lifts, large air compressor, lots of built ins. This is your chance to become self-employed! MLS#15-4212, $194,500. Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
Well maintained brick & aluminum 4 unit, close to shopping, amenities, parks. Plenty of on street parking, nice sized rear yard, possible off street parking. Separate utilities. *Owner to install 3 HW heaters prior to closing, 4th one OK, Owner to install new heat in 1 apt., 3 others are OK. MLS#153183 $134,900. Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
(570) 288-2514
LARKSVILLE Trojan & Crossin Rd. Looking for a nice tract of land to build your dream home? This is it! 33.51 acres gives you plenty of room, mostly cleared access on Crossin Rd. w/ road frontage on Trojan Rd. Come see this beautiful country setting!MLS 15-1383. Call Barb Strong 570-762-7561
9 Orchard St. Vacant lot w/public utilities, available 18X20 metal garage, cement flr. & 8x10 shed. MLS#15-4055 $20,000. Call Dawn 570-715-9320
27 W. Field St. 3 apartments near community college. Gas heat. Great investment opportunity at $35,000. Call Jim for details. Towne & Country Real Estate Co. 570-735-8932 or 570-542-5708
NANTICOKE
Alden Road Superb commercial industrial bldg. Overhead doors, concrete flr, 3300 sq ft. Ideal for machine shop, contractor, automotive, etc. Adaptable for many uses. Priced to sell at $199,500. Call Jim for details. Towne & Country Real Estate Co. 570-735-8932 or 570-542-5708
PITTSTON
Attention Investors Increase Your Inventory! Fully occupied 3 unit apartment bldg. w/separate utilities & long term tenants. It has two 3 BR units & efficiency apartment. Two units are gas HHW & the efficiency is electric baseboard. Call listing agent for specific details. MLS#15-4327. $69,900.00 Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
(570) 288-2514
PLYMOUTH
NANTICOKE
LARGE PRICE REDUCTION!
REDUCED $10,000!!
53 Logan St. Large house with 11 rooms. Extra lot for off-street parking. Newer furnace & water heater. Replacement windows. MLS#15-2863 $42,000. Call Tom @ 570-262-7716
WILKES-BARRE
47 Edison St. Priced to sell. Great buy. Charming 3 BR, 2 bath, 2 story. Move in condition. Modern kit w/island, FR off kit w/doors to flagstone patio & very private back & side yard. Wrap around front porch. Replacement windows. Freshly painted. OSP for 4 cars. MLS #15-3932. $79,900.
GO TO THE TOP.... CALL JANE KOPP
JANE KOPP REAL ESTATE 570-288-7481
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
WILKES-BARRE
709 N Washington St. $54, 900 Nicely kept home with off-street parking and a 2 car-carport. Good room sizes, gas heat & hot water. You could move right into this home. MLS#15-4245 Call or email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
WILKES-BARRE
E. Field Street Amazing opportunity for development! Prime piece of flat vacant land in city. Large 7 acres adjacent to local community college. MLS#14-762. $150,000.
13 South Main St. $399,000 Beautiful former bank building in the heart of revitalized downtown Pittston. Make a statement for your business w/an investment in this classic building. MLS #13-3924. Call or email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
Dana Distasio 570-715-9333
570-474-9801
PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
70'x180'. Located on dead end street. Quiet neighborhood, near playground. Free garbage. Free municipal sewers. Low taxes. Call 570-654-2081
EZ-Pay?
Saves Time Saves Money Saves Stamps It's Convenient
WILKES-BARRE TWP
The Citizens' Voice The Sunday Citizens' Voice
Mundy St Mall area
Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
PITTSTON
Church St – Main 30+ ACRES
PLAINS
Acreage Armory Realty, 570-824-1995
DUPONT WYOMING
77 Schuler St. $90,000 Remodeled in 2008 & move in ready, 3 BR 2 1/2 baths,fenced in yard, screened in porch & driveway. MLS #15-3684 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
55 Shulde St. Lots for the money Ranch home; 5 rooms, 2 BR & 1 bath. Large sunroom, 2 car garage. Nice location & street. MLS#15-4773 $84,900.
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
(570) 288-2514
Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
WEST PITTSTON
Why Sign Up For
Rte. 309 LARKSVILLE
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
67 Church St. Great owner occupied 4 unit w/ bonus apartment over 2-car garage! Well maintained. Vinyl replacement windows, good roofs, vinyl siding. 4 unit has huge finished walk-up attic on each side. Large basement area. 2 1st floor apartments are owner occupied other unit rents are substantially below market. MLS#14-3922. $99,995. Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
(570) 288-2514 www.atlasrealtyinc.com
LAND
Single home, 3 bedroom, 3 full baths, 2 car garage, $149,900. Call Stephen @ 570-613-9080
Coldwell Banker Town & Country Properties 40 N. Mountain Blvd. Mountaintop, PA 570-474-2340
2 buildings on same lot - 5 apartments, $90,000-Or Best Offer. Out of flood plain. Call 570-822-9697.
570-474-9801
WILKES-BARRE
WILKES-BARRE
1201 Market St. Convenient store, family owned & operated for 40 years, owners are looking to retire. Located in the heart of Lehman Center, great opportunity! MLS#15-1256. Call Barb Strong 570-762-7561
(570) 288-2514
WILKES-BARRE 570-283-9100
227 Nicholson Street Lovely 2 story in Wilkes-Barre Twp. Remodeled, new windows, new hot water heater, cozy 2 bedroom house. Low taxes! Call for an appointment to see today. Maureen Condo 570-262-4584
HANOVER TWP.
NANTICOKE
MOUNTAIN TOP
183 Crescent Ave. $89,900 Move in condition, 2 BR, 2 bath, hardwood floors, new windows, 4 year old roof, carport & driveway. MLS #151565 Call Tom @ 570-262-7716
LEHMAN
Mobile home, 1992 Fleetwood, 14 x 66, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Needs some work. $4,500. Can be moved. 570-498-0076
167 Academy St. DUPLEX – 2 BDRM Apt. each flr. Gas heat. Garage w/workshop. Good condition, ready to move in. Priced to SELL. MLS#15-4040 $65,000. CALL Ainslie for apt 570-954-5097 or 570-784-5993
GO TO THE TOP.... CALL JANE KOPP
WILKES-BARRE
WILKES-BARRE
209 George Ave. $219,000 Last used as pharmacy now has 14x48 showroom area w/half bath included. Two apartments both two BR w/full baths to the rear of the property . Side entrance to foyer area one apartment ground fl 2 BR, full bath. 2nd fl. Apartment 2 BR, full bath. MLS #15-2929 Call Bill, 570-362-4158
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
LEHMAN
WILKES-BARRE
18 Cummiskey St. $29,000 Affordable 2 story home. Nice big yard. Brand new roof, furnace & water heater new 2008. 2 BR. Concrete basement. Low taxes. MLS #15-3430 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
EXETER
BESECKER REALTY 570-675-3611
(570) 288-2514
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600
511 Pierce Street Prime multi-use commercial location on a corner lot. 90 front feet on Pierce Street! 5,000 sq. ft. concrete block building. Exterior signage. 15 Parking spaces. MLS #13-4286. $250,000.
Ask for Bob Kopec
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
153 New Mallery Pl. IMPROVED PRICE! A lot of house, a lot of lot, for not a lot of money. This split level's foyer entrance leads to open floor plan, 4 BR, 1 ½ baths, authentic HDWD floors, finished LL, private drive, & heated garage w/ bonus an extra lot. Property in need of some TLC but will go a long way for this terrific buy! Seller will consider all offers! MLS#15-953. $46,900. Call Michele Hopkins 570-540-6046
KINGSTON
Reduced to $250,000
Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
WILKES-BARRE
Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
Birchwood Mobile Home Community
LAUREL RUN
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
148 Holland St. Must see home! Relaxing front porch, vinyl siding, 1 car garage w/off street parking, & rear yard. Huge FR off kit w/ ¾ bath, brilliant white kitchen w/island. Gorgeous DR & LR w/wood trim. 4 BDR, full bath, walk-up attic. Full concrete basement w/bilco door; gas heat. MLS#15-4332 $89,900.
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
(570) 288-2514 Commercial property with income potential. $325.000 Call Stephen @ 570-613-9080
297 Main St. Great corner location for your business, currently being used as beauty salon, Doctor's office, & apartment, off street parking for 10 cars, lighted intersection. MLS#15-3130 $169,900. www.atlasrealtyinc.com Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
Great double block w/stone front & vinyl siding. Modern kitchens & baths. Separate utilities. Front & rear porches + deck to relax on! Many recent updates. Close to schools, sports complex, parks, shopping, etc. Nice street. Owner occupied. MLS #15-4020. $119,900. Call Pat Busch 570-885-4165
WILKES-BARRE
POCONOS
33 commercially zoned acres on Rt. 196 improved with a 7 room hotel & retail space currently used as a bar/restaurant. Many development possibilities. Offer price $800,000. Call 570-955-0049 for more information or email inquiries to: paradisesummit2006@yahoo.com
371-373 S. River St Multi unit investment property (4) units near Wilkes-University, convenient location, close to everything, plenty of OSP. MLS#15-3930 $154,900. Call Don Marsh at 570-814-5072
570-696-1195
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B03] | 10/08/15
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
UNFURNISHED
GLEN LYON Ken Pollock Apartments 41 Depot Street
EDWARDSVILLE
Private furnished rooms, with shared kitchen & baths. $120-$130/week Special! 2nd week Free with paid 1st week or 2 Free weeks with 1st paid month. Call Mike 570-852-9145 or Bob 570239-3633.
Low and Moderate Income Elderly Rentals Include • Electric Range • Refrigerator • Off Street Parking • Community Room • Coin Operated Laundry • Elevator • Video Surveillance Applications accepted by appointment 570-736-6965
UNFURNISHED
UNFURNISHED
PLAINS
WILKES-BARRE
12 EAST CAREY STREET
Move in ready 1 bedroom apartment available immediately. New carpets and flooring. Stove/refrigerator included. Quiet convenient location near cross valley, casino, and shopping. Off street parking, heat, hot water and sewer included. NO PETS.1 bedroom $525. One year lease/security. jackbeccaris@verizon.net or call 570-574-4303
PLAINS
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
8 a.m. - 4 p.m. TDD only, 1-800-654-5984 Voice only, 1-800-654-5988 Handicap Accessible
2 bedroom, 2nd floor, own entrance, stove & refrigerator, closed in porch, small yard. Total electric. $550/month + $550 security & year's lease. 570-256-9739, 570-328-5584 570-262-0743
New & Pre-Owned Homes for Sale! Rentals Available Financing Available to Qualified Buyers 109 Main Street, Inkerman Jenkins Twp., PA 18640 Rental Office: 570-655-9643 Sales Office: 570-655-2050 www.umh.com Licensed by the PA. Dept. of Banking NMLS 20033
Equal Housing Opportunity
PLAINS
Heather Highlands A Quality Manufactured Housing Community
FURNISHED
WILKES-BARRE
4 room apartment. Beautifully furnished. New appliances, etc. Living room, bedroom, kitchen & bathroom. Excellent neighborhood. Non smoking. Bus service. Off street parking. Numerous amenities. $700 month. 570-592-0900.
HANOVER GREEN
1 bedroom apartment. Heat & water included, $600/month. No pets. Background check. References a must. Text 570-954-3619
HANOVER GREEN Spacious 1st floor, 2-3 bedroom, wallto-wall, bath, Includes stove, heat, gas, water, sewer, garbage removal incl. Non-smoking. Security, no pets, $775/mo.+security ($775) 570-829-0854
HARVEYS LAKE
1 bedroom lakefront apartment. Wall/wall carpet. Off street parking. Private dock. No pets. Lease, security, references. 570-639-5920
KINGSTON
1 bedroom, 3rd floor, electric heat. Includes, water, sewer, stove & refrigerator. Credit & background & references required. Non smoking. No pets. $450/month+security. 570-283-1761.
UNFURNISHED
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. Call: 570-675-6936 or TDD# 800-654-5984 9am-4pm., Mon.-Fri. Equal Housing Opportunity Handicap Accessible
DALLAS, PA
KINGSTON 1st floor, 1 bedroom. Off street parking. All appliances. $475/month + utilities. Available November 1st. 570-690-1761
KINGSTON
1st floor, 2 bedroom. Washer and dryer hook-up. Off street parking. No pets. $650 per month. Water and sewer included. 570-443-0770.
KINGSTON
1st floor. 6 rooms & bath. Heat & hot water included. 2 large & 1 small bedroom. Kitchen, bath, sun room, living room, dining room. Hardwood floors, carpeting, built in hutch, fireplace, storage, yard, washer, dryer, refrigerator, stove included. 1 year lease & security. $985/month. Call 570-283-4370.
49 Warner St., 2 bedroom apartment, quiet neighborhood. Backyard, offstreet parking. Washer/dryer hookup. No pets. $550. 570-655-4735
PLYMOUTH
2 BR, 2nd flr. Stove & refrigerator. 1 year lease + security. No smoking inside. No pets. $550. Call Flo 570-674-1718
PLYMOUTH
2nd floor, 2 bedroom, living room, eatin kitchen, washer/dryer hook-up, wallto-wall, large yard, no pets. $525/ month + utilities & security. 570-655-3505
PLYMOUTH
Available now. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. 2 floor. Close to shopping/transportation. No pets, lease & security. $375 + utilities. Call 12-6pm. 570-779-3550.
nd
CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
RENT YOUR HOUSE
Elevate Your Lifestyle... Value Filled 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms
PLAINS TWP.
Includes Heat, Water, Sewer & Garbage Removal Make Your Life Effortless: Washer & Dryer in Each Apartment Modern Equipped Kitchen 24 Hour Maintenance Central Location to any Destination You Need: Colleges, Shopping, Hospitals, Bus & Highway Access Pet Friendly (up to 70 lbs.)* Short Term Leases Available CALL TODAY FOR AVAILABILITY!!!!
570-822-3968
mayflowercrossing.com Certain Restrictions apply*
WILKES-BARRE nd
WILKES-BARRE/ ASHLEY
Perfect 2 bedroom. Well maintained. Fully equipped kitchen. Includes washer and dryer. Unit over 900 square feet off street. Includes parking. Location ideal. Near Wilkes College, Wyoming Valley mall and 15 minutes to casino. Gas heat. $625/month. Utilities not included. References. Background check. 570-702-9246 Leave message after 4pm or lisburger@aol.com
UNFURNISHED DICKSON CITY Small 2 bedroom apartment. Large yard. $425 a month plus utilities. Call 717-449-8192 after 5 or leave message.
FORTY FORT
1399 Murray St. 3 bedrooms. Wall/wall, gas heat, washer/dryer hookup. Off street parking. No lease. $650 month + utilities, security, references. No pets; non-smoking. Available now. Call 570-287-8329.
GLEN LYON
3 BR ½ double. Refinished h/w flrs, refurbished, freshly painted. 1 year lease. Non-smoking inside. No Pets $550. Call Flo 570-674-1718
KINGSTON
2 bedroom, 2 bath. All appliances including washer and dryer. Gas heat. Off street parking. Non smoking. No pets. Security, references and credit check required. $750/month plus utilities. 570-288-5097 Leave message.
KINGSTON
Rent Starting at $1400-2300 2 Bedroom 2 bath 1,200 sq. ft. 3 Bedroom 2.5 bath 2,300 sq. ft. Features include:Air Conditioning Dishwasher,Fireplace, Microwave Stainless Steel Appliances Washer & Dryer, Some Garages Community Features: Swimming Pool, Fitness Center, Playground, Club house for parties or business. Call Today 570-881-3946 or 570-690-6632 Rt 415 & Rt 118 Dallas, Pa
DURYEA
1st floor, 1 bedroom apartment. $350/month + some utilities. No pets. 570-412-2886 DURYEA 2 bedroom, kitchen, living room and bath. Kitchen includes Refrigerator, stove and dishwasher. Bathroom includes washer/dyer hookup. Landlord pays sewer and 1 garbage sticker per week. Tenant pays for all other utilities. No pets. Call for appointment. 570-388-6773
EDWARDSVILLE
2 bedroom apartment. No $500/month plus security. 570-963-1029
pets.
EDWARDSVILLE
Beautiful newly remodeled studio apartments. All utilities included. On site laundry. Lounge room for special occasions. Spectacular view, beautiful gardens. Pets are welcome At reasonable rent prices. 570-846-7765
EXETER
EXETER AVE. 3 bedroom. Most appliances and water included. Off street parking. $625/month + utilities. Call 570-4971906 after 5 or leave a message.
EXETER
Newer 2 bedroom, 2nd floor apartment. Refrigerator, stove, dishwasher included. Gas heat. Central air. Off street parking for 2 cars. Available Oct. 6th. $650/month. Security required. Call 570-655-2254
FORTY FORT
Clean, 1st floor, 1 bedroom, dining room, large living room, oak hardwood floors, quiet street. Economical gas heat. Central air. Off street parking. Patio, yard. $545/month. Utilities by tenant. Lease, security and references. No pets. 570-332-1048
FREELAND
Foster Avenue. Newly remodeled. 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath. Lease, references and credit check required. Asking $800/month 570-902-9983
Garden Village Apartments
221 Fremont St., West Pittston 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 or TDD# 800-654-5984 8am to 4pm Monday – Friday
Looking For A Buyer, Seller, Employer or Employee? Citizens Voice Want Ads Will Help You. Call us at 570-821--2020 Garden Village Apartments
221 Fremont St., West Pittston 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 or TDD# 800-654-5984 8am to 4pm Monday – Friday
2nd floor, 2+ bedroom. Off street parking. No pets. $600 per month. Water and sewer included. 570-443-0770.
KINGSTON
2nd floor, 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, full bath, washer and dryer hook-up. Wall to wall carpet. $550/month plus utilities and security. No pets. Call 570-655-3505
KINGSTON
3 bedroom. Stove, dishwasher, refrigerator included. Washer/dryer hookup. Off street parking. $675. 570-814-0843 or 570-696-3090
KINGSTON
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Living room, dining room, kitchen. Hardwood floors throughout. 1st floor. Off street parking. Basement laundry. $975; includes sewer. No pets; non-smoking. Security & 1st month rent. Available end of November. Call 570-239-4996.
KINGSTON
Architecturally Designed
3 bedroom, 1 ½ bath townhouse in quiet residential neighborhood. Central air. Completely refurbished. Living room, dining room. Off street private parking. Utilities & heat by tenant. No pets; non-smoking.
ROSEWOOD REALTY Call: 570-287-6822
KINGSTON
Beautiful oversized apartment in large historic home. 2nd floor, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, granite kitchen, chandelier lighting, hardwood floors, dining room, living room, basement storage, beautiful front porch. Washer/dryer hookup. $1,000 month + utilities. Non-smoking. 570-472-1110
LAFLIN
Spacious, ultra modern 2 bedroom, 2 story apartment with 1 1/2 baths + washer/dryer hookup. Combination large oak kitchen/dining area with snack bar and all appliances. Bonus in-home office. Large maintenancefree yard. Off-street parking. $700 a month plus utilities. Security / lease/credit check. Sorry non smoking, no pets. (570) 824-9507.
LARKSVILLE
Newly remodeled. Living room, kitchen, 1 bedroom, bath. Heat, hot water, garbage and off street parking included. Near bus stop. $500/month plus $500 security. One year lease. No pets. Call 570-779-4021
LEHMAN TWP
Place Your Listing In The Citizens' Voice For Fast Results! 570-821-2020 SWOYERSVILLE
Hughes Street, small 1.5 bedroom, 2nd floor, hookups, attic. Parking. No pets, Will check. $525 includes heat/ water. $300 security. 570-824-8786. WEST PITTSTON 2 bedroom, 1 bath on second floor, Kitchen, living room and dining room on first floor. Private basement for washer/dryer hook up and storage. Side and back private entrance. Non smoking. No Pets. Application and background check. $725/month plus security and utilities. Call or Text 570-760-1922
WEST PITTSTON
Charming 2nd floor, 1 bedroom with appliances. Quiet street. BONUS half room off of living room – could be office, closet or storage. No smoking, no pets. $550/month. Water included. 570-654-0990 or 570-430-1204
WEST PITTSTON
Convenient location. 2nd floor recently remodeled one bedroom apartment. Washer/Dryer hookup. Stove & Refrigerator. Tile & carpeting. No pets. $475/month + utilities. 570-881-2285
WEST WYOMING
1st floor, 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Electric heat. Front porch, yard, off street parking. NO PETS. Utilities by tenant except sewer. $500/month + $200 security deposit. Available now. For appointment call 570-212-2538.
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom. New wall to wall. New kitchen/bathroom floor. Painted. Porch & yard. $650/month, includes all utilities except electric. Lease, security, references. No pets. After 5pm 570-817-6422.
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom. Stove and refrigerator included. Washer/dryer hookup. Off street parking. Non smoking. No pets. Background check and references required. $500/month + utilities. 570-825-5138
WILKES-BARRE • 2 Bedroom: Exceptional! • 2 Bedroom: Water • 3 Bedroom: Single • 3 Bedroom: Half-Double, large • 1 Bedroom: Efficiency. Water, hot water & trash included • 1 Bedroom: Water and Heat included
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
• 2 Bedroom • 1 Bedroom: Water included • 3 Bedroom Half Double
LUZERNE
• 1 Bedroom: Water Included • 2 Bedroom
NANTICOKE
1 or 2 bedroom apartment. Electric heat and all utilities by tenant. Lease and security. $625/month. 570-8178965
NANTICOKE
Must see. 1 bedroom. 2nd floor. All kitchen appliances plus washer/dryer unit. Electric heat. Full bath, private entrance. Available Nov. 1. $475./ month. No pets Lease, references required. 570-902-5195
NANTICOKE
Small, 1 bedroom apartment. $360/month + security. Water included. Call 570-499-6399
LUZERNE
KINGSTON
• 1 Bedroom, Heat & water included • 3 Bedroom, Heat & water included
570-675-4025
WILKES-BARRE
21 Catlin Avenue, 2nd floor, 2 bedroom. Heat and hot water included. Laundry hook ups, air conditioner units. $700/month 646-391-4638 or 570-825-3360
WILKES-BARRE
Get The Latest News Updates!
PITTSTON 2 bedroom, electric heat, some utilities by owner. Section 8 ok. $675/month + security deposit. Available October 1st. Call 570-299-0105, 570-709-5848
PITTSTON st
Modern, 1 floor, 2 bedroom. Air conditioned. Appliances, laundry hook up. Screened in porch. Garage available. Heat, water, sewer & garbage included. $695 per month + security & lease. No pets. Non smoking. 570-430-0123
570-675-5100
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
PLAINS/HUDSON
40 West Stanton Street 2.5 bedrooms, 1 bath. All appliances, washer & dryer, gas heat, air conditioning. Quiet street. Security, references & credit check. No pets. $675 month + utilities. Fred, 570-954-2972 PLYMOUTH Modern 3 bedroom, modern kitchen, some appliances. New paint, washer/dryer hookup, gas heat. Yard and off street parking. Nearst school. Academy Street. No pets. 1 month rent + security. $650/month + utilities. 570-814-0890
PLYMOUTH
Spacious ½ double. 3 bedrooms, with closets, newly carpeted. Living room, dining room, family room with all new hardwood flooring. Eat-in kitchen with pantry and new vinyl flooring. New carpeting. Freshly painted. Low maintenance yard. Family oriented neighborhood. Full basement with washer and dryer hook-up. Move-in ready. No pets. Non smoking. $750/month plus utilities. Section 8 ok. References required. Schedule an appointment today. CALL SOON! MUST SEE! 570-655-4950
PRINGLE
2 bedroom ½ double. Includes washer, dryer & stove. All utilities paid by tenant. Small yard. Off street parking. You won't find a better neighborhood! No pets. $560 month. Must have 1 year at current employment to apply. 570-287-1421 SCRANTON: WEST ½, double, 3 bedrooms. Newly remodeled $750/month includes sewer, garbage. No pets. 570-687-4235 WILKES-BARRE 3 bedroom, 1 bath. Large kitchen. Dining room. Living room. Yard. On street parking. Includes sewer, gas stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, and washer/ dryer hookup. No pets. $650/month + utilities and security. 570-696-4890
GLEN LYON TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD
570-821-2020 HANOVER TOWNSHIP
2.5 bedrooms. All gas. Modernized. All appliances included. Off street parking. $625/month. Call 570-417-5441
KINGSTON
2 bedroom, 1 bath. Off street parking. Backyard. Completely remodeled. New floor, new kitchen & new appliances. $740/month + deposit. 570-606-6956
ROSEWOOD REALTY Call: 570-287-6822
Penn Street Cozy, immaculate 6 rooms. Bath downstairs, yard. No pets. Non smoking. Not section 8 approved. $650/month + utilities, security and references. 570-288-7313 or 570-954-7863
FURNISHED
HARVEYS LAKE
Completely furnished 2 story home w/dock. Avail. Oct. 1, 2015 to May 31, 2016. All utilities & maintenance included. $2,200/month. Call for details. Ruth K. Smith 570-696-5411
KINGSTON Great Kingston location on a quiet, tree-lined street, two-story colonial with 4 bedrooms & 1.5 baths. Move in with white walls & oak hardwood floors throughout. New bath, new carpet in sunroom & all appliances. Screened back porch & private driveway. References, security & background check. No smoking & no pets. $1,000 + utilities. Outside maintenance included. 570-3574023
KINGSTON
Single family home on quiet, tree-lined street. 2 or 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ baths. Central air. Hardwood floors downstairs. Front & back porches. Large yard. Conveniently located; near Cross Valley, I-81, Rte. 315 & PA Turnpike. Landlord pays water, sewer, all maintenance. $1,500 monthly. Off street parking for 2 cars. Non-smoking. Call 570-357-5496
LUZERNE
3 bedroom, 1 bath, gas heat, carpeting, washer and dryer hook up. No pets. $825/month plus utilities and security. 570-430-7901
NANTICOKE
3 bedroom single family home. Newer kitchen & bath. Newer appliances including washer/dryer. Newer floor covering. Recently painted. No pets. Off street parking. $750 + utilities. Call 570-881-0320
CLASSIFIEDS 570-821-2020 PLAINS
Unique 2 bedroom raised ranch. Open living, dining and kitchen floor plan with beamed cathedral ceilings. Bath with Jacuzzi tub and laundry area. Four-seasons room currently used as an in-home office. Finished lower level with bar and coal-burning stove. Small maintenance-free yard. Offstreet parking. $975 a month. Security, lease, credit check. Sorry non smoking, no pets. (570) 824-9507.
SHAVERTOWN
3 bedroom, 1 bathroom ranch. Yard. One car garage. NO PETS. $795/month plus utilities. 570-690-2168
TRUCKSVILLE
Split level. Heated garage. All appliances, 2 bedrooms. No pets. Available November 1st. $875. plus utilities. 570-457-3468
WEST PITTSTON
3 BR, single family modular. 2 full baths; stove, refrigerator, dishwasher. 1 year lease. No smoking inside. $750 Call Flo 570-674-1718
570-675-5100 Single family, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. All brand new carpeting. 3 season room. Car port, large yard, plenty of parking, $995/month plus utilities and security. No pets. Non smoking. 570-693-1207 Immaculate, remodeled 3 bedroom ranch in a beautiful lake community. All appliances included. New Kitchen and bathroom granite counter top. Crestwood School District. $1,000/mo. No pets. 570-956-2043
WILKES BARRE
3 bedroom, 1.5 bath. Gas heat, fenced back yard. Washer/dryer hook-up. Section 8 approved. No pets. $700/month plus security and utilities. Call 570-472-8495854
WILKES-BARRE
570-696-1195
HARVEYS LAKE Stonehurst Cottages
Short term lease or month-to-month rental. $1,000-$1,200 per month. Includes heat, electric, cable TV & internet. Garrity Realty, 570-639-1891
Single House 20 John Street Cozy single house for rent. Available Oct. 1. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, all appliances included. Wall to wall carpeting, screened in patio, fenced in yard. $650 per month plus utilities and one month security. 570-825-2910
EYNON, RTE. 6
UNFURNISHED
EXETER
TRAP PLAZA
1,500 sq. ft. & 3,000 sq. ft. Retail/office. 570-829-1206
HANOVER TWP.
LARKSVILLE
Parkway Plaza Office or retail. 1,000 sq. ft. $23.33 per day. Call Joe, 570-991-0706
242 Buttonwood St. 3 bedrooms. Gas heat. Washer/dryer hookup. Dishwasher, garbage & sewer included. Quiet neighborhood. $675 month + security & utilities. No pets. 570-779-5910
HUGHESTOWN
MINERS MILLS
2 bedrooms. Stove, refrigerator, draperies, and area rugs. Washer/dryer hookup. $760 includes heat, hot water & sewer. Tenant pays electric. No pets. Background check, security deposit. 570-262-8620, 570-823-3626 MINERS MILLS Half double, three bedroom. Washer dryer hookups, stove included. Freshly painted and new floors. Small yard and on street parking. No pets. $625 per month plus utilities. 570-820-6460 Available November first.
Wildflower Village 530 Clover Court Great location for this 3 BDR,1 ½ bath townhome, 1st flr laundry, gas heat, central air, fenced in private yard, deck, all appliances included, $900/month + utilities, security deposit, & credit check required, no pets, non smoking. MLS#15-3392. www.atlasrealtyinc.com Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730
NANTICOKE
Newly remodeled large 2 bedroom ½ double with small office area. Two story with basement and attic storage. New windows, gas heat, new kitchen, new appliances including washer/dryer. Newly tiled bath. Front and rear porch. Off street parking. No pets. $695 + utilities. 570-881-0320
PITTSTON
6 rooms, 2 bedrooms. New carpet, stove and refrigerator. Front and side porch. Yard. Oil heat. No pets. All utilities by tenant. References required. $565/month plus security deposit. Call 570-654-7409
PITTSTON AREA
½ double, 2 bedroom, kitchen stove, dining/living room, wall-to-wall carpeting, ceiling fans, washer/dryer included, plenty of off street parking, fenced in yard. $545 + utilities & security. Nice condition. Non-smoking. Employment verification. Call 570-655-4480.
EAST MOUNTAIN APARTMENTS 822-4444
EXCELLENT DOWNTOWN LOCATION!!!
Apartments
Region’s Best Address • 1, 2, 3 BR Apts.
Phone: 570-823-2776 For Appointment 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Mon .- Fri.
HARVEYS LAKE
Nice, 1 bedroom. Water, sewer & garbage included. $700/month + heat & electric. Non-smoking. Lease & security required. 570-262-1089 or 570-639-2202
WHITE HAVEN (Bear Creek)
KINGSTON
www.eastmountainapt.com
Equipped Kitchens FREE Cable TV Wall to Wall Carpeting
570-675-5100
KINGSTON
3-4 bedrooms, 1.5 baths COMPLETELY REMODELED living room, dining room, washer/dryer hookup, porches & small yard. Quiet residential neighborhood. Utilities & heat by tenant. No pets/non-smoking
UNFURNISHED
WEST WYOMING
Please Call
• 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments
Studio, 1 & 2 Bedrooms
3 BR ½ double. Freshly painted w/stove & refrigerator. 1 year lease + security. $650. Non-smoking inside. No pets. Call Flo 570-674-1718
Large 3 bedroom ½ double. Recently redone. New bathroom. Small yard. $550 + security. Tenant pays utilities. Call 570-256-7265
The Good Life . . . Close at Hand
www.thecitizensvoice.com
NANTICOKE2nd floor apartment, newly remodeled. Garbage included. $500/month + utilities. No pets. 570-881-4522 After 4
2 BR. Modern kitchen & bath; no pets, one year lease. $550 plus utilities Call or email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom, freshly painted apartment. No pets. $850/month + security, includes everything. Serious inquiries only. 570-814-4730 2nd floor, 1 bedroom. Near bus stop. Washer and dryer hook-up. $495/month plus security. Hot water and heat included. 570-954-5273
PLAINS
MAYFLOWER CROSSING APARTMENTS
SHAVERTOWN
Large 7 room, 2nd floor, 2 bedroom. All appliances. Off street parking. Washer/ dryer hook-up. $625/month + utilities. Security, references required. No pets. 570-690-6610
UNFURNISHED 3 bedroom in great neighborhood. Modern kitchen all appliances, new carpeting & paint, washer & dryer hook-up, gas heat/ air conditioning, nice yard. No pets. $775/month . 570-655-4915
Newly remodeled, 2 floor. 1 bedroom, 1-bath. Gas heat. Stove and refrigerator. Laundry hook-up. No pets. Background check, security deposit and references a MUST! $500/month plus utilities. 570-655-0866
570-675-5100
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 B3
288-6300
www.gatewaymanorapt.com
401 Laurel St. $2,700 Commercial lease, 3,000 sq ft offered at $9/sq ft plus utilities. Great office modern space in convenient location adjacent to Pittston By-Pass with easy access to all major highways. MLS#15-4247 Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
HANOVER TWP.
Immaculate Raised Ranch, 3 Bedroom 1 Bath with modern kitchen, living room/dining room combo. Ground level 1 car garage and laundry. All utilities by tenant, except sewer. First and last month rent and security with credit check. $600. Lynda@570-262-1196
wwwatlasrealtyinc.com
KINGSTON
HARDING
Warehouse/Garage 16 Commercial Units. 1,250 sq. ft., 12 ft. ceiling, 10 ft. overhead door. Each with office area & bathroom. 1 unit available. $550 + utilities. 570-947-3292
WASHINGTON SQUARE APARTMENTSS
SDK Green Acres Homes
Route 92. Spacious 3 bedroom. Clean. Appliances. Wall-to-wall carpeting. Lease, references and security. No pets. By appointment. $750/month plus utilities. 570-344-4609
Senior Citizens Housing in Downtown W-B Renting 1BR Apartments. Features air conditioning, heat, wall to wall carpeting, security & laundry facilities. Active social organization. Rental assistance available. Call For Application
823-0127
Equal Housing Opportunity
Peaceful, Park Like Garden Apartments & Spacious Townhouses Free Heat, Water & Gas Newly Renovated Swimming Pool & Fitness Center Community Room 1, 2, 3 Bedroom Apts Wall to Wall Carpet Fully Equipped Kitchens Maintenance FREE Patio/Balcony
570-288-9019 Best Location In Town Church St., Kingston
www.sdkgreenacres.com
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B04] | 10/08/15
B4 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
PITTSTON
Commercial Rental
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
RADIO SONG WRITER Crosley CR248, plays 33-1/3, 45, 78 and casettes, records all to and plays CD's, plus Record Collection 33 to 78 singles and albums. All for $350. Call 570-474-6637 or 570-417-4709 SOFA, tan, approximately 80"L., good condition, $70; Queen size bed, includes steel frame, good condition, $90; GE electric stove, 4 burners and oven, good condition, $90. 570-2399963
351 S. Main St. 12,000 sq. ft. warehouse/light manufacturing building for lease w/some office space available. $3/sq. ft. will subdivide. Some utilities by tenant. MLS #15-3859. Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
WANTED:
WWII helmets, medals, Marine Corp items! Also OLD $0.10 & $0.12 comic books. CALL 570-817-7588
FIRE HOUSE ESTATE SALE
PLAINS TOWNSHIP
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315. 1,200 sq. ft. Office space, 2,000 sq. ft. fully-equipped salon, like new! Will build to suit. 570-829-1206 PLAINS TOWNSHIP
PLAZA 315
1,000 sq. ft. 1,750 sq. ft. 3,500 sq. ft. premium front location Available immediately.
570-829-1206 Wilkes-Barre
Jewelcor CENTER
PRESTIGE OFFICE SPACE
Downtown Wilkes-Barre • Free Parking • Free Conference Room • Free Fitness Center Starting at
$350 per month
SUITES AVAILABLE Up to 5,000 sq ft.
570-822-6277 WILKES-BARRE
Office/retail space available. Liberty Cleaners building, N. Main & E. UnionSt. (Union St. side). 1,000 sq. ft. $1,000 month; everything included except gas heat. Call 570-823-4949.
By Caring Transitions 124 Lake Road At The Old Lake Harmony Fire Station Fri., Oct. 9 thru Sun., Oct. 11 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Daily 570-977-4357 Call Classifieds 570-821-2020
MCADOO
YARD SALE
401 East Grant Street Sat., 10/10 9am-4pm Lots of baby items. Household, toys, holiday decorations and furniture.
WEATHERLY
GARAGE SALE
205 Doney Run Fri. & Sat., 10/9 and 10/10 9am-1pm - Rain or Shine Household, vintage, old pedestal sink, furniture. Something for Everyone.
Weatherly
Yard Sale/Moving Sale
2611 S. Lehigh Gorge Drive Oct. 10,Saturday, 8:00 am-3:00 pm Oct., 11, Sunday, 8:00 am-2:00 pm Household items, furniture, crystal. Everything must go.
ABINGTON – SOUTH
GARAGE SALE
2 Brookfield Circle Sunday October 11th 9am-1pm Antiques, collectibles, variety of household items including seasonal ARCHABALD
YARD SALE
105 Marie Blvd. Saturday 10/10 and Sunday 10/11 7am- 2pm Halloween, Christmas, Easter, Household and more! Don't miss out!
CLARKS SUMMIT
RUMMAGE/BAKE SALE/ BASKET RAFFLE!!
222 Noble Road Saturday October 10th 8am-1pm To benefit the Kovall Memorial Scholarship fund. At Abington Heights High School cafeteria. Bag sale starting at 12 Noon.
ESTATE/YARD SALE
946 Lincoln Street/ENTIRE BLOCK! Saturday October 10th 9am-1pm Refrigerator, freezer, TV console, bikes, outdoor furniture, snowblower, etc.
DUNMORE
YARD SALE
1623 Marion Street (One way street) Sat., 10/10 8am-12pm Furniture, household, jewelry. Something for everyone.
GAS COOK TOP 30” white glass, gray trim $50. Call 570-288-0191 after 4pm
BEDROOM SET – Ethan Allen hand painted Queen size. 8 pieces total. Bed with two side tables, lingerie chest, armoirie, desk, chair and triple dresser. Asking $3,500. Scandanavian floor clock. $500. Waterford Crystal $200. 570-693-3111
SOFA
Tan sofa. Excellent condition. 79”L x 34”H. $200 negotiable. Call 570-343-1604
FLEETVILLE ANTIQUES-ART SALE
570-346-6400
ESTATE SALE
924 West Elm Street Sat., Oct. 10th 9am-3pm 2-sewing machines, full sewing boxes, Dickens village, all new, in boxes, 8 piece. Queen size bedroom set and much more.
SCRANTON FINAL MOVING SALE
737 N. Main Ave. Apt. 2 Sat. & Sun. Oct. 10th & 11th 9 am. - 5 pm. All must go! Indoor! Collectibles, TV, A/C, sewing machine, pictures, vintage oak table with 4 extra leafs and 8 chairs, records, dresser, etc.
SCRANTON
GARAGE SALE
1753 McDonough Avenue Fri., 10/9, Sat., 10/10 & Sun., 10/11 8am-2pm Old toys, antiques. Too much to list.
SCRANTON
GARAGE SALE
801 Stafford Avenue Sat., 10/10 8am-12pm Girls and women's clothing: many brand names. Household items. SCRANTON
MOVING SALE
103 South Irving Avenue Sat. 10/10 & Sun. 10/11 10am-4pm Something for everyone. Household items, crafts, books, luggage and more
MOVING SALE
323 Spring Street Sun., 10/11 9am-3pm Vintage toys, collectibles, Nascar items, antiques and more. SCRANTON
MOVING SALE
3250 Cedar Avenue Thurs., 10/8, Fri., 10/9, Sat. 10/10 8am-5pm Rain or Shine Furniture, household, toys, clothes all sizes, books, jewelry, video games. Everything needs to go.
SCRANTON
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE 1413 Euclid Avenue Village at Tripp's Park Saturday, October 10th 9am-5pm We are back! RAIN OR SHINE! This is ABSOLUTELY, positively the last sale. Costume jewelry, clothing - ladies size M-2X, Men's and children's. Shoes, toys (Batman and dinosaurs), books, electronics – complete surround system, printer, DVD player, etc. Christmas decorations, housewares. You know us! Everything in excellent condition. Don't miss out on this sale! SCRANTON Nativity Section YARD SALE 312 S. Webster Ave. Saturday Oct. 10 th 9am – 2pm NO EARLY BIRDS! Many household items, clothes, furniture and much more! SCRANTON – WEST
YARD SALE
1160 SLOAN STREET Sat. 10/10 & Sun. 10/11 9am-2pm Too much to list. Come check it out!
SCRANTON
YARD SALE
Route 407 Fleetville Sat. Oct 10 Sun. Oct 11 10am to 4pm Appletree Antiques Cutler & Company Antiques Keystone Antiques Skylake Gallery Appletree Barn Sale Cutler Cottage/Tent Sale 570-945-9395 FLEETVILLE
COTTAGE/ TENT SALE
Route 407 (Near Cutler & Company Antiques) Sat. 10/10 – Sun. 10/11 10am-4pm Arkansas Traveler Jon boat, Trek, Peugeot, Raleigh bikes, Poulan lawn tractor (for parts), new garden cart, tools, housewares, electronics, books, dvds, quality clothing, futon.
FLEETVILLE
YAMAHA BABY GRAND PIANO,with disclavier unit, mahogany, like new condition, 570-575-9337
PLUS BAKE SALE WITH WELSH COOKIES!! COVENANT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 550 MADISON AVE. FRI., Oct. 9th , 5pm-8pm, SAT., Oct. 10th , 9am-2pm Bag Sale begins at 1pm NO EARLY BIRDS PLEASE! So many items – books, toys, jewelry, decorations, linens, dishes, glassware, small appliances & more!!! Proceeds benefit: Missions of Covenant Woman 27th Great Year of Junk & Jewels!
SCRANTON
DICKSON CITY
STAMP COLLECTION - 2 Michel catalog, 2005 Germany. First day covers. Sets, mint, sheets of stamps. Huge collection of stamps & more! $6,500. 570239-3007 from 12 Noon – 5 p.m.
SCRANTON
ANNUAL JUNK & JEWELS SALE
SCRANTON
LAKE HARMONY www.atlasrealtyinc.com
FALL BARN SALE
928 Grandview Street Sat., 10/10 10 8:00am-12pm Tools, furniture, jewelry, Christmas, gardening etc.
TAYLOR
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE 929 OAK STREET Sat 10/10 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SOMETHING For EVERYONE!
TAYLOR
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE
355 N MAIN ST Sat., 10/10 8am - 2pm Furniture, antiques, toys, kids, household and more.
TAYLOR
YARD SALE
148 South Keyser Avenue Sunday October 11th 9am-5pm Too much to list. 5 families large!
THOOP
YARD SALE
185 Copperneck Street Saturday October 10th 9am-3pm Housewares, clothing, furniture, etc. THROOP
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE
FOR SALE
6 FT LONG 20 TON CAST IRON FLOOR JACK $375. 570-401-0585
Behind Appletree Antiques 1 mile south of Fleetville on Rte 407 Sat Oct. 10, Sun. Oct. 11 10-4 Collectibles, home decor, household and much more.
JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP 2012 EVINRUDE OUTBOARD MOTOR 15hp, 4 stroke, like new. Extra prop, electric start. $2,000 firm. Call Rodny 570-954-0698. BEAUTY SALON – 6 chair salon. Custom cabinets. Nail stations. Spa pedicure chair. Kingston. 570-417-1566 or 570-287-2205
Classifieds Work! FOR SALE
NEW RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT
6 burner stove with oven, $1,350; 4 ft. flat top griddle, $1,200; Floor model fryer, $950; 3 ft Salamander, $1,500; 3 ft radiant char broiler, $1,350; 4 ft. Steam table, $600; All cooking equipment LP gas. 4 ft. Bain Marie S/C, $1,250; 20 qt. Mixer SS bowl, 3 attachments & safety guard, $1,750; Burkel 12” slicer, $1,250; 4 ft. SS Work Table $165.
All Equipment NEW 570-620-2693
HOT TUB
seats 6, original $8,500,
asking $3,500
570-762-2819
MATTRESS SALE
Locally Owned All New USA Made Mattress Guy – No Hassle Shopping Twin: $159; Full: $179; Queen: $239 Financing Available. 570-288-1898
2000 PALOMINO (PHILLY) POP-UP Sleeps seven. Awning, heater, refrigerator, two burner in & out stove, king & queen bed, inside porta potty. Good canvas, no leaks, light weight. $1,950 or best offer. Call 570-771-6399 FIREWOOD – ½ ton. FREE. You must haul away. No deliveries. 570-829-4494 JEWELER'S BENCH – very nice, $295. Folding tables, great for yard sales & flea markets, $10 each. Display cases, $`10. Call 570-287-4181.
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE
104 Laurel Ridge Drive Sat., 10/10 9am-4pm Children's, women's, men's clothing. Winter jackets. Bikes, toys, video games, kitchen items & so much more
800 Block of Dudley Street Saturday October 10 9am-2pm Furniture, household, tools, toys, many items in original packaging. WAVERLY
GARAGE/REMODELING SALE
1116 North Abington Road Saturday October 10th 9am-Noon Good antiques, furniture, new and antique chandeliers, girls bed ensemble, sporting goods, holiday décor, outdoor and more! Park on Church Street or at the COM.
JERMYN
YARD SALE
116 Raymond Drive Sat., 10/10 8am-2pm Boy's clothes 4T-up, toys, ladies clothes, dishware and furniture. MADISON TWP. 2210 Madisonville Rd. MOVING SALE Sat. 10/9 thru 10/16; 10 am – 5 pm Furniture, Big Halloween, Appliances, Plus Size Clothes, Household & More! MAYFIELD
YARD SALE
Laurel Drive Saturday October 10th 8am-4pm Clothes, home decor, office supplies. Huge selection of seasonal décor. Follow the neon signs.
MOUNT COBB
LARGE COLUMBUS DAY WEEKEND SALE 1234 Mount Cobb Road, Rte 348 Sat.-Mon., October 10-12 9am-4pm RAIN OR SHINE Reasonably priced items.
PECKVILLE INDOOR FLEA MARKET Genealogical Research Society 1100 Main Street (in the old Sacred Heart Church) Fri., 10/9 & Sat., 10/10 * 9am-2pm 570-383-7661 PECKVILLE
MOVING SALE st
107 1 Street Saturday October 10th 9am-Noon Record players, antique games, household items, furniture, and more!
RICHMONDALE
YARD SALE
323 Wood Street Sat., 10/10 9am-4pm Numerous items including collection of “Friends of the Feather”
ASHLEY
ANNUAL FALL FLEA MARKET LUNCH & BAKE SALE CENTENARY United Methodist Church 26 North Main Street
October 10, 9am to 2pm No early birds! Lunch can be purchased. Food available for take out. Baby clothes, craft items, holiday items, toys, china, jewelry. CHINESE AUCTION For more information: 570-899-8073 AVOCA
YARD SALE
1038 Russell Street Sat. 10/10 & Sun. 10/11 9am-4pm Household, furniture, baby items, toys, clothing, women's clothing, DVDs, books, and more!
BEAVER MEADOWS
YARD SALE
Rear 131 Dean Street Sat., 10/10 8am-2pm Baby boy clothes, 6-mos.-12 mos., purses, girl's 3T-4T. Toys. Something for everyone! COURTDALE
RUMMAGE / BAKE SALE! Courtdale United Methodist Church 225 Courtdale Ave. Thurs. & Fri. 10/8 & 10/9 9am-6pm., Sat. 10/10 9am -1pm (Bag Day!)
EBERVALE
GARAGE SALE
152 Patch Town Road Friday, 10/9 & Saturday 10/10 8:00am – 12:00pm * Rain or shine. Hunting, fishing, comic books, sports memorabilia, clothes, household, etc.
DALLAS
Fall Rummage Sale
Dallas United Methodist Church
4 Parsonage Street Fri., Oct. 9, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. & Sat., Oct. 10, “Bag Day” 9 a.m. - noon Bake Sale & Lunch Housewares, clothing, linens, toys, holiday décor and more!
DALLAS
GARAGE SALE
Sat. Oct. 10, 8am – 2pm (No Early Birds!!) 456 Valley View Dr. Household items, dishes, knick-knacks, books, pictures, teen clothing & shoes, some furniture, some toys, & more!!!
JENKINS TWP. Multi Family
4 BAY GARAGE SALE
Meade Street - off Chestnut St.) (between Tedrick and Mitchell Sts) Friday, October 9th - 9 to 3 Saturday, October 10th - 8 to 3 Numerous Kitchen items, Small electric appliances, beautiful Crystal items, linen, Christmas galore, Jewelry, Framed prints, lamps, Fishing items, Tools, Ladies clothing, Collectibles, too much to list all.
KINGSTON
Gateway Apartments Fall Community
100 LAKE STREET 10/10 9AM-1PM; NO EARLY BIRDS RAIN DATE: 10/11 100's+ items of all kinds. Household goods, small furniture, collectibles, loclothing, books, records, some antiques. Everything! From dozens of donors. Club fundraiser. Priced to sell!
DALLAS
HUGE YARD SALE
340 Upper Demunds Road Sat., 10/10 9am-3pm Crib, some designer clothing, hand bags, books, kitchenware, holiday items, electronics, beer signs, craft items, decorative items, office chairs, patio chairs. NO EARLY BIRDS! Rain or shine. ITEMS LOCATED IN THE BARN.
DALLAS
INDOOR & OUTDOOR FLEA, CRAFT & VENDOR FAIR Rain or shine! Dallas Eastern Star Bldg. Assoc. 15 FOSTER STREET (behind CVS) Sat. October 10th 9am-3pm Vendors, Lunch & Welsh Cookies available. DALLAS
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE
Robbins Road Haddonfield Hills Saturday October 10th 8am-2pm Baby and toddler clothes, kids furniture and toys, walker, carseat/stroller, weight set, household items, Generac generator, trunk, bar stools, Mesco oven, exercise equipment, books, garden equipment, knick knacks, jewelry, electronics, snowblower, pellet stove, wicker set, above ground pool pump, furniture, household décor, records,etc
DRIFTON HUGE MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE
2271 Rt. 940 Sat. 10/10 9-5, Sun. 10/11 Noon-6 Power wheels motorcycles, brand new toys and Christmas gifts. Clothes, household, new health and beauty, laundry, etc. EDWARDSVILLE YARD SALE 180 Zerby Avenue SATURDAY OCTOBER 10 8-1PM Holiday items, books, jewelry, toys, baseball cards and much more! To Place an Ad Please Call 570-821-2020
FORTY-FORT
GARAGE SALE Sat. Oct. 10 9am–2pm 1298 Murray Street Holiday items, from Christmas trees to American Flags. Boys school clothes size 10 & up.
FREELAND
HUGE YARD SALE
Rear 302 Ridge Street Sat., Oct. 10th 8am-4pm Too many items to mention. Come early for best selection!!!!
HANOVER GREEN
YARD SALE
473 Main Road Sat., 10/10 10am-2pm Toys, household, holiday items and sports memorabilia. HANOVER TOWNSHIP
YARD SALE
50 Betsy Ross Drive Saturday October 10th 7am-2pm Nordic track eliptical and E7SV - $200, TV, wine cabinet, designer clothes, home and decorations and more! HAZLETON
ESTATE SALE!
715 West 1st Street (between Peace & Grant). Sunday, Oct. 11, 9am to 5pm White wooden dining room set, queen size bed, bedroom furniture (armoire, bureau, mirror, side tables and desk), antique mantle clock, collectible teapots & teacups, china, dishes, glassware, early American milk can, antique sewing machines, couch and matching loveseat, papasan chair, storage cabinets, accent tables, cookware, books, clothing and costume jewelry.EVERYTHING PRICED TO SELL. Cash & major credit cards accepted. No movers provided. Cash & carry!
HAZLETON
GARAGE SALE
649 Lafayette Court Sat., Oct. 10th 9am-3pm & Sun., 10/11 9am-1pm Women's clothes, children's clothes, children's items, toys and much more.
HAZLETON
MOVING SALE
35 WEST DIAMOND AVE (Off Laurel St) SAT., 10/10 8AM-4PM Women's, men's and boy's winter coats and brand name clothing. Kitchenware, glassware, collectibles, Stephen King hard cover book collection, fall and Christmas décor, Bath & Body. Toys, blankets and much more.
HAZLETON
SIDEWALK SALE 887 Alter Street Saturday, October 10th 9am-12pm Jewelry, purses, Steeler items and a variety of other items.
HAZLETON
YARD SALE
172 Birch Knoll Drive Fri., 10/9 & Oct., 10/10 10am-2pm Scrubs and beer signs.
HAZLETON
585 N. VINE STREET SAT., 10/10 8AM-12PM Kids & adult clothing, HFA polos, khaki's, shoes. Hats, gloves, scarves, socks. Books, purses, Rubbermaid storage containers, household items, Beanie Babies, Littlest Pet Shop figurines, Nintendo DS & 3DS games, Leapster Game Pad & games, Halloween costumes & décor, TV, VCR, seasonal items. School supplies, Polaroid camera, etc. HUDSON
YARD SALE
105 Cleveland Street Saturday October 10th 8am-1pm All household items, clothing, accessories and more! KINGSTON YARD SALE 20 ENO ST. Saturday, October 10th 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Books, Christmas and Halloween items, and much more!
Sun., 10/11 * 1pm-3pm
SHAVERTOWN
COMMUNITY YARD SALE
(off of Northampton St. near Kirby Park) Saturday, Oct. 10th 8:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Rain Date: Sunday, Oct. 11th On the lawn next to the Community Building Sure to be something for everyone!
Huntsville United Methodist Church 1233 Huntsville Road Saturday October10th 8am-4pm Plenty of vendors and lots of homemade food.
KINGSTON
YARD SALE
SHAVERTOWN
YARD SALE
1457 Hillside Road Saturday October 10th 10am-4pm Housewares, toys, books, DVDs, tools, clothes, and much more!
LARKSVILLE BASEMENT & GARAGE SALE
GARAGE SALE
329 Wright Street Sat., Oct 10th 9am-3pm Clothing, household items, books, sporting goods. No Early Birds
1 CLEARVIEW DRIVE Across from Wyoming Valley Motors, Route 11. Friday, Saturday & Sunday ALL ITEMS IN GARAGE 2 FOR $0.25 BASEMENT ½ PRICE.
MCADOO
GARAGE SALE
178 Haddock Road Sat. & Sun., 10/10 & 10/11 9am. - 4pm. Girl's clothes, coats, etc. Tiller, air conditioner, old signs, Halloween & more
MCADOO
YARD SALE
SUGARLOAF
142 Jeffrey Drive Sat., 10/10 8am-2pm Furniture, household, clothing & more
SUGARLOAF
GARAGE SALE
632 Rock Glen Road (3 miles west of Rt. 93) Sat., Oct. 10th 8am-1pm Complete inventory from pet supply store including aquarium supplies. Also miscellaneous tools, clothing, household items & much more!
SWOYERSVILLE
ESTATE SALE
63 Lackawanna Avenue Sat., 10/10 9am-3pm Rain or shine Furniture, household items and more.
McAdoo Heights 11 East Green Street Sat., 10/10 & Sun. 10/11 8-4 Books, CD's, DVD's, Christmas, jewelry, household, gun cabinet, etc.
Lackawanna Avenue Sat. October 10, 8am – 2pm Something for everyone. Don't miss it!
MOUNTAIN TOP
SWOYERSVILLE
ESTATE SALE
71 N. Mt. Blvd/Rt 309 across from Januzzi's Pizza. Watch for sign... FRIDAY 10/9/15 (2-6PM) SATURDAY 10/10/15 (8-1PM) CASH ONLY Bring in ad & get 20% off with purchase of $10.00 or more, excluding collectibles!!! Only 3 weekends left...don't miss out on amazing items & discounts! (50% off Clothing, (does not include accessories), Crafts, Seasonal Decorations, Glassware, CDs & DVDs, New Sweatshirts, woodworking, gardening & craft books). Handmade 5 ft. Toothbrush, Pope John Paul II pewter statue, Golf items. Disneyana, Bols Ballerina decanter, Longaberger Basket, Madame Alexander doll, vintage Stegmaier postcards. Luggage & Briefcases, vintage Tilt Table & Mirror, Vintage Commode, Luggage & Briefcases, wood printer letter sorter, plant stand, F. Bartlett framed print, Topps Gallery of Champions 1988 collection-NIB, Barbies, Bradford, Boyd's, Folkstone. Dooney & Bourke purse. New MudPie leather clutch, vintage hats & gloves. Infant to teen & fine women's adult clothing, accessories & jewelry. New women's Reeboks & Black leather ankle boots. Seasonal decorations, kitchen & household items. Linens, quilts, crib bedding set. Tons of Crafts & Puzzles. Fabric $2.00 yd.
MOUNTAIN TOP ICE LAKES
GARAGE SALE 8 Osprey Dr. Rain or Shine. Fri. & Sat. 10/9 & 10/10, 8am–2pm A little of everything. Housewares, refrigerator, dishwasher, bar sink, holiday items, tables, clothes racks, homemade items and more! MOUNTAIN TOP
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE 16 Lehigh Street Sunday October 11th 8am-1pm Kids toys and clothes, household items, and much more!
NANTICOKE
GARAGE SALE
201 Enterprise Street Sunday October 12th 8am-3pm Holiday items, birdcage, exerciser, household items, mens and womens clothing. Something for everyone!
OLD FORGE
ESTATE SALE
305 DUNN AVENUE
SATURDAY,OCTOBER 10th 9:00am. - 4:00pm. Directions: Off South Main Items Include: Entire contents of home, including nice maple kitchen set, retro kitchen set, living room furniture, bedroom furniture, antique cedar chest, vintage cafe table & chairs, glassware, Lionel train set, vintage pretzel tins & a few beer advertising items, Whirlpool refrigerator, Maytag washer, commercial Hobart meat slicer & scale, basement items and much more! CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED SALE BY COOK & COOK ESTATE LIQUIDATORS WWW.COOKANDCOOK ESTATELIQUIDATORS.COM
ORANGE (GPS DALLAS) YARD SALE 2285 West 8th Street Friday 10/9 and Saturday 10/10 9:00am-1:00pm Toys: 1970 and 1980, fishing gear, cook books, housewares, handcrafted items, and much more!
PARSONS
HAZLETON
YARD SALE
CLEARANCE & BAG DAY Large Variety of Items.
YARD SALE
553 Arthur Street Sat. 10/10 & Sun. 10/11 10am-4pm Household, toys, clothing and collectible records and art books!
St. Peter & Paul's Church
20 Nottingham Street Fri., 10/9, 9am-5pm; Sat., 10/10, 9am-2pm & Sun., 10/11 Everything Goes in the Bag!
DALLAS
GIGANTIC GARAGE SALE
PLYMOUTH
RUMMAGE SALE & FLEA MARKET
104 Virginia Drive Saturday, Oct. 10 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. No Early Birds! Variety of items
SWOYERSVILLE
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE
RUMMAGE SALE ST. ELIZABETH ANN SETON PARISH 116 Hughes St. In School Gym Mon. 10/12 9 am. - 6 pm. Tues. 10/13 9 am. - 3 pm. $2/Bag Day Wed. 10/14 9 am. - 3 pm. $1/Bag Day Bake Sale, Refreshments. Huge Variety of Items
SWOYERSVILLE
YARD SALE 29 New Sullivan Street Sun., Oct 11th 9 am. - 2 pm. Lots of kids clothes, household items, deep freezer, clothes, and more!
WEATHERLY
YARD SALE
53 Company Field Road Across street Buck Mtn. Hotel Sat.,10/10 8am-2pm Videos, household, tools, appliances, food processor, albums, records, miscellaneous, kids clothes, toys. WHITE HAVEN – East
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE East Side Inn Parking Lot Rte. 940 East Saturday October 10th 9am-1pm Household items, hunting, books, clothing, way too many items to list! WHITE HAVEN
GARAGE SALE
206 Tannery Road Fri. & Sat. 10/9 & 10/10 9am- 4pm; Sun., 10/11 9am- 1pm Holiday collectibles & décor, rock & blues CD's, books & lots more
WILKES BARRE NORTH ANNUAL RUMMAGE AND FLEA MARKET
St. Luke's United Church of Christ Corner of 471 N. Main St. & Hollenback Ave. SATURDAY, OCT. 10 SUNDAY, OCT. 11 MONDAY, OCT. 12 •Saturday: 9:00a.m. - 6:00p.m. •Sunday: 11:30 a.m. - 6:00p.m. ½ PRICE DAY •Monday: 9:00a.m-6:00p.m. BAG DAY BAKE SALE & RAFFLE! Items include: dishes, furniture, jewelry, rugs, linens, toys, clothing, shoes, books. Greek Roasted Chicken Dinner With roasted potatoes, green beans, pie/cake, ice cream, soda, coffee. Available for eat-in or take-out
WILKES-BARRE
$2.00 Bag Sale
Saturday Oct 10 9am – 1 pm Albright United Methodist Church 116 Dana Street WILKES-BARRE
ESTATE SALE
36 Bruce Lane Saturday 10/10 and Sunday 10/11 9am - 3pm Everything Must Go!
Wilkes-Barre Township
WANTED: Lark Mountain Marketplace Auction Co.
is looking for high quality and unusual items such as Vintage Costume Jewelry, Vintage Holiday Items, Old Advertising Items, Mining Items, Trains, etc. for our monthly Auctions. If you have items you would like to sell, please contact us at
PITTSTON
570-822-8855
15 Whitman Drive Quail Hill Development Saturday October 10th 8am-4pm 12 years in the making! Huge selection. Electronics, exercise equipment, small appliances, Christmas and Easter décor, luggage, brand name purses, Spongebob bounce house, bath and bed sets, toys/games, lawn furniture, large floating pool island & more!
ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENT ITEMS TUESDAYS FROM FROM 12 NOON – 3 P.M. AT THE AUCTION HALL 369 Johnson St. Wilkes-Barre Township
YARD SALE
PLAINS
YARD SALE
60 Perkins Street Sat., Oct. 10th 9am-2pm CD's, DVD's, holiday decorations, clothing and much more. ROCK GLENN
MOVING SALE
1302 Park Street FRI 10/9 & SAT. 10/10 9am-4pm. Princess house, tile top dinette set, seasonal decorations, and more!
For Appointment
WILKES-BARRE TWP.
CHRISTMAS GARAGE SALE 860 Wilkes-Barre Twp. Blvd. Saturday and Sunday 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Angels, lights, balls, décor, figurines, train sets, lots of Christmas WILKES-BARRE
YARD SALE
29 Slattery Drive Saturday, October 10th 9am-1pm Rain Date: 10/11 9am-1pm Variety of items.
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B05] | 10/08/15
18:27 | STAHLLERSA
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
WILKES-BARRE TWP.
NEW HOLLAND BOOMER 8N TRACTOR
CHEVY 2003 MONTE CARLO SS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 B5
GMC, '04 ENVOY
ACME Auto Sales
Must sell! $5,000 Firm
1009 Penn Ave., Scranton
4 wheel drive. Silver with grey interior. Well kept; excellent condition 570-762-1068
JEEP '94 WRANGLER SAHARA EDITION
COME CHECK OUT WHAT YOUR FRIENDS & FAMILY HAVE BEEN TALKING ABOUT!
LARK MOUNTAIN MARKETPLACE
The area's first antique & collectible mall. We are handicap accessible too. We have thousands of items from every era & for every budget. 306 Wilkes-Barre Township Blvd. (across from Applebee's). Complimentary coffee. New items arriving daily. Hours: Closed Mon. Tues. & Wed., 10-6 Thurs. & Fri., 10-7 Sat., Noon - 6; Sun., Noon - 5 570-822-8855 www.larkmountainmarketplace .com Like us on Facebook
50 hp CVT transmission, Chrome roll bar. 115 hrs. Will eventually be a collectors tractor, limited edition only 984 made. Includes 72" Bush Hog back blade and chains. Beautiful tractor, serious inquires only. $18,000.00 570-351-6145
HOPKINS FARM
Open 7 Days a week. Dawn till Dusk everyday. Apples. Fall Decorations. Pumpkins, Gourds, Hay Bales & more. 502 River Road, Falls. 570-388-2858
YARD SALE RAIN OR SHINE
WILKES-BARRE: NORTH
RUMMAGE SALE
St. Peter and Paul's Ukranian Catholic Church Corner N. River & W. Chestnut Street (Near General Hospital) Sat., 10/10 9am-2pm Clothes, handbags, books furniture and LOTS more! Also Baba's Kitchen featuring homemade food. WYOMING ESTATE SALE 170 East Fourth St. Sat. Oct. 10th 8am – 4pm Furniture, toys, tools, appliances and outdoor furniture.
WYOMING
ESTATE SALE
19 Valley View Drive Saturday, October 10 9am-3pm Directions: Follow 8th St past Carverton Rd, then turn left onto Mt. Olivet Rd, Follow Mt. Olivet Rd then turn Left onto Valley View Drive. Watch for Signs!! Contents of Beautiful Home: Sofas, Chairs, Tables, Holiday Decor, Decorative Pieces, Glass, Linens, Fabric, Fur Coat, Books, Housewares, Kitchen, Wall Art, Womens Clothing, Plus Garage Full of Tools, Yard Items, Grills, Honda Hydrostatic Track Drive Snowblower, Gas Mower, metro shelving, Ski Equipment, & Much More!!! Something for Everyone! All Items Priced to Sell.
Sale by Wm. Lewis www.wvestates.com
WYOMING
ESTATE SALE
700 WYOMING AVENUE
SATURDAY,OCTOBER 10th 8:00am. - 3:30pm. Directions: Across from Wyoming Monument. Items Include: Entire contents of home, including beautiful 4 poster bed, bedroom furniture, many book shelves, kitchenware, decorator items, lots of holiday, electronics, video games and systems, little tikes activity sets, vintage kenner's 6ft. Styrofoam dinosaur, costumes and much more! CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED SALE BY COOK & COOK ESTATE LIQUIDATORS WWW.COOKANDCOOK ESTATELIQUIDATORS.COM
WYOMING
HOUSE SALE
45 Breese St., Next to 8th St. Saturday, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Jewelry, refrigerator, freezer, washers, gas dryer, dishwasher, kitchen set, metal cabinets, recliners, tables, lamps, books, desks, bedroom furniture, linens, Christmas, over 50 new dolls in boxes, sewing machines, mirrors, pictures, luggage, tools, games, glassware, canning jars, cedar chest, marble top table, buffet, server, cameras, records & much more
WYOMING
RUMMAGE SALE
1st Presbyterian Church of West Pittston Being held at THE INSTITUTE 40 Institute Street Saturday, October 10th 9am-3pm Rain or Shine Bag Day will be held at 1pm. Refreshments Available.
Exterior black with black leather interior. 4 cylinder, 5 speed automatic. 71,200 miles. Bluetooth wireless data link for hands free phone, power moon roof, power front heated seats, heated side mirrors, 360 watt stereo with sub woofer, satellite radio ready, remote keyless power door locks + many more. Excellent physical/mechanical condition. $14,500. PRICE REDUCED ! Call 570-362-3520
AUDI '01 S4 QUATTRO
4 door sedan. Dark blue, V6 turbo 2.7 liter engine, manual 6 speed transmission, all wheel drive, ABS, (4 wheel). Leather, heated front/power seats, CD (multi-disc) Bose speakers, power glass sunroof, air, power windows/door locks. Cruise control, alloy wheels. 4 new tires. Recently inspected. Good condition. 107K miles. Asking $4,500 or best offer. 570-696-3596
AUDI 2006 A6 AVANT AWD
Black with beige leather. 3.2L 6 cylinder, automatic transmission, sunroof, navigation, 17” wheels, winter package, full power. Recently serviced, new tires.
$9,995
570-498-6935 or 570-587-1292
BMW 2006 E46 330CI
22,000 miles. Sparkling graphite metallic with gray interior, soft blue convertible top. 3 liter, 6 cylinder. $16,500. Call 570-857-0446
BMW 2007 335I CONVERTIBLE
Hard top, black sapphire. Tan, leather interior. 68,000 miles. Automatic, Inspection. Good tires. $22,000. 570-857-7135
BMW 2009 328 XI
New Lower Price $18,700 570-445-7438
Call for more information and picture.
BUICK 2000 LESABRE
Needs some work. Asking $1,000 O.B.O. 570-735-8409
CADILLAC '00 ELDORADO
Very good looking, must see! Great condition. Needs some minor work. 87,000 miles. Looks like convertible but it's not! It has a sunroof! Fully equipped: heated seats. Black/white leather interior. CD changer. Great on miles. All brand new tires. $4,800 or best offer. 570-266-9360
CADILLAC '05 CTS
120,000 miles. Very good condition. $7,500. Call 570-235-1563
Looking For A Buyer, Seller, Employer or Employee? The Citizens' Voice Classified Ads Will Help You! 570-821-2020
Silver. Current inspection. New brakes. 6 disc CD changer, new battery. Runs good. No rust. $2,500 or best offer. 570-825-2141
CADILLAC 2013 ATS
2.0 turbo, AWD, black, 4,400 miles. Keyless start. Satellite radio. R title. Premium sound system. Retails at over $30,000.
Must Sell. Purchased new car. $18,700. Warranty available. CALL 570-878-7760
you'll start saving money immediately!
CHEVY 1980 CORVETTE
You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot!!
BICHON FRISE Cute & Cuddly. Males, Family Raised. Dewormed. Shots. Call 570-943-2184
Puppies
CHEVY 2009 MALIBU LTZ
44,000 miles, remote starter, sunroof, all options. FWD, good in snow. New tires. Garage kept. 1-Owner. No accidents. Non-smoking. Very clean, well maintained. Clear A-Title. Red jewel tint. $11,000. 570-401-8772
CHEVY 2010 COBALT LT COUPE
White with black interior, Air, power windows, locks, cruise control, factory remote start, 39,000 miles, R-Title. $7,500 570-222-4140
CHEVY MALIBU 2005
LS-V6 150,00 miles, all power, new brakes. Tires Excellent/Rust Free/Good condition $2595 570-655-6742
Yellow with oyster interior. Automatic with L48 engine approximately 50,500 miles. Owned 31 years. Serious inquires only. $8000.00 570-351-6145
CHEVY 1994 CORVETTE Excellent condition. Low mileage.
$9,700. Call: 570-241-5568
CHEVY 1995 CORVETTE PACE CAR
HAVANESE
All colors & both genders available. $1,000 to $1,500 (some for less) www.willowspringcavaliers.com 215-538-2179
PONTIAC 2001 GRAND PRIX
Good running car, looks great. Automatic. Power windows & power locks. 4 door. Maroon. New tires, new exhaust & new starter. $3,000 or best offer. Call 570-501-0595.
PORSCHE '11 PANAMERA
14,500 miles. Like new. Jet Green metallic. Luxor beige interior. Never out in Winter. Fully loaded. $48,500. 570-881-0177
VOLKSWAGEN 2000 BEETLE
1.8 turbo, 5 speed manual transmission. Very good condition. Very clean. $3,200 or best offer. Call 570-735-3479.
VOLKSWAGEN 2001 PASSAT
1.8 turbo, 5 speed. Runs & drives excellent. Maroon in color. $2,500 or best offer. Call 570-466-8791.
CHRYSLER 2012 200 CONVERTIBLE
44,000 miles. Excellent condition. 4 cylinder. 29MPG/highway. Silver. 2 new tires, recent inspection. Warranty. Drastically Reduced $12,000 570-647-6441
DODGE AVENGER RT '10
CALL 570-290-5656
MERCURY 2003 MOUNTAINEER
V8, AWD, automatic, fully equipped, heated seats, windows, sunroof, 3rd row seat, one owner, 128,000 original miles, recently inspected. New transmission, Sunroof, charcoal gray, very good condition,
REDUCED! $4,500 570-675-2468
TOYOTA '99 FORERUNNER SR5
Rolling chassis assembly complete. Good motor and drive train. $1500 negotiable. Call 570-510-0113 EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
#1 in Customer Satisfaction!
Black Z71 LT Crew Cab 4 door , power windows , 5 passenger grey interior like new, front bucket seats with rear split fold down, 4WD automatic transmission, 5 cylinder engine, with a tow package, factory bed liner & ladder rack. Alloy wheels, tinted windows, inspected ,new brakes, new battery . great running condition. 83k miles asking $12,500. Scranton Area. 570- 702- 1429
Example:
CHEVY '05 COLORADO
2 Reg. Cab, 6' box, EXTRA CLEAN! $4495 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN! ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
FORD 1997 RANGER LXT
Extended Cab 4 .0 motor, automatic, 4 wheel drive. New: 4 shackles, shocks, muffler, exhaust pipe, tail pipe, brakes, master cylinder, timing chain, tires, alternator, plugs, wires, distributor cap. $2,500 or best offer. 570-735-3479 4 door. 83,945 miles. Dual VVT 2.4 litre engine, new front brakes, rear brakes are good. 4 brand new tires. Oil & filter changed. Loaded. Leather interior. $10,999. Serious inquiries only. Car can be seen at Ben's Auto, Rte. 309, Wilkes-Barre Twp. Call 570-760-0773.
FORD '14 FUSION
Sterling gray speckled clear coat. Black cloth interior. 14,500 miles. Has sports package: fog lights & spoiler. Purchased automobile brand new. Body is in perfect condition. Purchased new for $24,000. Asking $14,799. 570-822-0398 OR 570-446-2662
FORD 2004 F150 XLT
DAVE'S
USED CAR SALES
101,000 miles. Excellent condition.
2008 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming
$13,000 Call 570-582-9881
“The little Guy With The BIG Savings”!
TOYOTA 2001 TACOMA
(570)714-1980
All Vehicles Are Now
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED!
White, 2.4 liter engine, 4 cylinder, automatic transmission replaced with 36k unit-have receipt. 6.6 ft. box, 245k, AC, cassette, no rust, NEW inspection. New frame. $3,999. Dealer. Call 570-876-1870 Mon. - Fri. 8:30 am. – 5:00 pm. Sat. 8:30 am. - 1:00 pm.
HONDA 2009 ACCORD 2 DOOR COUPE LX
Blue, 4 cylinder. 5 speed. Adult driven, clean/non smoker 63,000 miles. $11,000. Call for details.570-650-1100
HONDA 2009 ACCORD
4 Door LX. Polished metal grey with black interior. 53,000 miles. Automatic. 1 owner. Adult, non smoker. No accidents. Very well maintained by Honda dealer. Great car in great condition! Carfax available. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE! ONLY $9995! 570-947-8740
LEXUS 2007 ES350
4 door, privately owned by one owner. All options. Only 64k. Burgundy in color, like new condition. Priced for quick sale. $14,900 or best offer! 570-954-1257
LEXUS 2010 RX350 AWD WITH SUNROOF
3.5 liter, V6, automatic. 18” aluminum alloy wheels, dual zone climate control with rear vents; Tungsten pearl, all the options available, comfort package, premium audio system, AM/FM/CD, Blue tooth Technology, XM Satellite radio, cruise control, navigation system, premium package, tow prep package, genuine wood interior trim, all power. $29,995. Call for more details. 570-226-3819
CHEVROLET 2000 EXPRESS 2500
Ladder racks, built in bins and shelves, trailer hitch. Rebuilt transmission. 4 new tires as well. Perfect work van. White in color. $2,800 O.B.O. Call 570-655-9487 or 570-479-4315
CHEVROLET '03 TAHOE
All power. Dark green. Air conditioning works. New tires, new brakes. Great condition. 157,000 miles. Asking $6,200. Call 570-852-0042
CHEVROLET EQUINOX 2013 LT 2 -V6
Garage kept, like new, 8,000 K, under factory warranty, $21,900. 570-654-6494 or 570-855-8669
FORD '01 EXPLORER SPORT
Only 64,000 miles. Runs great! Needs nothing except inspection sticker. All power. Cruise. Alloy wheels. Maroon 2 tone with grey cloth interior. These items are all new: front hubs, front brakes, muffler & tailpipe, battery, rocker panels. Truck has no rust! $5,000 or best offer. 570-709-2479.
FORD '97 MUSTANG COBRA SVT
High miles. Many after market parts. Asking $5,500 or best offer. 570-709-2479
4 door, automatic, Sunroof, navigation system. Low miles; 32,500. Red exterior with cream interior. Beautiful. Wood dashboard. $23,500. 570-288-5211
To Place an Ad Please Call 570-821-2020
NISSAN '00 ALTIMA SE
5 speed, 4 cylinder, power sunroof. New brakes. Inspected. Looks good; runs great. $2,200. 570-235-0525
Affordable Vehicles ONLINE www.
MERCEDES 2012 BENZ 300
SPORTS EDITION
SUVs, Vans, Trucks & 4x4's
10 Chevy 1500 Silverado LT, Grey, X-Cab, 4x4 Truck 10 Dodge Journey SXT AWD, Black 3rd Seat 08 Cadillac Escalade AWD, Pearl White w/ Tan Leather, Navigation 08 Chevy Equinox Sport AWD, Silver, 31K, Leather 08 Chrysler Town & Country Ltd. Blue, Entertainment Center, 7 Passenger Mini Van 08 Jeep Liberty Sport, V6, 4x4 08 Kia Sportage EX AWD, Black, V6 07 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Blue 4 Dr., 7 Passenger Mini Van 07 Ford Edge SEL AWD, Dove Grey w/ Tan Leather 07 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer, Plum w/ Tan Leather, V6, 4x4 07 Jeep Gr. Cherokee Laredo, Black w/ Grey Leather, Sunroof, V6, 4x4 07 Nissan Murano SL, Burgundy w/ Black Leather, V6, Navigation, AWD 07 Nissan Xterra Off Road 4x4, Yellow V6 07 Volvo XC90, Black, 3rd Seat, AWD 06 Chevy Colorado, Crew Cab, Black, Z-71, 4 Dr., 4x4 Truck 06 Ford Escape XLT 4x4, White, V6 06 Ford F-150 XLT Blue, Super Cab 4x4 Truck 06 Ford Ranger Super Cab XLT, Silver V6, 4x4 Truck 06 Jeep Gr. Cherokee Laredo 4x4 Green w/ Tan Leather, V6 06 Jeep Liberty Ltd. 4x4, Blue w/ Grey Leather 05 Dodge Ram 1500 Quad Cab SLT Maroon, V8, 4 Dr, 4x4 Truck 05 Ford Escape Ltd. 4x4, Silver, V6 05 Ford Expedition XLT Black w/ Grey Leather, 3rd Seat, 4x4 05 Kia Sorento LX AWD, Silver, V6 05 Mercury Mountaineer Premium Red, 3rd Seat, AWD 04 Dodge Durango Ltd., Grey w/ Grey Leather, Sunroof, 4x4 04 Nissan Titan SE, Black, 4 Dr. Crew Cab, 4x4 Truck 04 Toyota Highlander, Black w/ Tan Interior, 4x4 03Chevy 1500 LS Reg. Cab 4x4 Truck White 03 Ford Explorer XLT 4x4, Green, 3rd Seat, 78K 03 Ford E-150 Cargo Van, White 03 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, Silver, 4x4 03 Kia Sorrento LX AWD, Silver, 4 Cyl. 03 Nissan Murano SE, Gold, V6, AWD 02 Dodge Dakota Quad Cab SLT Blue, V8, 4x4 Truck 02 Dodge Ram 1500 Quad Cab SLT 4 Dr., V8, 4x4 Truck, Silver 01 Chevy Tracker LT 4x4, White, V6 99 Chevy Suburban Black, 3rd Seat, 4x4 99 Ford Expedition Eddie Bauer 4x4 Blue w/ Tan Leather
AUTOMOBILES
FORD 2009 F150 SUPER CAB
HONDA 2007 ACCORD 4 DOOR EX V6
68,000 miles. New brakes & rotors. 4 new Michelin tires. $10,000. 570-346-6746 HONDA 2007 CIVIC LX Mint, one owner, ONLY 28,500 miles. Silver with grey interior. Just inspected, no issues, put on brand new tires. Interior is in showroom condition. Exterior is in excellent condition. Kelly Blue Book is $9,200, Asking $9,000.00. Call 570-241-2987
14 Infiniti Q60 Hard Top Convertible, Pearl White w/ Black Leather, Nav., 4,500 Miles 13 Suzuki SX4 Crossover, White, 4 Cylinder, AWD 12 Ford Focus SE, White, Auto.,4 Cyl 11 Chevy Impala, Silver, V6 10 Chevy Malibu LT, White, Chrome Wheels, 4 Cyl., Auto. 10 Kia Forte LX, White, 5 Speed 07 Dodge Charger SXT, Silver w/ Tan Leather 07 Hyundai Sonata, Whtie, V6 06 Honda Accord EX, Grey w/ Tan Leather, 5 Speed 06 Infiniti G35X, Silver, AWD 05 Audi A6 Quattro, Silver, Black Leather, 3.2 V6, AWD 04 Hyundai Sonata GLS, Blue 04 Mercury Grand Marquis LS, Silver w/ Grey Leather, 90K 03 Buick LeSabre, Green, V6 01 Audi A6 Quattro AWD, Silver w/ Black Leather 73 Porsche 914 2.1, Green & Black, 5 Speed, Targa Top 05 Kawasaki Ninja 500R Motorcycle, Blue, 5,300 Miles
Classifieds Work!
4 x 4 Super Cab 70,000 miles. V-8, 5.4. $10,500. 570-704-9472
FORD 2002 EXPLORER XLT
142,000 miles. Blue on blue. New tires & brakes. Very, very good condition. Runs great. Asking $3,800. 570-239-5595 or 570-762-4107
FORD 2002 F-150 XL
Only 527 made! Very rare! Very low mileage. Garage kept, never out in bad weather. For details
White with Sunroof, garage kept. Brand new tires, leather interior, navigation system, park assist and heated rear and front seats. 75,000 miles. Asking $33,000. 570-690-3840
CHEVY 2006 COLORADO
4 cylinder, 89,000 miles. Blue with black top. $7,500 or best offer. 570-779-0604
CAVALIER KING CHARLES SPANIEL Prices reduced. AKC. Health certified. $1,000 to $2,000
$8,000 570-696-3598
CHRYSLER 2008 SEBRING CONVERTIBLE
4 door. Inspected. Very good condition. 124,000 miles. $3,000 or best offer. Call 570-472-7655
PUPPIES
$400. Call 570-204-2549
4 door, blue, 2.2 4 cylinder, automatic, power windows, CD, rear defroster, 79k, PA Title. Reduced $5,199. Dealer. Call 570-876-1870 M-F 8:30-5, Sat. 8:30-1.
LINCOLN 2000 CONTINENTAL
Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
BIEWER YORKSHIRE CROSSES
JEEP 2004 LIBERTY
Silver, 3.7V6 Engine, 4 Wheel Drive, Automatic Transmission, Air Conditioner, Power Windows, Power Locks, 101,000 Miles. Runs Great. $4,500. Kingston. 570-709-6298.
V8, 4.7 liter, 4x4, 117,000 miles, excellent condition,
125K miles, 6 speed manual, all options including T-roof, good condition, runs great. $6,000. Call 570-299-9972
BMW 2014 X1
When you start 'flashing' your
Parents on premises. Vet checked. Ready to go. Males. $1,200.
Excellent condition. 2 door hardtop, 4.0 litre, 5 speed stick. Everything new! $5,300 negotiable. Call 570-824-1796 or 570-817-7611
JEEP 2007 COMMANDER SPORT
CHEVY 2008 COBALT LT
automatic, S drive, 28i sport model, approximately 30MPG, rear wheel drive, 15,000 miles, silver, with leather interior, R title, retails $28,000.
CADILLAC '94 SEDAN DEVILLE
BIEWER YORKSHIRE TERRIERS
PONTIAC 1995 TRANS AM
Classifieds WORK!
2 door coupe. White. Brand new tires. Sun roof. Excellent condition. Recently detailed. $18,500 570-851-8511
69,855 miles. Garage kept. Very, very good condition. Standard options. Gray with gray leather interior. Reduced to $11,500 570-760-5835
Puppies
Well maintained, 2 owners, minor cosmetic issues. Mainly highway mileage and all required maintenance was performed regularly as it runs great, 128,000 miles, $2999 OBO 570-406-5307
ACURA 2010 TSX
CADILLAC '10 DTS
Call for details after 8 p.m. Wilkes-Barre Animal Hospital Dr. I.H. Kathio 570-821-9390 Being a VIP Subscriber has its privileges
Cars
OLDSMOBILE 2000 BRAVADA Platinum Edition, V6, AWD, ABS Brakes, power windows & seat, heated seat, moon roof, air,cruise, roof rack, leather, new tires. 110,800 Miles, $2500. 570 881-8228
LEXUS 2011 GX-460
classified@citizensvoice.com
LOW COST SPAY & NEUTER CLINIC FOR CATS
(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
acmecarsales.net
WILKES-BARRE 111 Wood Street, Rear Saturday Oct 10th 9am-2pm Electric Wheelchair, Halloween and Christmas decorations, toaster oven, ladies good clothes 14 thru 18. Kids toys and little girls clothes. Princess house punch bowl/ladle and cups. Microwave oven, 18 piece punchbowl set-complete. Jars: pickle, jelly and juice. Tools and some new merchandise. Girls white Christening gown – 4t brand new! Too much to mention!
570-343-1959
V6, Automatic transmission, regular cab, 129,000 miles, Black with gray interior, a/c, bed liner, tilt steering wheel, cruise control and am/fm radio with cassette, 6 foot box, good brakes and tires, inspected, runs well and serviced regularly, located in Scranton. Asking $4,500.Call anytime. 570-840-9233
ROCHESAUTOSALES .com
829-Cars (2277)
13 KIA OPTIMA EX, 4 Cyl., Auto., PW, PL, PM, PS, Cooled & Heated Leather Seats, Eco-mode, 24K Miles Clearance $18,495 13 CHEVY CRUZE LS, Only 16K! Alloys, New tires, PW, PL, PM SALE $14,995 13 FORD FOCUS SE, 30+ MPG, 1 Owner, 4 Cyl., Auto., PW, PL, PM, Traction Control SALE $13,995 13 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GLS, 13K Miles, 4 Cyl., Auto., Bluetooth, Alloy Wheels Clearance $12,593 12 NISSAN ALTIMA, Auto., 2.5 4 Cyl., PW, PL, PM, 28K Miles! Reduced $13,783 11 BMW 3 SERIES, Convertible Coupe, Heated Leather Seats, PW, PM, PL, PS CLEARANCE $24,995 08 HYUNDAI AZERA LTD., 6 Cyl. Auto., Heated Leather, PW, PL, PM, PS, Power Rear Sun Shade Reduced $10,995 08 SUZUKI SX4 AWD, Alloys, Roof Rack, PL, PM, PWSALE $8995 07 FORD FUSION SE, 4 Cyl., Auto PM, PL, PW, Only 54K Miles! $10,995 06 HONDA ACCORD EX, 4 Cyl., Auto., 2 Dr., 67K, Sunroof, Leather Clearance $9995 Visit Our Website @ www.
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daves used car sales
WE BUY CARS Auto Detailing Available
BMW '08 X3
4 Dr., 6 Cyl., Auto., Sunroof EXTRA SHARP! $16,495
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales
Buick '05 Lacrosse
444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227 BUICK '00 LeSABRE
4 Door Sedan, PA Inspected, Runs Very Well, 101K $1400
Gorgeous! Leather, Low Miles, Must See! $4925
BARN FIND MOTORS
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
BUYING JUNK CARS & TRUCKS Highest Prices Paid In Cash 570-288-8995
Also Buying USED Cars & Trucks SELLING USED TIRES & BATTERIES $20.00 & UP
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B06] | 10/08/15
B6 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
Automobiles
Tom Driebe Auto Sales
531 N. Keyser Ave., Scranton ( Near Bolus Motor Lines )
Call: 570-350-4541 Specializing In Vehicles
CHEVY '10 COBALT LT
Under $5,000!
'07 Chevy Malibu LS, 4 Cylinder Gas Miser. Auto, Air, PW, Newest Inspection, Save Thousands & Steal This One! $4975 '06 Chevy Malibu LS, 4 Cylinder Gas Miser, Auto., Air, Alloys, Newest Inspection Local Trade, Great Car At A Great Price! $4975 '06 Hyundai Elantra GLS,4 Cyl., Gas Miser, Auto., Air, PW, Tape Deck, Local Trade, 1 Owner, Looks & Runs Like New! Save Thousands! $3995 '04 Chevy Impala LS, V6, Auto., Air, Low Miles, Looks & Runs Like New! Newest Inspection REDUCED! $3995 '04 Hyundai Elantra GS, 4 Cylinder Gas Miser, Auto., Air, PW, Newest Inspection, Local Trade ONLY $2975 '02 Hyundai Sonata XL, V6, Auto., Air, Alloys, Leather, Looks & Runs Like New, Only 46K! Steal this One! $3995 '00 Lincoln Continental, V8, Auto., Air, Alloys, Leather, Low Miles, Local Trade, Looks & Runs Great! $3975 '89 Buick Riveria,3800 V6, Auto., Air, Moonroof, FWD,Wire Wheels, New Michelin Tires, Newest Inspection. Just 70K! REDUCED! $3975 We CAN Get You Financed! www.tomdriebeonline.com Call: 570-344-8000
'09 VW JETTA SEL
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
KELLY
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
Chevy '86 Corvette 33K, 6 Cyl., Auto., Stock# W0043A $24,400 '10 MERCEDES BENZ GL450
54K, V8, 4 Speed, 4 New Tires With Warranty! $6995
Freshly Serviced, State Inspected & Warrantied. Join Our Family Of Thousands Of Satisfied Customers! ( FINANCING AVAILABLE ) Car Fax Available On ALL Vehicles!
DODGE '07 CALIBER
AUTOMATIC, 4 CYL., SHARP, SPORTY CAR! $4495 Call for Details & Other Specials! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
77K Miles, Nicely Equipped, Call Today! '11 BUICK LaCROSSE CXL 43K Miles. $19,995
Call For Hours
'12 HARLEY DAVIDSON ELECTRA GLIDE ULTRA
DODGE '08 CALIBER
Call For Hours
Only 8K Miles! Call Today!
'09 ACURA TSX
CHEVY '98 S-10 PICKUP
1 Owner, 4 Cyl., 5 Speed, Like Brand New!! $3495 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN! Stock# 70360C $9900 '12 BUICK LACROSSE
ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
CHEVY 2006 IMPALA SS
Black Beauty w/ Black Leather, Moonroof, Only 83K!SUPER CLEAN SUPER SPORT $6990!
DODGE '09 CARAVAN
HANDYMAN SPECIAL! Looks & Runs Great! Needs Some Work $2995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
'10 DODGE GR. CARAVAN SE
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
Looking For A New Car? Check Out: The Citizens Voice Call 570-821-2020 to place a classified ad
CHEVY 2013 SONIC LT
79K, Stock# 70347B $8900 NEW! '14 INFINITI Q60 CONVERTIBLE
Stock# 70159 MSRP $54,640...SALE $46,900
Chrysler '06 Pacifica
'12 HONDA CRV EX-L
Gold, 1 Owner, 73K $5950
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
DODGE '93 DAKOTA
Chrysler '06 Town & Country
46K, Stock# 70127A $18,700 '13 HONDA ACCORD EX-L
6 CYL., AUTO., EVERYONE RIDES FOR ONLY $2995! CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
Chrysler '07
Town & Country Touring
Extra Clean, Sto-N-Go, 124K $6995 Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
www.rochesautosales.com
4 CYL., AUTOMATIC SHARP, CLEAN CAR! $3995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
New Brakes, Tires, Inspection, Low Miles, Extra Clean! $3995
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
CHEVY '07 COBALT LT
Crossroads Motors
570-825-3943 or 820-7692
Moving!
All Prices Reduced!... & We Will Consider ALL Reasonable Offers!!
CHEVY '01 MALIBU 4 Cyl., Great On Gas! $5995 *
Only 31K Miles! Absolutely Like New! $4750
Chevy '06 Equinox LT AWD, Fully Equipped, 104K $6995
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
When you start “flashing” your you'll start saving money immediately! You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot! Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage www.rochesautosales.com
4X4, X-CAB, AUTO., V8, BARGAIN PRICE! $9995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
'14 CHEVY IMPALA LTZ, Leather, Only 15K! Factory Warranty $16,499 '13 FORD E-250 CARGO,6850 Miles, Like New Condition! SOLD! '13 BUICK LACROSSE, Only 15K! Leather, Factory Warranty & Certified! Backup Camera, Nav. $18,899 '11 DODGE NITRO 4x4, Factory 47K, Warranty Powertrain SOLD! '11 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS, Auto., Gold, Only 24K! Factory Warranty Was $16,499....SALE! $12,799 '09 JEEP WRANGLER X 4x4 Auto., Only 28K! SOLD! '03 FORD WINDSTAR, 7 Passenger, Rear Air $4899 '02 FORD T-BIRD Convertible, Hard & Soft Top, Auto., 1 Owner SOLD! '00 CHEVY BLAZER, 4x4, 88K $3899 TITLE, TAGS & FULL NOTARY SERVICE 6 MONTH WARRANTY TRADES WELCOME WE BUY VEHICLES!
570-829-2277
CHEVY '09 SILVERADO
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
FORD '04 F-150
X-CAB, My Personal Truck! V8, 4x2 $6999
CHEVY '08 HHR
4 Door, 4 Cylinder, Excellent! $5495 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN! ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
Ford '05 Focus ZX-4 Auto., Air, Alloys 100K $5800
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
BARN FIND MOTORS
4x4, Crew Cab, 41K Miles Call For Details!
351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
Only 109K Miles! Nicely Equipped $14,995
4x4, Ext. Cab, Lift & Body Kit, 37” Tires $3600
'07 HONDA CR-V EXL AWD 86K Miles, Great Family Vehicle! Call Today!
BARN FIND MOTORS
'10 HONDA CIVIC LX 26K Miles, Honda Certified $12,995
EASTERN AUTO
'08 PONTIAC SOLSTICE
351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
816 Moosic Rd., Old Forge
FORD '06 ESCAPE LIMITED 4X4
HEATED LEATHER SEATS, SUNROOF ABSOLUTELY LIKE NEW! $5995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
FORD '06 FOCUS
2 DR., AUTO., 4 CYL., REAL NICE CAR! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
570-457-0034
Call For Hours
CHECK OUT SOME SWEET DEALS! '06 CHEVY Cobalt, Coupe, 67K $6750 '06 FORD Taurus, 116K $4500 '05 DODGE Neon, 59K $5500 '04 FORD Escape 4x4, Sunroof, Leather $4500 '03 MITSUBISHI Outlander, 70K $7000 '03 MERCURY Sable, 77K $5000 '03 CHEVY Blazer 4x4, 116K $4995 '02 JEEP Gr. Cherokee Laredo Leather, Sunroof, 55K $7000 '99 FORD Ranger 4x4, Stick $2995 '98 FORD Contour, 73K $3495
ELI'S Sales & Service
1425 Main St. • Jenkins Twp.
'12 VW BEETLE Summer is here!Call For Details! '10 NISSAN MAXIMA 91K Miles, Nicely Equipped! $15,995 '05 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 REGULAR CAB
4x4, 81K Miles, Beautiful Truck! $13,995
FESZCHAK'S AUTO
LIMITED, Nicely Equipped $7995*
'08 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY MINI VAN 85K Miles $12,995 '11 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY MINI VAN Touring-L, Sunroof, DVD, Nav., Heated Steering, 40K Miles $AVE!
10 FORD Focus SES 4 Door, 60K........................$9999 08 CHEVY Cobalt LS 2 Dr 2 Door, 82K........................$5595 07 CHEVY Cobalt LT 75K.....................................$5995 07 CHEVY Cobalt LS 4 Door, 78K.......................$4995 05 CHEVY Cobalt LS 54K.....................................$6195 05 CHEVY Cavalier 2 Door, 76K........................$4295 04 FORD Mustang GT Super Sharp! With Many Extras!!.........$7595 All Vehicles Serviced & Come With Warranty
River St., Plains 570-823-4077
FORD '07 FIVE HUNDRED
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
'05 BUICK LESABRE
FORD '07 FUSION LIMITED 55K Miles, Well Equipped, Won't Last Long!... Take It Home Today! '08 HYUNDAI VERACRUZ 68K Miles, 3rd Row Seating Call For Details! '07 PONTIAC TORRENT AWD Only 27K Miles! Call Today!
AWD, V6 $9295 *
'13 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
CHRYSLER 03 PT CRUISER
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
www.rochesautosales.com
2WD Flat Bed Truck, 3.9 V6, New Fuel Pump, Auto., Grey w/ Red Bench Seat 57K Original Miles! $1800
570-602-5255
Chevy '01 Blazer 4x4
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
12K Miles, 5 Speed $23,995
570-825-3368
6 Cyl., Leather, Nav., Sunroof, 3,803 Miles, Stock# 70440A $25,500
'12 NISSAN TITAN PRO 4X
White Hatchback w/ Black Cloth, Alloys, 46K, COOL CAR! $11,200
lousgarage.com
'15 NISSAN ALTIMA 3.5 SL
'11 CHEVY TRAVERSE AWD 3rd Row, CALL TODAY!
Call For Hours
DODGE '98 RAM 1500 SPORT
Premium, 39K, Stock# 70364A $17,900
'09 BUICK LaCROSSE CXL 4 Dr. Sedan, 47K Miles, Heated Seats, Chrome Wheels, Nicely Equipped! $12,995
Coupe, 34K, Stock# 70462A $19,400
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
Ford '04 Explorer XLT
KELLY
Black, Navigation, 71K, Stock#70385A $26,500
View Our Inventory @ www.wyomingvalleyautos.com 197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Call For Hours
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Best Selection! Best Quality! Best Values!
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
4X4, AUTO., V6, HIGHWAY MILES, NICE, CLEAN SUV! $3495 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
AWD, Gorgeous White, 3rd Seat w/ Rear Entertainment System, Leather, Moonroof, Must See! $6550
4 Cyl., Auto., EXTRA SHARP! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
Celebrating Our 35th Year! Over 75 Vehicles In Stock!
FORD '04 ESCAPE XLT
'08 CHEVY AVALANCHE LTZ PACKAGE
444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
Low Miles, Showroom Condition! With Warranty! $13,900
Classifieds WORK!
ALL VEHICLES WITH 6 MONTH / 7500 MILE WARRANTY LIKE US ON FACEBOOK!
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales
BUICK '08 LUCERNE CXL
570-288-6227
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
CLEAN CAR FAX WITH EVERY VEHICLE
'12 NISSAN FRONTIER 4x4 PRO-4
570-822-7359
444 Market St., Kingston, PA
Carfax One Owner, Must See! Only 64,000 Original Miles! Like New! $4650
4 Door Sedan, 77K
$12,499
BEN'S Auto Sales
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales
Credit Specialist Team Here To Help!
Call For Hours
Route 309 Wilkes-Barre Twp. Blvd ( Across from Wegmans ) 13 DODGE GR. CARAVAN SE, V6, All Power, Rear Air, Nav., PM, Cruise, Tilt, AM/FM/CD, Sirius, Alloys, Balance of Factory Warranty, Like New! SPECIAL $14,995 13 CHEVY MALIBU LS, Tan, 4 Cyl. Auto. All Power, PM, Cruise, Tilt, Alloys,Sirius CD, Balance of Factory Warranty SPECIAL! $13,495 12 CHEVY IMPALA LT, V6, Auto., Air, All Power, ABS, Cruise, Tilt, Alloys, CD Sirius, Like New! WAS $12,495...REDUCED! $11,995 13 FORD FOCUS SE, Grey, 4 Cyl., Auto. Air, PS, PB, ABS, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD & Much More! WAS $11,995...REDUCED! $11,495 11 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4x4, V6, Auto., All Power, Cruise, Tilt, Alloys, CD, Sunroof, Like New!SPECIAL! $14,995 11 FORD ESCAPE XLT, Red, Auto., Air, All Power, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Alloys, Very Clean & Economical! $10,995 11 FORD RANGER, 4 Cyl., White, Auto., Air, PS, PB, ABS, AM/FM, Cruise, Tilt, Bed Liner, Extra Clean! REDUCED! $10,500 10 KIA FORTE EX, 56K!, Silver, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, PS, PB, ABS, PW, PDL, Cruise Tilt, CD, Sirius Radio & Much More! Showroom Condition! Gas Saver WAS $9995...SPECIAL! $9495 11 FORD ESCAPE XLT, Auto., Air, All Power, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Alloys, Blue, Very Clean & Economical! Was $13,995...SPECIAL! $12,995 12 SUZUKI SX4 AWD, Hatchback, 5 Dr., 6 Speed, Black, All Power, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Alloys, SPORTY! WAS $10,995...SPECIAL! $9995 10 FORD RANGER, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, PS, PB, ABS, Cruise, Tilt, AM/FM, Wagon Wheels, Bed Liner, Very Clean! WAS $10,995...REDUCED! $10,495 09 CHEVY COLORADO, Auto., Air, PS, PB, ABS, Bedliner, 81K, Cloth Seats, Wagon Wheels, Extra Clean, Runs 100%! WAS $9495...SPECIAL! $8995 09 FORD RANGER Super Cab, V6, Auto Air, PS, PB, ABS, AM/FM, Wagon Wheels, Cloth Seats, Rear Jump Seats, Bed Liner, Tool Box WAS $6995...REDUCED $6495 08 FORD RANGER, Auto., 4 Cyl., Air, PS PB, ABS, Bed Linier, Economical! Runs 100%! Was $5495...Reduced! $4995 06 ISUSU I280 Pick Up Ext. Cab, 4 Cyl 5 Spd., Air, PS, PB, ABS, Cruise, Tilt, AM/FM/CD, Extra Clean WAS $5495...REDUCED! $4995 All Vehicles Serviced & Inspected Notary Service, Tags & Title Transfers REASONABLE!!! www.bensautosaleswb.com
FINANCING FOR EVERYONE!...
AUTO., 4 CYLINDER NICE, NICE CAR! $4495 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
CHEVY '12 MALIBU LS Black, 2.5L 5 Cyl. Manual Trans., 86K, Stock# 70401B $8700
Dodge '05 Neon SXT
DODGE '05 STRATUS
AUTO., 4 CYL., NICE CLEAN CAR! $2995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
FINANCING AVAILABLE!!!
$500 DOWN ON APPROVED CREDIT!
'04 Chevy S-10 Blazer SUV, 4 Dr., V6, Auto., 6 Cyl., Impressive Options, Smoke Free, 14 MPG City...18 Highway ONLY $4995 '04 Saturn L-300, 4 Dr., V6, Auto., Excellent Condition! 110K Miles, 18 MPG City...26 HW, Must See & Drive! $3995 '02 Dodge Dakota Sport, Ext. Cab, Plush Interior, V6, Auto., Excellent Condition! 13 MPG City...16 Highway Serviced & Inspected $5495 '02 Ford Focus SE, 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto., Nicely Equipped, Excellent Condition! Inspected & Serviced, 65K $3495 '02 Chevy Malibu LS, 4 Dr., 6 Cyl., Auto Nicely Equipped, Plush Interior,Only 92K 18 MPG City...26 Highway $2995 '00 Chrysler Cirrus, 4 Dr., V6, Auto., Leather, Excellent Condition! Many Nice Options, 19 MPG City...27 Highway Only $2895 '00 Chrysler Sebring LXI, 2 Dr., V6, Auto., Nicely Equipped, Leather, Sunroof CD, Cassette, Great Condition, Good Miles! 19 MPG City...27 Highway $1995 '97 Chrysler Sebring Convertible Nicely Equipped, Excellent Condition In & Out, Serviced & Inspected, Only 99K Miles! Smoke Free Vehicle, 18 MPG City...26 Highway $2495 ALL Vehicles Are Serviced & Inspected In Our Shop & MOST Are Sold w/ A Warranty VISIT US AT: www.feszauto.com www.facebook.com/ feszauto
Miss A Sunday,
MISS A LOT
The Sunday Citizens' Voice Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
4x4, 2 Door, Professionally Installed 7'6” Boss Plow, 1 Owner Call For Details!
Ford '07 Fusion
'13 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY Nicely Equipped, 76K Miles Call For Details! '11 DODGE DURANGO EXPRESS rd 3 Row, AWD, 69K Miles Call For Details! '10 FORD EXPLORER XLT 66K Miles, 4x4 $15,995 '08 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT QUAD CAB
Low Miles, MUST SEE! $5975
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Ford '08 Focus SE
5 Spd., Alloys, 34 MPG, 119K $6400
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
46K Miles, 1 Owner, Unique Truck! See It To Believe It! Tax & Tags Additional Highest Quality Full Service Dept. A+BBB Rating FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1971
rd
FORD '03 EXPLORER XLT
3 Row, 135K, Extra Clean! $5500 Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
www.rochesautosales.com
www.rochesautosales.com CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
FORD '08 FUSION SES AWD, Leather, Sunroof, 109K $6500
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
www.rochesautosales.com
FORD '11 F-150 Extended Cab XLT FORD '01 F-150 2WD
AUTO., V6, CAP, CLEAN, GREAT RUNNING TRUCK! $5995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
5.0 V8, 126K, Extra Clean! $16,900
FORD '05 ESCAPE 4x4
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
www.rochesautosales.com
4 CYL., AUTO., NICE ECONOMICAL SUV! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
Call For Hours
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B07] | 10/08/15
18:21 | STAHLLERSA
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FORD '11 FOCUS SES Auto., 108K, Extra Clean! $7900
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
HONDA 2010 CR-V LX AWD
Dark Blue Metallic w/ Black Cloth, Only 46K Miles! GREAT VALUE @ $14,600!
Ford '12 Fusion SE
4 Cyl., Auto., 34 MPG, 75K $11,900 Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
www.rochesautosales.com
INFINITI 2011 QX56
50,800 MILES
Stock# J7157A
$39,999
RinaldiAutoSales.com
570-825-3368
J & J AUTO DETAILING Hanover Twp. 570-820-7692
HONDA 2012 ACCORD EXL 43,500 MILES
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
$18,299
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Stake Body, 351 V8, Auto., 2WD, Dual Wheels, PA Inspected, Good Hauling Truck! $1800
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
BARN FIND MOTORS
KT Auto
HONDA 2012 CIVIC LX
FORD '89 F-350
351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
1-866-356-8830
Black Beauty! 1 Owner, Only 32K! CLEAN CIVIC! $13,490
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
FORD 2013 ESCAPE SEL 45,600 MILES
Stock#H34286A
$19,999
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
1-866-356-8830 CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
FORD 2014 MUSTANG
13,000 MILES
Stock# H33622A
$22,999
Rug Shampooing by
“The THERMINATOR”!... Extracts 85-90% of the solution.
570-825-3368
JEEP '03 GR. CHEROKEE
1-866-356-8830
73,000 MILES
$19,999
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
MAZDA '02 MPV
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
funrvcamping.com
SUSQUEHANNA RV 570-389-9900
JEEP '04 GR. CHEROKEE 4x4
$6995 *
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
Jeep '04 Gr. Cherokee Laredo 4x4, 6 Cyl., Auto., With Warranty $8995
444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
AUTO., V6, EXTRA CLEAN $5995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
4 Cyl., Auto., Air, PW, PL, Keyless, Ipod, Only 44K! BUY FOR $12,995 TOYODA '10 RAV 4
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
RAM '07 1500
2WD, AUTO., V8, NICE, STRONG TRUCK! $6995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
4 CYL., AUTO., REAL NICE CAR! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
N V AUTO SALES
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales GMC '07 ENVOY 4X4
PRIDE MOBILITY CELEBRITY X SCOOTER
4 Cyl., AWD, Auto., Air, PW, PL, Tinted Rear Glass, Keyless, Only 47K! BUY FOR $14,995 HONDA '11 CR-V EX AWD
MERCURY '06 MILAN
Call For Hours
Hyundai '03 Sonata GLS
HYUNDAI '04 ACCENT
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
1-866-356-8830
Call For Hours
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
Call For Hours
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
AUTO., V6 LIKE NEW! $3495 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
CHRYSLER '12 200
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
1-866-356-8830
“A CAMPER' S BEST FRIEND”
Route 11 Bloomsburg – Danville Highway
351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
Stock# H34367A
4 Cyl., Auto., 18” Alloys, Bluetooth, XM, Leather & Suede Seating, Only 29K, Factory Warranty! Black On Black! BUY FOR $16,995
FWD, 6 Cylinder, Auto., 112K, PA Inspected, 4 Bucket Seats & 1 Bench, Very Clean Interior & Very Nice Body $3495
BARN FIND MOTORS
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
1-866-356-8830
1-866-356-8830 HONDA 2013 ACCORD LX
$27,999
Pontiac '09 G5 GT
Includes Manuals & Power Cord, ALMOST BRAND NEW! $900
6 Cyl., 4x4 $6995 *
42,500 MILES
Travel Trailer Camper
Stock# L13073B
$17,999
Stock# H34226A
$18,799
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
LEXUS 2009 RX350
HONDA 2012 CRV EX
HONDA 2013 PILOT
Very Clean, 2 Slides, Queen Bed & 4 Bunks, Nice Bathroom, Fiberglass Front End, Air, Stereo & Furnace, Very Clean Inside & Out! $9500
LEXUS '09 IS 250 AWD
www.kellyautosales.net
1-866-356-8830
FRONTIER '05 KZ SPORTSMAN
VISIT: WWW.KTAUTO.COM
SHARP! 83K, Aux. Input $6915
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
Stock# H34255A
HYUNDAI '13 SONATA SE
25 LOW MILE VEHICLES IN STOCK!!!!
Stock# H34214A
$19,999
46,000 MILES
570-346-1133
Auto., Air, PW, PL, Keyless, 42K, Factory Warranty, 1 Owner! BUY FOR $12,995
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
KELLY
HONDA 2012 CRV EX
46,000 MILES
A Division Of Kelleher Tire 430 W. Market Street Scranton, PA
AWD, 4 Cyl., Wagon $7995 *
4 Dr. Sedan, V6, Well Equipped Includes Heated /Cooled Leather Seats, 47K Miles! $21,999
lousgarage.com
17,900 MILES MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
&
Complete Detailing Starting at $60.00!
FORD '94 F-150 X- CAB AUTOMATIC, CHEAP TRUCK! $1295 CALL FOR DETAILS!
Wash Machine Wax
$ALE!!! NISSAN '12 ALTIMA 2.5S
Gorgeous Red 4 Door Hatchback...Must See & Drive! $4450 197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
Stock# HP16900
Credit Restoration Program Available... Call For Details!
PONTIAC '06 VIBE
1-866-356-8830
lousgarage.com
Main St.,Taylor 570-562-2277
KIA '08 RIO
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
www.rochesautosales.com
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 B7
Sharp 2 Dr. Hatchback, 1 Owner! Low Miles, MUST SEE! $3960 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
SATURN '03 ION 2
JEEP '09 WRANGLER 4x4
Route 309 South Dallas Memorial HWY Trucksville, PA 18708 '01 Chevy Corvette Coupe Yellow w/ Black Leather, Only 56K! Chrome Wheels, End Of Season Sale! - Blowout Price!.........$14,500 '08 VW Jetta, Black w/ Grey Cloth Very Sporty! 81K, 5 Speed, 2.5L..........................................$7499 '06 VW Golf GTI, 2 Dr. Hatchback, 2.0 Turbo, 6 Spd. Manual, Grey w/ Grey Leather, 130K.................$5950 '05 Audi A6 Quattro Sedan, Black w/ Tan Leather, Nav., High Miles, Great Condition!..........$5799 '04 Ford F-250 4x4, Black w/ Grey Cloth, Ext. Cab, 6' Box, Auto., 6.0 Diesel.................................$8795 '03 VW Passat Wagon, 4 Cyl. 1.8 Turbo, 5 Spd., Teal w/ Grey Cloth Heated Seats...........................$3950 '03 Mitsubishi Montero 4x4 SUV, 4 Dr. Auto., Suspension Lift, Oversize Tires.........................$3499 '00 VW Golf, 4 Dr., 1.8 Turbo, 5 Spd. Manual, 120K, Silver w/ Heated Cloth.........................................$3799 '00 Dodge Neon, 4 Cyl., 4 Dr., 117K.........................................$2399 '04 Jeep Gr. Cherokee 4x4, 4.7 V8, Auto., Silver w/ Black Leather, Heated Seats...........................$2990
4 Cyl., Auto., Air, Moonroof, Keyless, Alloys, Roof Rack, Only 46K! BUY FOR $17,995
4 New Tires, New Rear Brakes, 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto., Clean! $3895 *
6 Cyl., Hard Top, Full Doors, 6 Spd., Air, Only 60K! BUY NOW $17,995 CHEVY '09 SILVERADO CREW CAB LT 4x4
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
Classifieds WORK! Saturn '04 Ion
5.3 V8, Z-71, Auto., Air, PW, PL, Power Seat, Alloys, OnStar, XM, Only 53K, 1 Owner! BUY FOR $24,995 CHEVY '10 EQUINOX LT AWD
570-401-8885
HYUNDAI '05 SANTA FE
HONDA '04 ACCORD EX
Red Coupe, Leather, Moonroof, New Inspection $4995 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN! ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
4x4, AUTO., V6 VERY NICE SUV! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
JEEP '99 CHEROKEE SPORT
White, 4 Dr., 4.0 Straight 6 $4495 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN! ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
Hyundai '05 Sonata
Kia '01 Sephia LS
2 Dr. Coupe, Sporty, Extra Clean, MUST SEE!
$8499
KELLY
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
CarFax 1 Owner! Only 103K! $3950
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
NISSAN '12 ROGUE AWD
Back Up Camera, Extra Clean Inside & Out, 46K Miles!
$16,999
KELLY
570-829-2277
www.rochesautosales.com
HONDA '10 ACCORD EXL
CITIZENS' VOICE CLASSIFIEDS WORK!
KELLY
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
HONDA '12 CIVIC LX Black, 4 Dr. Sedan, Hard To Find 5 Speed, 28K Miles
SOLD!
KELLY
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
Roche's Garage
www.kellyautosales.net
Call Today To Place Your Ad! 570-821-2020 HYUNDAI 2013 SONATA GLS
29,500 MILES
KIA '05 SPECTRA
4 Dr., 69K Miles! Like New Inside & Out! $5495 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN!
lousgarage.com
KIA '06 SPORTAGE LX
HYUNDAI 2013 SONATA LTD
37,000 MILES
www.kellyautosales.net
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
HONDA 2007 ACCORD VP
INFINITI 2006 G35X AWD
Silver w/ Grey Cloth, 5 Speed, 170K, SHARP CAR! $7400
V6, 4x4 $8495 *
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
LEXUS 2008 IS 250
97,500 MILES
Stock# A12723B
$13,999
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
4 Cyl., 5 Spd., Air, PW, PL, CD, Keyless, Black On Black! BUY FOR $8995
Tax, Tags & Registration Fees Extra
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
570-825-3368 NISSAN 2012 ALTIMA SL
VOLVO '07 S-40
35,000 MILES
Subaru '04 Impreza
$15,999
1-866-356-8830 OLDSMOBILE '86 CUSTOM CRUISER
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
1-866-356-8830
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
PONTIAC '04 GRAND AM
Silver, 4 Door, V6, 113K Miles $2995
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
Sharp Blue, AWD, Must See! $4495
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Stock# P16930
Full Size Station Wagon, Seats 8, Grey w/ Grey Cloth Interior, Under 90,000 Miles! $1400
1-866-356-8830
Silver w/ Black Leather, Only 84K! IMPRESSIVE! $10,990
White w/ Black Cloth, Sporty 5 Spd.! 103K, GREAT VALUE $6490!
SPECIAL!
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
Stock# KP16883
$18,795
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
Black w/ Pearl, 1 Owner, 69K Miles, COOL CUBE! $10,200
HONDA '09 CIVIC LX
ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
$14,999
1-866-356-8830
NISSAN 2010 CUBE SL
AWD, V6 Auto., Air, PW, PL, Alloys, Roof Rack, Only 71K! 1 Owner! BUY FOR $12,995
ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
www.kellyautosales.net
Stock# K15646A
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
SATURN '05 SL-300
Leather, Moonroof, Heated Power Seats, 98K $3295 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN!
SCION 2006 xB
Hyundai '06 Elantra Auto., Air, 67K, $6995
White w/ Tan Leather, Sunroof, Heated Seats, 32K Miles, LIKE NEW! $15,999
4 Cyl., Auto., Air, PW, PL, Alloys, Bluetooth, XM, OnStar, Only 58K! 1 Owner! BUY FOR $14,995
ECONOMICAL! 1 Owner, 70K Miles $6975
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Auto., Air, AM/FM, Low Miles, ECONOMICAL! $3495
Serviced Inspected Warrantied CarFax
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales
HONDA '08 CIVIC LX
Nissan '11 Versa
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
Honda '07 Accord
570-288-6227
Carfax 1 Owner! Only 77K, Sunroof, Sharp Black! $4575
HYUNDAI '09 SANTA FE
Nicely Equipped, Showroom Condition! w/ Warranty! $10,495 444 Market St., Kingston, PA
Warranties Available!
5 Cylinder, Automatic, 1 Owner ONLY $5995 '07 Dodge Gr. Caravan, 6 Cyl., Sto-N-Go Seating, All Power Options ONLY $5995 '07 Chevy Equinox AWD, 6 Cyl., Auto. $4995 '06 Saab 9 3 4 Cyl. Turbo GAS SAVER! $5995 '06 Volvo S40, 5 Cyl., Sunroof, Auto.,Sharp Car! ONLY $4995 '06 Kia Spectra, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, ONLY $3995 '04 Hyundai Sonata, 6 Cyl., Auto., $2495 '02 Pontiac Sunfire, 4 Cyl., Auto., 2 Door Coupe $1995 '99 Ford F-150, 4x4, V8, Auto., X-Cab $4995 '98 Ford Ranger X-Cab 4x4, 6 Cyl. Automatic $3495
570-287-1493 or 814-9821
All Vehicles Are Serviced, Inspected & Come With A Warranty!
EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
SUBARU '05 IMPREZA
Sport Wagon, AWD, Excellent Condition! Priced To Move NOW! $5495 SPOOKTACULAR SAVINGS NOW IN EFFECT & SCARY LOW OFFERS NOW BEING TAKEN! ALL VEHICLES SERVICED, INSPECTED & WARRANTIED
WB_VOICE/ADVERTISING/AD_PAGES [B08] | 10/08/15
B8 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
In today’s economy, reading the classified section of The Citizens’Voice is very helpful for finding a
JOB ... buying a
CAR ... buying
FURNITURE ... hiring a
HANDYMAN ... and even welcoming a
PET
into your home and heart!
33,000 MILES
Stock# T34851A
$34,299
OCTOBER BLOWOUT SALE
1-866-356-8830
Classifieds WORK! TOYOTA 2014 CAMRY SE
32,150 MILES
$2000 Minimum Trade ***ONLY $198/month***
'05 Volvo S60..................$6488 '09 Kia Rio.......................$6988 '07 Dodge Caliber............$7988 '07 Volvo S40..................$8988 '07 Nissan Versa..............$8988 '12 Nissan Versa..............$9188 '12 Kia Forte....................$9488 '09 VW Passat..................$9988 '10 Suzuki SX4................$9988 '09 Dodge Avenger..........$9988 '11 Mitsubishi Lancer.....$9,988 '12 Chevy Sonic..............$9,988 '11 Dodge Avenger SXT$10,988
Guaranteed Gaughan Credit Approval
NOW!
Where Davis Street Meets Main Street. Taylor, PA 570-562-3088
www.gaughanautostore.com.
Suzuki '06 XL-7 4x4
1 Owner, 7 Passenger, Absolutely Like New! $5975 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
SUZUKI '11 BLVD CT50 MOTORCYCLE
805CC Cruiser, Windshield, Saddle Bags, Blue & White, Whitewalls, 1,600 Original Miles, EXCELLENT CONDITION! $5300
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-714-0600
Stock# TP16898
$16,999
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
1-866-356-8830
'06 Ford F-250 w/ Plow,159K...$7995 '06 Jeep Liberty,116K..............$6995 '05 Ford Sport Trac, 127K......$4995 '04 Ford Ranger, 82K...............$6995 '04 Chevy S-10, 1 Owner 57K Original Miles................$6995 '04 Chevy Trailblazer, 116K...$4995 '04 Hyundai Santa Fe, 145K...$4995 '01 Dodge Ram, 140K..............$4995 '00 Chevy Silverado 1500 146K......................................$5795 '87 Dodge w/ Plow....................$2995 31 Point Check Done On All Vehicles MOST WITH 30 DAY WARRANTY ( Ask For Details )
TOYOTA '06 RAV4 SPORT
Rare V6, AWD, Sunroof, Extra, Extra, Clean! SOLD!
2008 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming
“The little Guy With The BIG Savings”!
(570)714-1980
All Vehicles Are Now
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED! 13 HYUNDAI TUCSON LTD. AWD, Heated Leather, Panoramic Sunroof, 4 Cyl., Auto. Reduced $22,995 13 MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER SE AWD, Heated Seats, 3rd Row Seat, Alloy Wheels Reduced $17,995 12 CHEVY SILVERADO Ext. Cab 1500 LT, 4x4, 31K, 8 Cyl., Auto., PW, PL, PM, PS Reduced $27,995 12 GMC TERRAIN SLE-1, Backup Camera, 4 Cyl., Auto., PM, PW, PL, PS, Roof Rack Clearance $18,495 11 GMC SIERRA 1500 Ext. Cab SLE, 4x4, 8 Cyl., Auto., PW, PL, PM, PS, Tow Pkg. SALE $25,995 10 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 Ext. Cab, Level Kit, New Tires, V8, Auto., PW, PM, PS, PL $24,995 10 DODGE RAM 1500 Quad Cab SLT, 4x4, 8 Cyl., Auto., Running Boards, Tonneau Cover, PW, PL, PM SALE $19,995 08 NISSAN TITAN King Cab SE 4x4, 8' Bed, 8 Cyl., Auto., PW, PL, PS, PM, Bed Liner SALE $18,995 08 NISSAN FRONTIER, Crew Cab 4x4, PW, PL, PM, Running Boards, Vent Visors Clearance $16,995 07 FORD EDGE SE AWD, 66K, 6 Cyl., Auto., PW, PM, PL, Rear Privacy Glass $11,995 Visit Our Website www.
WE BUY CARS Auto Detailing Available
Trucks, Vans & SUVs
Tom Driebe Auto Sales
531 N. Keyser Ave., Scranton ( Near Bolus Motor Lines )
'06 Chevy Tahoe SE, V8, Auto., Air, Leather, Alloys, 3rd Row Seating, Rear Entertainment, Absolutely Like New! $14,750 '04 Isuzu Ascender, V6, Auto., Air, Alloys, Moonroof, Leather, Low Miles, Fresh Inspection Steal This One For $4975 '04 Suzuki Gr. Vitara 4x4, 4 Cyl., Gas Miser, Air, Alloys, Automatic, Fresh Inspection, Local Trade Save Thousands! $4875 '04 Mazda Tribute LX, V6, Auto., Air Alloys, Moonroof, AWD, New Tires, Newest Inspection, Local Trade & Runs Like New! $4675 '03 Mazda Tribute XL, V6, Auto, Air, Alloys, AWD, Fresh Inspection, Local Trade, A Great SUV At A Great Price! $2995 '02 Nissan Xterra SE,V6, Rare 5 Spd. Alloys, New Tires, Local Trade, Only 88K! $5975 We CAN Get You Financed! www.tomdriebeonline.com Call: 570-344-8000
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
TOYOTA '07 YARIS
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
TOYOTA '12 HIGHLANDER 42,000 MILES
Stock# T34745A
$24,999
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
1-866-356-8830
TOYOTA 2012 HIGHLANDER LMT
There’s something for YOU in the classifieds!
www.cpizzanoauto.com
949 Wyoming Ave. Forty-Fort 570-288-8995
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
89,000 MILES
VITO's & GINO's
'01 Mercury Gr. Marquis, 92K $2395 '97 Toyota Corolla $2495 '00 Ford Focus $2495 '01 Ford Focus Wagon $2395 '06 Chevy Corvette Convertible Auto., 27K $29,995 '04 Honda Civic SI $4995 '09 Mercedes GL450, 7 Passenger, Too Many Options To List!, 38K, Garage Kept Cream Puff! $32,995
Junk Cars & Trucks WANTED! $$$ CASH PAID! $$$ WE BUY USED VEHICLES!
Stock# L13330A
$23,699
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
1-866-356-8830
CONTACT US
Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 classified@citizensvoice.com To place your ad today!
TOYOTA 2012 RAV-4
34,500 MILES
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
VW 2013 JETTA SE
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
WE'RE THE BEST!... & DON'T FORGET:
Rick's Auto Body
Quality Collision Repair
Classifieds Work! PONTIAC 1973 GRANDVILLE
4 door hardtop. Original interior. 455 V-8. Minor touch-up work needed. 75,000 original miles. Runs & drives like new. $5,000. 570-417-7870
STUDEBAKER 1963 LARK
From Minor to Major Repairs Rust Window Regulators, etc.
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
$7,000 570-562-3539 or 570-430-6946
YAMAHA 2011 STRIKER
980 miles. No time to ride. $1,000 in accessories. Asking $6,500. 570-254-6804
ALUMACRAFT 2008 BOAT
2008 HARLEY DAVIDSON DYNA LOW RIDER All original. Includes leather side bags, back rest, and extra padded seat. Black, nearly perfect condition. 15,300 miles. Asking $9,500 570-586-4749
Beautiful fiberglass, 25 ft. long. Shallow keel. Roller furling. Enclosed head, full galley. 15HP. Long Shaft outboard motor. Tandem trailer, all very good+ condition. Launch ready. $2,900 570-857-1768
BMW 1980 R100T MOTORCYCLE
1,000cc, 36,000 miles, red, second owner. Two fairings-both painted to match bike color. Both with windshields and mirrors. 1) Hannigan Super Sport. Full uppers and lowers. 2) Smaller-Handle bar/frame mounted. BMW Krauser hard bags., Eclipse tank sack. Eclipse rear bag-both with rain covers. Two seats, one stock, one Corbin. BMW crash bars, Stock & Brown side stands, BMW tool kit, Metzler tires, New battery, New Dowco cover. You won't find a finer machine of this era in our locale. $7,000 or best offer. 570-253-0831 after 7:00pm or leave a message. 3,800 miles. One owner. Just professionally serviced. Perfect for a beginner to a seasoned rider. Asking $5,000 or best offer. Will email photos on request. Call 570-454-5799.
We Work With ALL Insurance Companies!
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2009 FATBOY
For Over 35 Years!
All original, except exhaust pipes, only 2,400 original miles. Garage kept. Asking $13,700. 570-760-9065
CHEVROLET '91 UTILITY TRUCK
With ladder rack & utility boxes. Good condition. $2,800. Call 570-235-1563
THOMPSON 15 FT 1974 TRIHULL
with an 85hp Evinrude motor. Lowrance depth finder on EZ loader trailer with spare tire. Garage kept. Many extras included. $2,500. 570-788-2133
COACHMEN 2005 30' CHAPARRAL 5TH WHEEL,
1 slide-out, queen size bed, full bath, awning, air conditioning, refrigerator, freezer, microwave, very good condi$9,000 tion.
570-287-1351
JAYCO 2011 EAGLE
32', 2 slides, A-1 shape, 20'x 6' deck. Electric awning. Set up in Cherry Ridge Campground, paid until October 15. Asking $20,000.
570-253-5455
NEWMAR '98 DUTCH STAR
HARLEY 1983 DAVIDSON FLHT
Rubber mount engine. 5 speed transmission. Recent rebuild. Predecessor to Road King. Steel gray. $5500 or best offer. Hazleton area. Call 570-225-1201.
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2011 NIGHTSTER/ SPORTSTER
Cummins 300 h.p. diesel. All over-sized tires. Large back up camera. All awnings. 51,300 original miles. Too many options to list. Must see. Purchase price: $120,378.21. FOR QUICK SALE: $39,900 OR BEST OFFER. 570-466-0239
PALAMINO 2008 STAMPEDE
DODGE 2001 RAM 3500 DIESEL DUMP S17, Ultra light, towable, 4 year warranty remaining. Queen and full beds, refrigerator, stove, oven and shower. $7,900 Call: 570-650-2202 1,500 miles. Custom color: purple & black. Forward controls. Garage kept. Mint condition. Must sell!
$5,500 FIRM 570-309-1598
Automatic, 2WD, 110k original miles, newer dump body in great shape. 5.9 Cummins turbo diesel, with 12' landscape trailer in great shape. $11,900. 570-507-6300
FORD 1995 F350 DUMP TRUCK
26,000 original miles. $4,000. Call 570-881-3942 & leave message.
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2012 WIDE GLIDE
103 cubic inch motor, 6 speed transmission; All the gages on the gas tank. Less then 100 miles. $13,500 or Best Offer Call 570-823-7507
HARLEY DAVIDSON, '11 HERITAGE SOFTAIL CLASSIC
Psychedelic purple and black with saddle bags and white wall tires. 2 windshields. Low miles. Asking $12,000. 570-852-9267
HONDA 2008 GOLDWING DAEWOO SKIDSTER LOADER
ROYAL TRAVELER 2014 41FT. 5TH WHEEL RV
Like new! Sleeps up to 7 with 3 slide outs, tri-axle, all options. Electric awning, big refrigerator, oven & stove, dishwasher, washer & dryer. Fully self contained. Too many extras to mention. $27,500. 570-877-1302
SHASTA '08
Excellent condition. Sleeps 8. Air conditioner, full shower/bath, refrigerator, stove, sound system. Hardly used. $7,000 or best offer. 570-472-8383
Winnebago 2003 Brave
Handicap equipped. Braun wheelchair lift. 2 slides. Under 19K miles. Class A. Self contained. Call 570-752-2428 after 9am
TIRES – Bridgestone run flat tires. Size 225-60-17. 4 each. 6 to 7/32” tread. $160. Call 570-829-3530 1,800CC, 11,500 miles, Burgundy color, fully loaded, NAVI, reverse, heated seats and grips, custom exhaust, CD/ MP3, rain sensing system. Very good condition. $19,949 or best offer. Call 570-885-5352 leave message.
$$$ BUYING $$$ Cash Paid 570-574-1275
Enclosed. Suitable for Daewoo Skidsteer.
KAWASAKI '12 VULCAN VOYAGER
Like new! Low mileage. Great touring bike. ABS brakes. $12,500 negotiable. Call 570-814-3948 Leave message if no answer
570-236-6298
KAWASAKI '93 1100 C SUPERBIKE
1-888-514-9901
Model 1760-XL Perkins diesel, 4 cylinders. Less than 2,700 hours. Clam bucket, tooth bar and new quick spade.
DOOLITTLE LANDSCAPE TRAILER
REDUCED: $15,000 Both Items.
REDUCED! CASE 580 CK EXTEND-A-HOE STANDARD BUCKET
CHEVROLET 1974 CAPRICE
Convertible, 52K original miles. Clean, garage kept. Green with white top. $8,000 O.B.O. Call 570-335-0932 Ask for Bob.
CHEVY 1986 EL CAMINO
JUNK CARS & TRUCKS... HARRY'S U-PULL IT!
Bring Your Vehicle To Us! - Enter to Win $500 Gift Card every month www.wegotused.com
LISPI TOWING
Smooth machine. Very low hours. Dependable. Rebuilt motor. This machine starts at 14 below zero. Very reliable! Shop and compare today! $7,200. 845-649-7931
$ Junk Cars $ $ Wanted $ 570-822-0995 570-824-8795
LISPI TOWING
Garage kept, adult owned, Black, excellent condition, runs great, needs nothing. $2,500 Firm. Call Bill. 570-550-7555
KAWASAKI 1998 VULCAN SPECIAL Mint condition. Saddle bags. New tires & new brakes. $4,500. 570-333-4075 or 570-760-8063
KAWASAKI 2006 VULCAN 900
Red, black and chrome, windshield, saddle bags, back rest, 5,800 miles. Like new condition. $4,500 or best offer. Call 570-454-3621.
$Junk Cars$ $Wanted$ 570-822-0995 570-824-8795 Being a VIP Subscriber has its privileges When you start 'flashing' your you'll start saving money immediately! You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot!! Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
SUZUKI 2005 SV650S Blue in color; Excellent Condition; Garage kept.
Call For Hours
Silver, 36K, ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL! $12,600
YAMAHA 2003 “1600 ROAD STAR”
$3,000 570-497-0016
Specializing in Quality Collision Repair & $aving Your Deductible
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
VW 2013 JETTA S
Many extras. Like new. 5,800 miles. $4,900. Call 570-852-0042
17' . 4 seats, 2 peddle seats. Minnkota 70lb electric motor with foot control. Mercury jet motor, 65hp. 6 hour run time. Loadrite trailer. All purchased brand new. $16,500. 570-239-9362
BMW 2003 650CS
Automatic 6 cylinder with Tonneau. All original with new paint with clear coat. Have car fax, no accidents 67,000 miles, excellent condition. Asking $9800. Call 570-955-5091
$3,000 FIRM Call Sam 570-825-2574
VULCAN 2008 CLASSIC LIMITED
MERCEDES '79 BENZ 450 SL
Burgundy two toned black, 1 new tire, garage stored, great condition. Must sell due to health reasons. $5,500 or best offer. 570-351-5514
124,000 miles. Gray with blue leather interior. Very good condition. Asking $5,500 or best offer. Call 570-489-1809
Red, great condition. 13,000 miles. Must sell! $3,995. 570-606-7699.
Hard Top Convertible
1-866-356-8830
4 door hard top. 394 CID. Automatic transmission, 53k miles. Almost everything is original, no rust. Antique plates. $6,000 firm. Must See! Call 570-459-2689
Snow White w/ Black Leather, Only 32K! ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL! $14,800
VOLVO '03 S60
$19,999
821-2020
Silver, Leather, Sunroof $4950
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
AUTO., SUNROOF, LEATHER EXTRA SHARP! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
Stock# T34860A
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
OLDSMOBILE 1961 DYNAMIC 88
YAMAHA '04 V STAR 1100
SAILBOAT
daves used car sales
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
Sharp Black 4 Dr. Hatchback! 1 Owner, MUST SEE & DRIVE! $5850
VW '05 Jetta
Find Us On Facebook @
Sharp 2 Door Hatchback, 1 Owner, Very Economical! $4995
TOYOTA '06 SCION XA
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
davesusedcarsales.com
15 Mazda 5 Sprt Wgn. 1 Owner. Only 1,000 mi. all Power Options, Premium Wheels. Back up Camera, 3rd Row Seat. Like new. $17,995 15 Toyota Corolla LE, 1 Owner, Only 8K! All Power Options, Bluetooth, Satellite Radio, Like New! MPG= 29 City...38 Highway $16,500 14 Honda Accord Sport, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options,Premium Wheels, Like New! MPG = 27 City... 36 Highway SPECIAL! $21,995 14 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport 1 Owner, Only 11K! All Power Options, Premium Sound & Wheels, Backup Camera, Like New! $17,995 14 Hyundai Sonata GLS, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, Alloys, Bluetooth, Satellite Radio, Like New! MPG = 24 City...35 Highway $15,995 14 VW Jetta SE, 1 Owner, Only 16K! All Power Options, Leather, Like New! MPG= 25 City...36 Highway. 2 to choose from. $15,995 13 Toyota Rav4 XLE, AWD, 1 Owner Only 19K! All Power Options, Power Sunroof, Bluetooth, Satellite Radio, Backup Camera, Like New! $23,995 13 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport AWD, 1 Owner, Only 4K! All Power Options, Alloys, Bluetooth, Satellite Radio, Like New! $22,995 12 Mini Cooper S. 1 Owner. Only 10K! All Premium Options Including Interior & Wheels! Power Sunroof, Like New! $19,995 04 Ford Freestar SE, V6, Auto., Low Miles, All Power Options, Like New! $7995 Low Interest Financing! WE BUY CARS!
www.kellyautosales.net
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
Needs rebuilt motor. $5,000. Call 570-878-7236
DAVE'S
KELLY
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available, Good CARFAX
USED CAR SALES
Specializing In Vehicles Under $5,000! 570-675-4329 or 477-2833 Stop By & We'll Hook You Up With A Great 4x4!
PW, PDL, Air, Moonroof, 1 Owner, Low Miles $4925
TRUCKS & SUVs
Call: 570-350-4541
Specializing In 4 Wheel Drives
VW '04 Beetle
MotorWorld Drive, Off Route 315 WILKES-BARRE, PA
view complete inventory @
It’s FRESH and NEW every day!
MERCEDES BENZ 1972 CONVERTIBLE 350SL
TOYOTA 2013 TUNDRA PLATINUM
renting a
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