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LOCAL NEWS: PNC Bank consolidating Elk County locations, Page 6
Mostly Sunny
MINOR
STARS WIN
High of
87˚
The St. Marys minor league
softball stars won their first
game at the state tourney.
PAGE 10
Wednesday
July 27, 2016
BIG LEAGUE
SOFTBALL
Wins half
marathon
The St. Marys Big League
softball stars advanced to
today’s title game.
PAGE 11
50¢ Vol. 106
Colt Mack took first place in
half marathon.
PAGE 11
St. Marys, Pennsylvania
smdailypress.com
No. 142
Raspatello asks for judgment of acquittal
Vinyl Windows
SUMMER SALE
WITH
FREE
TRIPLE
GLAZED
GLASS
By Richie Lecker
Staff Writer
RIDGWAY – John Raspatello, 62, of the State Correctional
Institute at Forest, has asked
President Judge Richard A.
Masson for a judgment of acquittal on the various charges
that he was found guilty of following a two-day jury trial in
October 2015.
SUBURBAN
Raspatello was sentenced
after being found guilty of 10
charges related to the December
2013 incident in which he struck
a pair of repo workers with a car
before fleeing the scene.
The incident left Doug and
Amy Brosious, the repo workers, with serious injuries.
Raspatello was found guilty
of two counts of aggravated assault, felonies of the first de-
gree; two counts of aggravated
assault, felonies of the second
degree; two counts of simple
assault, misdemeanors of the
second degree; two counts of
recklessly endangering another
person, misdemeanors of the
second degree; one count of accidents involving death or personal injury, a misdemeanor of
the first degree; and one count
of reckless driving, a summary
JOHNSONBURG RD., ST. MARYS, PA
FAX: 814-781-6157
(814) 781-7576
AFFORDABLE
CONTRACTORS
By Becky Polaski
Staff Writer
• Kitchens & Bathrooms
• Plumbing & Heating
• Water Damage Repair
• Drywall Installation & Finishing
• Interior & Exterior Painting
• Roofing & Siding Repair
• Porches, Decks, & Concrete
• Windows & Doors
• 24 Hr. Emergency Service
Photo by Amy Cherry
Edwardo Saldana, a co-owner of Salsa's Mexican Grille in St. Marys, is shown reviewing the menu at the new Brusselles
Street restaurant.
New Salsa's Mexican Grille adds
variety, flavor to city's restaurant scene
By Amy Cherry
Staff Writer
814-781-1506
Land Clearing
Retaining Walls
Underground
Utilities
Stump Removal
Road Installation
Tree Service
Available
...AND MUCH MORE!
Mike DeLullo
814-594-3797
See Raspatello, Page 3
Plans taking
shape for Elk
County's Got
Talent
BUILDING CENTER, INC.
WE CALL BACK
814-788-0044
offense.
Following his sentencing to
a minimum of 15 years in prison and a maximum of 35 years,
Raspatello filed a post-sentence
motion with the court, with the
request for a judgment of acquittal counting for five of the
nine issues raised.
In the first three issues,
A new restaurant is bringing
the tastes and flavors of Mexico
to St. Marys.
Salsa's Mexican Grille recently opened along Brusselles
Street much to the delight of
area residents grateful for a
new eatery in town.
Patrons have lauded the res-
taurant for its vast menu offerings, welcoming hospitality and
festive atmosphere.
The family-run business is
owned by Armando Saldana, his
brother Edwardo Saldana and
Sari Saldana, Armando's son.
In addition, Sabrina Saldana,
Armando's wife, assists with
several aspects of the business
as well as creating artwork displayed inside the restaurant.
Salsa's authentic Mexican
cuisine features traditional
dishes of enchiladas, burritos,
quesadillas, fajitas and street
tacos, along with steaks and
seafood featuring bold flavors
using fresh ingredients.
"We have more than just
Mexican food. We also serve
hamburgers, chicken salad, and
There was a time a few weeks
ago when it seemed like Elk
County's Got Talent – a collaboration between the staffs of Memorial Park, Fox Township Community Park, Ridgway YMCA, and
Johnsonburg Community Center
– might not happen.
The deadline was approaching and no entries had been received. However, as is often the
case, a number of entries came in
before the deadline and roughly a
dozen acts are scheduled to perform at the event, which is being
held Sunday, Aug. 7 at Fox Township Community Park in Kersey.
Memorial Park Director Jason Schreiber indicated that
those signed up to participate in
the event are between the ages of
10-18 and will be performing acts
related to singing, dancing, and
playing instruments.
"I know it's eight years, but
it's a pretty tight age group, 1018, so we're going to do one age
group with a $1,000 prize package for first place and a $500 prize
package for second place. There
See Salsa’s, Page 14
See Plans, Page 5
Benzinger Park set to hold Activity Day this Thursday
By Becky Polaski
Staff Writer
The annual Activity Day at
Benzinger Park is scheduled for
Thursday, and park staff have a
fun-filled event planned for area
youngsters between the ages of
4-15.
Benzinger Park staff members Madison Quesenberry and
Julia Sweeney are coordinating
the event, with this being Que-
senberry's first Activity Day and
Sweeney's second. Both expressed
that they are excited for the event,
which is scheduled to begin at 9
a.m.
Anyone who has yet to register their children is asked to be
at the park office at 8:30 a.m. so
that activities can begin on time.
Youngsters can also be registered
by calling the park office at 8347551.
Both Sweeney and Quesen-
berry indicated that there are
already a number of youngsters
signed up for the event, with
many having registered earlier in
the summer. Participants will be
divided into groups based on their
age and gender. There will be
groups for boys and girls ages 4-6,
7-8, 9-10, 11-12, and 13 and up.
Each group will rotate
through nine different event stations.
"We have nine activities this
year: a volleyball serve, basketball shoot, home run derby, relay
race, football throw, tennis serve,
soccer kick, frisbee throw, and
football punt," Sweeney said.
Two of the events – the soccer
kick and football punt – are new
this year. They replace the hockey
shoot and softball throw, respectively.
Lunch will be provided, and
See Benzinger, Page 3
Construction to continue on Elk County bridge project
CLEARFIELD – The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation’s (PennDOT) Rapid
Bridge Replacement Project
continues in Elk County in August with the reconstruction of a
bridge in Horton Township.
The bridge (JV-49) spans
Mead Run on Route 219, just
north of the village of Brockport.
Replacing the bridge will remove
the current weight limit postings
of 36-ton for single vehicles and
40-ton for combination vehicles.
Replacement will also allow
PennDOT to remove it from Elk
County’s structurally deficient
list.
Construction is expected to
start during the week of Aug. 8
and be complete in early November. During this time, drivers will
encounter one-lane of alternating
traffic in each direction controlled
by temporary traffic signals.
In the event of unfavorable
weather or unforeseen activities,
this schedule may change.
This bridge replacement is
part of the Rapid Bridge Replacement Project, a Public-Private Partnership (P3) between
PennDOT and Plenary Walsh
Keystone Partners (PWKP) under which PWKP will finance, design, replace and maintain the
bridges for 25 years. The P3 approach will allow PennDOT to
replace the bridges more quickly
while achieving significant savings and minimizing impact
on motorists.
To see the bridges included
in the statewide initiative and
to learn more about the Rapid
Bridge Replacement Project and
P3 in Pennsylvania, visit www.
P3forPA.pa.gov. Additional information on the project, the team
and how to bid on the project can
be found at www.PARapidBridges.com.
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The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
LIFT CHAIR SPECIAL
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3-Day Forecast for St. Marys
TODAY
The Nation
TONIGHT
THURSDAY
87°
87°
62°
60°
Mostly sunny
Mostly clear
Precipitation
A thunderstorm in spots
Regional Weather Today
Erie
85/68
High ................................................ 91°
Low ................................................ 68°
Normal high ................................... 79°
Normal low .................................... 58°
Record high ....................... 91° in 2016
Record low ........................ 48° in 2014
Jamestown
82/62
Monday ....................................... 0.20"
Month to date .............................. 1.64"
Year to date ............................... 18.98"
Normal year to date ................... 24.91"
Warren
87/62
Kane
86/57
Corry
84/64
Precipitation
Meadville
86/64
Cleveland
89/68
Ridgway
87/61
Oil City
88/63
Sun and Moon
Sunrise today ....................... 6:05 a.m.
Sunset tonight ...................... 8:36 p.m.
Moonrise today .................. 12:44 a.m.
Moonset today ..................... 2:33 p.m.
Youngstown
88/62
Full
St. Marys
87/60
City
Hi
Albuquerque
92
Asheville
88
Atlanta
91
Atlantic CIty 85
Baltimore
89
Billings
86
Birmingham
88
Boise
100
Boston
87
Burlington, VT 89
Charleston, SC 97
Charlotte
97
Chicago
88
Cincinnati
87
Dallas
95
Denver
92
Des Moines
87
Helena
88
Honolulu
87
Houston
91
Indianapolis
87
Jacksonville
95
Kansas City
89
Las Vegas
112
Los Angeles
87
Lo
68
69
73
72
71
62
74
66
72
67
79
75
68
71
78
59
69
59
75
77
71
74
70
89
66
Thu.
W
pc
t
t
pc
pc
t
t
s
s
pc
s
pc
pc
pc
t
t
pc
t
s
t
pc
s
pc
s
pc
Hi
95
86
91
86
91
86
87
100
91
83
98
95
81
81
94
89
82
92
86
94
85
97
84
113
85
Lo
71
66
73
75
73
61
73
66
70
63
79
73
66
68
77
58
67
60
76
77
69
74
67
93
66
Today
W
pc
t
pc
pc
t
t
t
s
pc
pc
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
pc
pc
t
s
pc
Aug 10
Aug 18
Aug 24
Indiana
86/64
Pittsburgh
89/66
Billings
86/62
Minneapolis
83/64
Detroit
91/70
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
City
Allentown
Altoona
Ashtabula
Baltimore
Beaver Falls
Binghamton
Bradford
Buffalo
Canton
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Hi
90
87
86
89
89
86
84
86
90
87
89
88
Lo
66
62
65
71
65
64
55
68
67
71
68
70
W
s
pc
s
pc
s
s
s
pc
s
pc
s
s
Thu.
Hi
91
88
85
91
87
85
84
87
86
81
88
84
Lo
71
66
68
73
65
64
59
69
67
68
69
69
Today
W
pc
pc
pc
t
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
t
pc
t
City
Coudersport
Detroit
DuBois
Franklin
Fredonia
Grove City
Harrisburg
Ithaca
Jamestown
Johnstown
Lancaster
Lewisburg
Hi
86
91
88
86
86
87
90
89
82
82
87
91
Lo
61
70
60
61
64
62
69
61
62
64
66
64
W
s
pc
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
pc
s
s
Lo
61
67
65
64
67
63
73
62
63
66
70
69
Today
W
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
CNB Bank hires
Serafini as assistant
VP of private banking
RIDGWAY – Gregory
M. Dixon, Market Executive of CNB Bank,
recently announced the
addition of Heather D.
Serafini, Assistant Vice
President
of
Private
Banking, to the Bank’s
expanding Private Banking Division.
A Private Banker,
Serafini offers a unique
blend
of
specialized
products
and
customized
services
tailored to
meet
the
individual
Heather D. f i n a n c i a l
Serafini
goals and
circumstances of
her clients in the Ridgway, St. Marys, Kane,
Johnsonburg and Bradford areas.
A native of Brockport, Serafini graduated
from Brockway Area
High School as a Business Graduate in 1992.
She continued her education at the Pennsylvania State University
World Campus for Business Administration. Serafini currently serves
as a member on the Elk/
Cameron County Board
of Realtors, Elk County
Redevelopment Authority, North Central PA
Regional Planning & Development CommissionMicro Loan Committee
and the Elk County Community
Foundation’s
Women Who Care.
Serafini has over 15
years of banking experience and most recently
served as branch manager and lender in the
Ridgway and St. Marys
areas. She graduated
with honors from the
Pennsylvania
Bankers
Association
Advanced
School of Banking and
has obtained a Consumer
Loan Training and Certified Professional Supervisor certificate. Serafini
also took courses on making successful joint sales
calls, sales/services, the
role of coaching, business
etiquette, understanding
and leading teams, and
managing multiple priorities, projects and deadlines from the American
Bankers Association.
“She has a great deal
to offer the Private Banking clients in the Elk and
McKean County area,”
Dixon said. “Providing a
knowledgeable resource
such as Ms. Serafini to
this growing customer
oriented service is a significant benefit to CNB.”
Based on strong, traditional values, CNB is
dedicated to being the
premier, financial services provider in the area,
focused on the changing
needs of people and businesses by providing the
highest quality service.
PYO Blueberries
409 Cory Rd., Wilcox, PA
Staring July 16, 2016
Saturday 8am-8pm &
Sunday 8am-6pm
$2.00 PER LB.
Call 781-3686
for Directions
ECC ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION’S
NEW YEAR’S BINGO
Friday, July 29th - ECCHS Cafeteria
Doors open @ 5:00 pm -- Games start @ 6:30 pm
FREE DINNER @ 5:45 pm
Hoagies & Chips
1,000 Coverall
Lots of special prizes • Lots of fun!
SPECIAL END OF YEAR
GRAND PRIZE DRAWING!
Brad Kraus, President
Chicago
88/68
San Francisco
76/56
Thu.
Hi
85
86
87
84
85
85
92
87
83
83
90
91
Thu.
W
t
pc
t
pc
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
pc
s
t
t
s
s
pc
s
pc
s
t
t
pc
t
Hi
83
91
76
79
82
93
92
94
81
93
96
112
91
96
77
103
104
87
102
76
85
92
87
104
90
Lo
72
79
66
62
71
79
76
78
59
67
77
91
71
75
55
69
65
72
73
57
61
78
67
84
68
W
t
t
t
t
t
pc
pc
t
t
s
t
pc
pc
pc
t
s
s
t
s
pc
s
t
t
t
t
Seattle
82/60
State College
89/63
Regional Forecast
Today
Lo
75
80
67
64
73
79
76
77
60
71
76
91
68
75
55
66
64
73
72
56
60
77
70
82
73
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.
Altoona
87/62
Aug 2
City
Hi
Memphis
89
Miami
92
Milwaukee
87
Minneapolis
83
Nashville
90
New Orleans 89
New York
92
Norfolk
93
North Platte
86
Oklahoma City 90
Orlando
95
Phoenix
112
Providence
91
Raleigh
95
Rapid City
79
Reno
103
Sacramento 104
St. Louis
87
Salt Lake City 101
San Francisco 76
Seattle
82
Tampa
92
Topeka
90
Tucson
104
Wichita
92
National Outlook
Canton
90/67
Last
Coudersport
86/61
DuBois
88/60
New Castle
90/62
Moon Phases
First
82°
59°
Times of sun and clouds
Statistics for Monday
Temperature
New
Today
FRIDAY
City
London
Mansfield
Meadville
Morgantown
New Castle
Niagara Falls
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Punxsutawney
Rochester
Scranton
Smethport
Hi
89
91
86
86
90
90
93
89
87
91
91
85
Lo
61
59
64
69
62
69
74
66
64
67
65
59
Thu.
W
pc
s
s
pc
s
pc
s
pc
s
pc
s
s
Hi
87
89
84
84
87
89
93
85
87
86
93
84
Lo
62
62
64
68
65
69
77
67
65
67
68
61
Today
W
c
pc
pc
t
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
City
Hi
State College 89
Syracuse
88
Toronto
89
Washington, DC 91
Wellsboro
89
Wheeling
88
Williamsport 92
Wilkes-Barre 92
Youngstown
88
Lo
63
67
66
77
60
67
65
62
62
W
s
s
pc
pc
s
pc
s
s
s
Denver
92/59
Lo
66
66
65
77
63
67
68
68
65
W
pc
pc
c
t
pc
c
pc
pc
pc
Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Los Angeles
87/66
Washington
91/77
Kansas City
89/70
Thu.
Hi
89
87
85
90
87
84
93
92
86
Atlanta
91/73
El Paso
95/73
Houston
91/77
Fronts
Miami
92/80
Cold
Precipitation
Warm
Showers
Stationary
-10s
New York
92/76
-0s
0s
10s
20s
T-storms
30s
40s
Rain
50s
Flurries
60s
70s
Snow
80s
90s
Ice
100s 110s
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Pinecrest Manor residents enjoy day out
Photos submitted
Residents of Pinecrest Manor recently enjoyed spending the day at the St. Marys Sportsmen's Club fishing, playing bingo and
having a picnic lunch. A special thank you to all our volunteers and the Sportsmen's Club who made this day possible. At left are
residents Donna Farley and Bertha Baughman playing bingo. At right, resident Earl Lyons is also pictured with his catch of the
day.
Remains of lost Spanish fort found on South Carolina coast
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C.
(AP) — Archaeologists
have found the location
of a long-sought Spanish
fort on the South Carolina
coast at the site of what
was once the first capital of
Spanish Florida.
A release from the University of South Carolina
says the site of San Marcos, one of five forts built
during the 21-year history
of the early settlement of
Santa Elena, has finally
been located on Parris Island near Hilton Head Island.
University of South
Carolina
archaeologist
Chester DePratter and
Victor Thompson of the
Center for Archaeological
Sciences at the University
of Georgia, have conducted
research for the past two
years to find the site of the
1577 fort.
Using
ground-penetrating radar and other
high-tech equipment last
month, they found the site
and are publishing the
details of their work this
week in The Journal of Archaeology Science Reports.
Santa Elena, founded
in 1566 to protect Spanish
shipping interests, was the
first capital of Spanish colonial Florida. The site of
the settlement itself was
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ELK COUNTY
REAL ESTATE
LLC
814-781-1393
www.elkcountyre.com
Leah Whiteman, Broker
Sales Associates:
• Debra Sidelinger
• Barb Feidler, CRS, GRI
• David Larkin
• Debbie Dippold
located back in 1979 beneath a golf course at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot on Parris Island.
But the site of San Marcos remained a mystery.
Using the high-tech
equipment, scientists were
able to measure differences
in local magnetic fields to
locate the fort. They were
also able to map where
buildings stood on the 15acre Santa Elena settlement. Those buildings
included a church, courts,
shops, taverns and farms.
There are no historical documents with a map
of Santa Elena, DePratter
said.
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"Remote sensing is allowing us to create a town
plan that will be important
to interpreting what happened here 450 years ago
and for planning future research," he said.
Parris island is located between Hilton Head
and Beaufort on the lower
South Carolina coast.
Back in April, events
were held in the Beaufort
area to mark the 450th
anniversary of the founding of Santa Elena. They
included the opening of the
Santa Elena History Center and a visit to the area
by a replica of a Spanish
galleon.
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www.smdailypress.com
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Penn Highlands corner
Do you scramble to
the Internet every time
you get the sniffles or feel
a twinge? What you really
may have is a case of “the
searches.”
Eighty percent of
Internet users utilize the
Web to answer health
questions and self-diagnose when they don’t feel
well, research says.
The Pew Report noted
that one in three cell
phone owners use their
phone for health information, and 19 percent have
a health app on it.
Also, about 35 percent
of adults look online specifically to figure out what
medical condition they or
someone else might have.
“The Internet is an
incredibly rich source of
information, so this may
sound like a good idea;
however, studies show
that using the Internet to
self-diagnose is leading to
an entirely new problem
called “cyberchondria,”
which is anxiety for one’s
personal wellness caused
by health-related online
searches,” Lori Rancik,
RN, case manager of The
Women’s Health Center of
Penn Highlands Health-
care, and outreach coordinator, said.
Letting your searches
stress you out enough to
give you cyberchondria
can actually turn your
well-meaning search into
a health hazard.
“I see it very often
that people self-diagnose,”
Dr. Salman Azim of
Penn Highlands Internal
Medicine located at the
Moshannon Valley Community Medical Building
in Philipsburg, said.
“It’s global and it’s
increasing. People who
believe that they’re
diagnosed with a specific
medical or mental health
condition may attempt
to cure that problem
by changing their diet,
taking over-the-counter
medications or otherwise
attacking the issue at its
source. Unfortunately, if
people are working from a
flawed assumption about
what they have, they
might be taking steps
they simply don’t need to
take. Meanwhile, if people
are addressing one problem while ignoring the
real source of the issue,
they may find that their
original complaint grows
much more serious.”
“For example,” he
said, “People who assume they have a brain
tumor might begin to
dabble in drug abuse in
order to make the pain
fade or go away, and they
may believe that they’re
facing a terminal illness
and therefore don’t have
long to live, so there’s
no reason to be sober. If
their pain comes about
due to allergies, however,
and they don’t get that
addressed, those allergic
symptoms could grow
much more severe and
might even transition into
asthma. At some point,
the person could have an
addiction and asthma,
and the headache might
still be a problem. The
wrong diagnosis, as this
example makes clear,
could lead to long-lasting
problems.”
Here are just a few
reasons why trying to
answer health questions
and diagnose any problems without the aid of a
healthcare professional
can be problematic:
There is so much information available online
that it can be difficult to
sort reliable sources from
those that are less reputable.
Even when healthrelated information is
reliable, most searchers
do not have a medical
background to allow them
to know what to do with
it, as medical problems
tend to be complex.
timony refer to the defense's testimony.
Raspatello's
postsentence motion states
that the defendant acted
out of fear of Amy Brosious' actions and that he
acted in a justifiable defense of his property.
At a post-sentence
hearing Monday, Elk
County District Attorney Shawn T. McMahon
pointed out that Raspatello's name was not
on the title, meaning it
was not his legal property.
Masson added that
the court never instructed the jury to consider
defense of property and
was never requested to
do so by the defense during the trial.
After questing the
testimony from his trial,
Raspatello continues in
his post-sentence motion
to ask for Masson for resentencing.
Raspatello
claims
that the aggravated assault charges that include a deadly weapon
aspect are inappropriate.
Masson and McMahon pointed out that it
was the jury that made
a factual determination
that a deadly weapon
was used in the incident.
Continuing,
Raspatello is asking that
Masson adjust his sentence to make the sentences concurrent as
opposed to consecutive,
which the sentences currently are.
Raspatello's attorney,
Joseph Drew Ryan, argued at Monday's hearing that the incident was
less than five seconds
in duration and was a
single act, not a series of
acts.
Masson
responded
that there were two distinct victims in the case
and that the jury had
the opportunity to weigh
Raspatello's
testimony
against that of the other
witnesses.
The final re-sentencing argument related to
Raspatello's health and
age.
Given his age and
medical conditions, Raspatello may spend the
rest of his life in prison
with the sentences given
by Masson.
Ryan argued that the
sentence is "essentially
a life sentence," adding
that Raspatello was asking the court for a reduced sentence.
Masson
countered
that the court was aware
of Raspatello's age when
it entered its sentence,
adding that Raspatello
had the opportunity to
outline medical conditions in a pre-sentence
investigation
report,
which is a prerequisite
for sentencing.
McMahon
pointed
out on Monday that Ryan
had contacted Doug Bro-
Photo submitted
Visiting a healthcare provider is always better than diagnosing
yourself by reading internet information. Shown are patients doing
the right thing and visiting Dr. Julia Garcia of Penn Highlands
Family Medicine located in the St. Marys Community Medical
Building located in Fox Township.
Recent studies have
shown that as many as
nine out of ten people
who used the Internet to
self-diagnose were led to
information on serious
illnesses when they had
basic symptoms.
When patients mistakenly believe that
they have a serious illness based on Internet
searches, it can lead to
high levels of anxiety and
unnecessary screenings
that can actually cause
medical problems.
“The internet can provide very useful information but if you are not a
medical professional you
don’t always know what
diagnosis is most pertinent to your symptoms,”
said Dr. Julia Garcia of
Penn Highlands Family
Medicine located in the
St. Marys Community
Medical Building located
in Fox Township.
“Just because you
have chest pain, doesn’t
mean you have a heart attack,” she said. “No symptoms should be taken
lightly, because they may
be a sign something big
is coming. To be able to
correlate symptoms and
signs, you need to speak
to your doctor.”
“So don’t stress
yourself. Make an appointment to talk with
your doctor about what is
bothering you. If you can’t
stay away from the Internet in the meantime, use
credible medical websites
to search for signs and
symptoms –not a diagnosis – so that you will
have a comprehensive list
to take to your doctor,”
Rancik said.
“There is a wealth
of information available
on the women’s health
page of Penn Highlands
Healthcare located at
https://phh.spirithealth.
com,” she said.
But the most important search you can make
is finding the right doctor
if you don’t already have
one. Penn Highlands
Healthcare has an online
physician directory at
www.phhealthcare.org
that can help you find
a doctor who fits your
needs.
Start with the kind of
doctor you need. Do you
have a primary healthcare provider who can
help you with your overall
wellness? He or she can
make a recommendation if you need to see a
specialist.
You can talk friends,
family and co-workers,
but keep in mind that
your needs may be different from theirs. Also,
check that your insurance
plan covers this physician.
sious to ask him whether
he would be amenable to
a reduced sentence for
Raspatello.
Ryan stated that he
did not believe he was
doing anything inappropriate and would not
be contacting Doug Brosious again as he was requested not to do so.
Ryan added that
Raspatello did not reach
out to the victims, which
would be a violation of a
no contact stipulation in
Raspatello's sentence.
The ninth and final issue raised by Raspatello was a request for
his bail to be reinstated
through the appeals pro-
cess.
Raspatello's bail was
revoked for failing to appear for sentencing in
January.
Raspatello was taken
into custody by U.S. Marshals in Limestone, N.Y.
in March on the active
arrest warrant in Elk
County.
"I think that is certainly indicative of being a flight risk," Masson
said during Monday's
hearing.
Ultimately, Masson
has until the beginning
of September to determine whether any or
all of Raspatello's arguments have merit.
Raspatello
Continued from Page 1
Continued from Page 1
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Raspatello argues that
the commonwealth did
not meet its burden of
proof that Raspatello was
guilty of specific crimes.
"The defendant believes, and therefore
avers, there was insufficient evidence for the
jury to have found that
Mr. Brosious suffered
serious bodily injury as
result of the defendant's
actions in this matter,"
Raspatello's
post-sentence motion reads.
In this issue, Raspatello challenges his
guilty verdict to the first
count of aggravated assault, to which he was
sentenced to a minimum
of seven years of incarceration and a maximum
of 15 years.
Raspatello continues
to challenge most of the
guilty verdicts through
challenges of the commonwealth's case.
The remaining two
issues relating to tes-
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The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
w w w. s m d a i l y p r e s s . c o m
O PINION
Letters &
“On the Press”
a weekly column by HJ Beagley
Laura Funaki’s bass tale, show us
your black and blue, Big D and
Bubba, and other Bits & Pieces…
Thin Blue Line.
Something happens, someone attacks you with their words,
you feel unsafe…Who are you going to call? That’s right, you call
the police. They respond.
If some vote-seeking politician smarts off, rushes to judgment,
attacks the police with their words and makes them unsafe, who
are the police going to call?
Let’s answer that call. Join us and thank
our law enforcement officers.
Did you notice the black and blue ribbon placed on page 2 of
yesterday’s Daily Press? Please thank your fellow resident and
business owner Mr. Todd Parisi for placing that nice ribbon in
our paper with the simple message: “Thank you local law enforce- Harlan J. Beagley
Publisher
ment, we appreciate you.” This black and blue ribbon can be cut
out and displayed at work, at your home— I put it on my truck
window.
Today on page 10, another fine business placed a black and blue ribbon in this
paper. Thank you Rodney and the community-minded folks at Metco. Tomorrow yet
another local business will have a black and blue ribbon and a message…I would like
to print 100,000 of these ribbons, it might take me a few weeks or even a month but
I’m going to try. Wouldn’t it be powerful if we all had these ribbons on all our home
windows, cars and business doors?
It’s nothing fancy, I’m sure someone could charge a bunch of money and print a few
of them in China like they did the “Support our troops” magnet ribbons. I just want
to join these local businesses and print 100,000 ribbons on my local press. You will
see one of these clippable ribbons every day in the paper with a nice message. I will
get together with Police Chief Tom Nicklas and ask him for advice on making a donation to one of his local projects. If you want to be a partner and have a message, call,
email, or text [email protected]. Our partners so far are: Curves of St. Marys,
Metco Industries Inc., Cotter’s GMC, St. Marys Insurance, Elk County Real Estate,
Jet Metals, Morgan AM&T, Maria Solway, Burke’s Ace Hardware, SinterFire Inc.,
Steve’s Lawn Mower Sales & Service. And of course, Todd Parisi over at Team Parisi.
Please cut out and display the black
and blue ribbon in today’s paper on
your windows [Page 10 today and
page 2 yesterday]. “Pay respect…
I want to honor those who serve,
those who are keeping our streets
safe, said Todd Parisi, the first sponsor of The Daily Press’s “Thin Blue
Line” campaign [Todd’s ribbon was
in yesterday’s paper]. Todd explained
to me how he always wanted to be a
state trooper as a young adult but then proudly served our country in the Marine
Corps for 30 years [Thank you Todd]. This photo was taken downtown as Todd
[An amazing motivational speaker], addressed a crowd of over 300 folks and
shared his thoughts about our first responders for Law Enforcement Appreciation
Day [back on July 16.] “That simple act of kindness started it for me,” said Todd.
Roll of Painter’s Tape, Big D and
Bubba — Please stand up with us
I became aware of this ribbon movement when my wife Kim bought a roll of blue
“painter’s tape” and placed a strip of it on her rear window of her car. She was
listening to the “Big D and Bubba Show” on the Hound radio station and someone
called in about the blue tape. She told me all about it [Brilliant]. Pretty soon it was
on the back of my truck and some of her friends at St. Marys Insurance proudly
placed it on their cars as well. I have family in law enforcement and many friends
on the force — we need to stand up and answer the call.
6RPHWKLQJ¿VK\$QJOHU/DXUD)XQDNLDQGKHU
Largemouth Bass — a profound experience.
If you shop at the Save-a-Lot food
store in St. Marys then you might know
Laura Funaki [She is a real nice person]. Well, the next time you see her tell
her congratulations! Laura landed a big
fish the other day, one of those rare moments that we all want and expect each
time we cast out a bass plug. “I recently
caught the biggest catch of my career
as a fisherman. Everyone said I should
send it to you,” said Laura. She said it
was a whopping 22” 6.2 pound Largemouth Bass [6.2 pounds is a lot of fish,
no question about it].
Today is Wednesday,
July 27, the 209th day of
2016. There are 157 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in
History:
On July 27, 1996, terror struck the Atlanta
Olympics as a pipe bomb
exploded at Centennial
Olympic Park, directly
killing one person and injuring 111. (Anti-government extremist Eric Rudolph later pleaded guilty
to the bombing, exonerating security guard Richard Jewell, who had been
wrongly suspected.)
On this date:
In
1789,
President
George Washington signed
a measure establishing
the Department of Foreign Affairs, forerunner of
the Department of State.
In 1866, Cyrus W. Field
finished laying out the
first successful underwater telegraph cable between North America and
Europe (a previous cable
in 1858 burned out after
only a few weeks' use).
In 1921, Canadian researcher Frederick Banting and his assistant,
Charles Best, succeeded
in isolating the hormone
insulin at the University
of Toronto.
In 1946, American author, poet and publisher
Gertrude Stein, 72, died
in Neuilly-sur-Seine (NU'yee-suhr-sehn), France.
In 1953, the Korean
War armistice was signed
at Panmunjom, ending
three years of fighting.
In 1960, Vice President
Richard M. Nixon was
nominated for president
on the first ballot at the
Republican national convention in Chicago.
In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed
the Kerner Commission
to assess the causes of
urban rioting, the same
day black militant H. Rap
Brown said in Washington that violence was "as
American as cherry pie."
In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee voted
27-11 to adopt the first of
three articles of impeachment against President
Richard Nixon.
In 1976, Air Force veteran Ray Brennan became
the first person to die of
so-called
"Legionnaire's
Disease" following an
American Legion convention in Philadelphia.
In 1980, on day 267 of
the Iranian hostage crisis,
the deposed Shah of Iran
died at a military hospital
outside Cairo, Egypt, at
age 60.
In 1995, the Korean War
Veterans Memorial was
dedicated in Washington
by President Bill Clinton
and South Korean President Kim Young-sam.
In 2003, comedian Bob
Hope died in Toluca Lake,
California, at age 100.
Ten years ago: Floyd
Landis' stunning Tour de
France victory just four
days earlier was thrown
into doubt when he tested
positive for high levels of
testosterone during the
race. (Landis was stripped
of his title for doping.)
Five years ago: A Russian space official (Vitaly
Davydov) said that once
the mammoth International Space Station was
no longer needed, it would
be sent into the Pacific
Ocean. Julio Lugo scored
from third base on a blown
umpire's call at the plate,
giving the Atlanta Braves
a post-midnight 4-3 win in
19 innings over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Ervin Santana pitched the first solo
no-hitter for the Angels in
nearly 27 years, striking
out 10 and leading Los Angeles over Cleveland 3-1.
Former New York Yankees
pitcher Hideki Irabu, 42,
was found dead of an apparent suicide in the affluent Los Angeles suburb of
Rancho Palos Verdes.
One year ago: Presi-
dent Barack Obama, during a visit to Ethiopia,
unleashed a blistering
and belittling rebuke of
Republican White House
hopefuls, calling their attack on his landmark nuclear deal with Iran "ridiculous if it weren't so sad."
The Boy Scouts of America
ended its blanket ban on
gay adult leaders while allowing church-sponsored
Scout units to maintain
the exclusion for religious
reasons.
Today's Birthdays: TV
producer Norman Lear is
94. Actor Jerry Van Dyke
is 85. Sportscaster Irv
Cross is 77. Actor John
Pleshette is 74. Actressdirector Betty Thomas is
69. Olympic gold medal
figure skater Peggy Fleming is 68. Singer Maureen McGovern is 67.
Actress Janet Eilber is
65. Rock musician Tris
Imboden (Chicago) is 65.
Actress Roxanne Hart
is 62. Country musician
Duncan Cameron is 60.
Comedian-actress-writer
Carol Leifer is 60. Comedian Bill Engvall is 59.
Jazz singer Karrin Allyson is 54. Country singer
Stacy Dean Campbell is
49. Rock singer Juliana
Hatfield is 49. Actor Julian McMahon is 48. Actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
(NIH'-koh-lye KAH'-stur
WAHL'-dah) is 46. Comedian Maya Rudolph is 44.
Rock musician Abe Cunningham is 43. Singersongwriter Pete Yorn is
42. MLB All-Star Alex
Rodriguez is 41. Actor
Seamus Dever is 40. Actor Jonathan Rhys (rees)
Meyers is 39. Actor Blair
Redford is 33. Actress Taylor Schilling is 32. Singer
Cheyenne Kimball is 26.
Golfer Jordan Spieth is
23. Actress Alyvia Alyn
Lind is nine.
Thought for Today: "We
are always the same age
inside." — Gertrude Stein
(1874-1946).
The Daily Press
(144920)
245 Brusselles St., St. Marys, Pa. 15857
Website: www.smdailypress.com
Publisher: Harlan J. Beagley
E-mail: [email protected]
Cell: 509-770-6598
Office: 814-781-1596
Managing Editor: Joseph Bell
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 814-781-1596
Fax: 814-834-7473
E-mail: [email protected]
What is FishBrain?
Laura Funaki also asked me to mention an app called “FishBrain,” she said
it is an awesome family friendly app all
fishermen should check out [Very cool].
FishBrain is a community-based fishing
app. Their claim is something like…you
can join other anglers in your area and
contribute local fishing forecasts and
share locations. “The good spot,” this
somehow forecasts or shows what species are biting in your area. Thank you
for the tip Laura, I will check it out...I
could tell you the best place to drown
worms and where “not to go”…does that
help?
Today in History
Laura Funaki showing off her big
Bass. “I caught him on a 4 1/2 ft.
Ugly Stick, size 10 hook (that’s very
small LOL) at Laurel Run Reservoir.
It felt like forever [The fight] but
probably only took about 10 minutes,”
explained Laura. Laura also invited
me to join her family as they go fishing soon [What a treat] then she added
“Be careful though, if you have a fishermen’s spirit in you it might surface
full strength,” she warned [Oh my].
Harlan Beagley
Publisher, Daily Press
Published every morning except Sunday, New Year’s Day, Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Single copy price 50 cents.
By carrier or mail in county: 1 month $12.50, 3 months $36.75, 6 months $70.00, 1 year $134.75.
By motor route delivery: 1 month $12.50, 3 months $37.00, 6 months $73.00, 1 year $139.00,
Out of county mail delivery: 1 month $16.00.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Press, 245 Brusselles St., St. Marys, Pa. 15857.
Complete information on advertising and advertising rates furnished at The Daily Press business office.
Advertisers must notify the management immediately when errors appear. The publisher reserves the
right to reject, edit or cancel any advertising at any time without liability. Publisher’s liability for error
is limited to the amount paid for advertising.
Periodicals postage paid at St. Marys, Pa.
www.smdailypress.com
Records
5
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Daily Press
Today's Obituaries
Patrick Joseph Belsole
Patrick Joseph Belsole, 60, of Hershey, died
peacefully with his wife
by his side Monday, July
25, 2016 in the Hershey
Medical Center after a
long battle with pancreatic cancer.
He was born March
20, 1956 in St. Marys, a
son of Michael R. and Rose
Mary (Herzing) Belsole of
St. Marys.
He was married Aug.
25, 2012 to Joelyn Lee
(Martorana) Belsole.
Patrick was a 1974
graduate of St. Marys
Area High School.
He was a member of
St. Joan of Arc Catholic
Church, Hershey.
Patrick was employed
for 34 years with Hypertherm, Hanover, New
Hampshire, last working
as a district sales manager in January 2015.
Patrick loved anything water related. Every summer, Pat and Joie
spent almost every weekend on their houseboat
located at Raystown Lake
along with their family,
friends and their H-Dock
family.
He is also survived by
a son, Mark Schaut of St.
Marys; a daughter, Greta
Belsole of Hummelstown;
a stepson, Philip Vagnoni
of Reading; three brothers, Michael, husband of
Angela Belsole of New
York; Gerald (G.T.), husband of Debbie Belsole of
St. Marys; Father Kurt
Belsole of Rome; and two
sisters, Mary, wife of Larry Vonarx of Gardeau, and
Rose Anne Johnson of St.
Marys. He is also survived
by many nieces and nephews.
Pat was preceded in
death by his grandparents
and brother-in-law, Matt
Johnson.
A Mass of Christian
Burial for Patrick Joseph
Belsole will be celebrated
Friday, July 29 at 10 a.m.
in the Chapel of St. George
at Gethsemane Cemetery, 3139 Kutztown Rd.,
(Muhlenberg Township),
Reading, Pa. 19605. There
will be no public viewing.
Entombment will follow
in Gethsemane Cemetery
Mausoleum, Muhlenberg
Township.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to
Pancreatic Cancer Action
Network, 1500 Rosecrens
Ave., Suite 200, Manhattan Beach, Calif. 90266.
Stitzel Family Funeral Homes & Crematory, Inc., Laureldale, is in
charge of arrangements.
For online condolences, visit www.StitzelFamilyFuneralHomes.com.
Continued from Page 1
KORB
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State Police at
Ridgway
License to engage in
business
The
Ridgway-based
State Police report an incident of failure to possess a license to engage in
business.
Police report the incident occurred Aug. 30,
2014 between 8:30 a.m.
and 2 p.m. along South St.
Marys Road in St. Marys.
According to police, Jo-
Plans
will be different prizes
and stuff in each package,"
Schreiber said.
He also indicated that
Elk County's Got Talent
is expected to kick off at 1
p.m.
"We are going to be
running not only the talent show, but we're also going to do a small KanJam
Tournament over there.
There will also be other
small games and things
going on that people can
participate in," Schreiber
said.
The St. Marys Area
Dance Team is also expected to perform, and other
entertainment is still in
the works.
Also still in the works
is finalizing the panel of
judges that will determine
the winners. Ben Daghir
and Fr. Ross Miceli will
both be on the panel, and
the other members have
yet to be announced.
"The judges are going
to vote on who wins," Schreiber said. "If it's a tie,
we're going to go to Facebook and let people vote."
He added that it is still
being determined whether
the event will be able to be
streamed live.
In total, the entire
event is expected to last between two to three hours.
"It's not going to be a
full day where you're going to have to give up your
whole Sunday, but we do
encourage people to come
over and check out the local talent," Schreiber said.
Schreiber
remarked
that he and his staff have
been impressed with the
audition videos they received with contestants'
entry forms.
"We have seen some of
their videos that they've
Police Reports
Before St. Marys had a community pool, farm ponds and chilly
mountain streams cooled off young people. The most well
known and frequented of these makeshift pools was on Silver
Creek below the Johnsonburg Road. Dammed up by the
youngsters themselves using rocks, a sizable swimming hole
was formed, sometimes even sporting a diving board. Refreshing waters in a secluded vale charmed St. Marys' overheated
youth.
Wish granted: Six-yearold boy is garbage man
for a day
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Ethan Dean
has always dreamed of
being a garbage man.
He never tires of playing
with toy garbage trucks
and loves to watch the
real ones drive past his
house.
On
Tuesday,
the
6-year-old with cystic fibrosis got his wish, riding shotgun in a booster
seat through Sacramento
as an honest-to-goodness
garbage truck driver with
a set of wheels labeled
"Ethan's Garbage Truck."
He donned a green
cape that read "Hero
Ethan" and a big smile as
the truck stopped to pick
up trash and recyclables.
It wasn't a chore for
Ethan, who said his favorite part of the day put
on by the Make-A-Wish
Foundation was "cleaning up garbage." Hundreds of people gathered
to cheer him on.
After being surprised
at his school, Ethan and
the garbage truck made
five stops.
Sam Thurman, the
Waste Management employee who drove Ethan,
said when he agreed to
take part, he had no idea
how big the day was going to be.
And as for Ethan?
"He can't wipe that
grin off his face," Thurman said. "He looks like
it's Christmas morning
and he's unwrapping his
first present."
Ethan was diagnosed
with cystic fibrosis as an
infant and began treatment at eight weeks
old. The genetic disorder is characterized by a
buildup of thick mucus
and frequent lung infections, and the median life
expectancy is about 40
years old.
When Make-A-Wish
Foundation agreed to
grant his wish in February, there was little doubt
what he wanted it to be.
"We pretty much
knew it was going to be
about garbage trucks,"
sent in for the auditions,
and I will say that they're
definitely pretty talented,"
Schreiber said.
He also indicated that
he and his staff are looking
into sharing brief clips of
some contestants on Facebook ahead of the event to
show what attendees can
look forward to on the day
of the event.
Elk County's Got Talent is open to individuals
of all ages from throughout
the county, and Schreiber
noted that entrants hail
from a number of communities, not just St. Marys.
Additionally,
even
though the official entry
deadline has passed, Schreiber indicated that entrants will still be accepted through the end of the
week.
"We will accept another couple auditions.
We can't take much more
than that," Schreiber said.
"We're not going to take an
extra 20. It'll be on a first
come, first served kind of
deal. We will take a couple
more if they want to sign
up."
Anyone still interested in being a part of
Elk County's Got Talent
should contact Memorial
Park staff by Friday.
"They can message us
on Facebook, email us at
memorialpark2@gmail.
com, or call the park office
at 834-9418 and we can answer their questions and
get them their paperwork
and let them know they
need to get us the audition
take," Schreiber said.
Additional information
on Elk County's Got Talent, as well as other park
The ECCHS Class of
activities, can be found on1964 will hold its monthly
line at smrecreation.com.
luncheon Aug. 3 at 11:30
said Ethan's dad, Ken
Dean, laughing.
He's been watching them come down
the street since he first
learned how to crawl,
Dean said. Ethan also
has a garbage truck
bedspread and pillow,
garbage truck toys and
has had a garbage truck
birthday party.
Ethan's big day comes
three years after MakeA-Wish transformed San
Francisco into Gotham
for a 5-year-old boy who
had battled leukemia for
years and dreamed of being Batkid. Miles Scott
traveled from one crime
scene to another, rescuing a damsel in distress
and thwarting the plans
of The Riddler and The
Penguin, as crowds of
people cheered him on.
Ethan's dream is
being a less fantastic,
more everyday superhero. When he visited
Make-A-Wish and was
asked about some of his
dreams, almost all of his
answers were garbagetruck related, said Jennifer Stolo, CEO of the local
chapter of the Make-AWish Foundation.
Ethan's uncle, Tim
Dean, said it means a
lot to the family to have
people who don't even
know him come out to
celebrate.
At least 500 people
gathered at the Capitol
for a press conference
and VIP lunch at the end
of Ethan's day.
Erika
Sizemore
doesn't know Ethan and
said she learned about
his special day on social
media. It hit home for
her, she said, because she
has two boys, Kane and
Benny, who also love garbage trucks.
"As soon as he got
out of the truck I cried,"
she said, tearing up. "It
could happen to any of
our kids. He is an amazing little kid and I just
think that any of could be
in the same boats as his
parents are."
Note of Interest
ST. MARYS
MONUMENTS
LOCALLY OWNED
& OPERATED
SUSIE & DONNY (FLIP)
BOBENRIETH
148 TIMBERLINE ROAD
834-9848
a.m. at The Village Peddler. Call Nancy at 7816439.
AUCTION
1325 Glen Hazel Rd.
St. Marys, PA
Thursday, July 28th, 2016
5pm
Crolls Mills Auction House
Auctioneers #AU005812
Phone: 724-496-4580
auctionzip.com Auctioneer ID # 17949
seph A. Chicola, 67, of St.
Marys, is charged with
two counts of Title 63, license to engage in business, after he engaged in
the business as a dealer
without securing a proper
license. The accused purchased, sold, or exchanged
more than four vehicles in
the 2014 calendar year.
Both counts are summary offenses with a
$1,000 fine each. The investigation continues.
Appeals court
declines appeal in
2007 shooting of 5
LANCASTER, (AP)
— An appeals court has
declined to reduce the
decades-long sentence of
a man who pleaded guilty
to shooting five people,
including a toddler, in
central Pennsylvania almost a decade ago.
Forty-eight-year-old
Mark Galloway of Philadelphia was sentenced
to 41½ to 100 years in
prison in the June 2007
shooting in Lancaster.
Prosecutors said he
shot his girlfriend and her
mother, daughter, 2-yearold grandson and a family
friend. Authorities said
he was distraught that
his girlfriend had moved
from Philadelphia to Lancaster.
All of the victims survived. Galloway pleaded
guilty to attempted murder and aggravated assault.
Galloway argued in
an appeal that witnesses
had lied and also alleged
improprieties by police
and prosecutors. But the
Superior Court panel
ruled that his challenge
to his conviction was filed
too late.
Employees of the Month
Photos submitted
Penn Highlands Elk and Pinecrest Manor honored Elaine Scida, top, and Sandy Schneider, respectively, as the Employees
of the Month for June. They are pictured with Rose Campbell,
president of Penn Highlands Elk. The awards are given to
employees who consistently go above and beyond while in
their duties. Elaine works in the nutritional services department
and Sandy works at Pinecrest Manor.
6
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
PNC Bank to consolidate
Elk County locations
By Richie Lecker
Staff Writer
RIDGWAY – PNC
Bank has announced to its
customers that it will be
consolidating the Ridgway
and St. Marys branches of
PNC Bank.
On Oct. 21, the Ridgway branch of PNC Bank
will close and Ridgway consumers will be transferred
to the St. Marys branch.
In a letter to all Ridgway banking customers,
PNC stated that the Ridgway branch is being closed
as a result of a study in
which PNC Bank looked
at the physical capacity of
their buildings as well as
the number of customers
that use each location.
Several PNC Bank consumers took to Facebook to
express their displeasure
over the closure of the local
branch.
Many of these consumers worried that their elderly relatives would have
a difficult time adjusting
to the change, not able to
handle the transition to
online banking or not having the desire to drive to St.
Marys to do banking.
Others view the branch
closure as a mild inconvenience with minimal longterm effects.
With the news that the
local branch of PNC Bank
will be permanently closing at the end of October,
residents will now have to
determine whether they
want to drive an additional
11 miles to do their banking
with PNC Bank or whether
they want to switch to another local bank.
Northwest
Savings
Bank, Farmers National
Bank and CNB Bank currently all have offices within Ridgway Borough.
PNC Bank's branch
manager from Ridgway
said she was unable to
comment on the branch's
closing when contacted by
The Ridgway Record.
The bank's media dePhotos submitted
partment did not respond The Community Nurses 8th annual Butterfly Release for Hospice will take place on Sunday, Aug. 7
to a request for additional at 2 p.m. at Pinecrest Manor
information prior to press
time.
ference call Tuesday with
the media, in releasing a
report , "Tar Sands in the
Atlantic Ocean: Transcanada's Proposed Energy
East Pipeline," that lays
out their case against the
project.
"What we have is a
proposal to move nearly
300 super tankers down
the eastern seaboard, and
we don't have the techniques and technology to
contain and clean a spill of
tar sands diluted bitumen
should one happen," said
Anthony Swift, the Canada project director for the
Natural Resources Defense
Council.
TransCanada said that
the project would adhere to
stringent safety standards
and that it would be the responsibility of its customers of where they ship the
oil, noting that "it does not
own or operate ships for
the delivery of oil."
"Safety remains our
top priority," TransCanada spokesman Jonathan
Abecassis said in an email
to The Associated Press.
He said the port in New
Brunswick "will have a
number of preventive safety measures" including the
use of trained pilots and
advanced navigational and
docking technologies.
"We are working in
collaboration with local
authorities and first responders during the development of our emergency
plan to ensure that the
plan is adapted to local circumstances with resources
placed strategically across
the route to react quickly
in the unlikely event of an
emergency," he said.
Abecassis said the proj-
ect is being reviewed by the
National Energy Board in
Canada. Environmentalists are hopeful the United
States will express its opposition to the project during this review process and
enact a ban on the shipment of tar sands in U.S.
waters.
The project comes less
than a year after President
Barack Obama rejected
the Keystone XL project
following seven years of
political wrangling, arguing it would have undercut U.S. efforts to clinch a
global climate change deal.
The Paris agreement last
December aims to keep the
global temperature rise below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6
degrees Fahrenheit) compared with preindustrial
times.
Environmentalists are
hoping the same grassroots success they had with
Keystone will bring down
the Energy East project.
In a sign they may use
some of the same tactics,
the National Resource Defense Council has already
launched a petition against
the project that highlights
the role tar sands play in
worsening global warming.
"We're here today because the threat of climate
change is increasingly dire,
and we have a critical but
narrow window of opportunity to take action," Sierra
Club's Cathy Collentine
said. "That includes action
to stop tar sands infrastructure from being built
and to take action to ban
the transport of tar sands
in tankers that would increase the threat to our
communities, environment
and our climate."
Environmentalists take aim at
TransCanada pipeline project
BOSTON (AP) — Environmentalists are again
taking aim at the company
that proposed the Keystone
XL pipeline — this time for
another of its projects they
fear would send hundreds
of supertankers laden with
crude oil down the Atlantic
coast to refineries in Texas
and Louisiana.
TransCanada is behind
the Energy East Pipeline
project, a 4,600-kilometer
pipeline, or nearly 3,000
miles, that would carry
crude oil from tar sands
in Western Canada to
the East Coast, where it
would then be shipped to
refineries along the Texas
Gulf Coast. When completed, the project would
carry 1.1-million barrels
of crude oil every day from
refineries in Alberta and
Saskatchewan in Eastern
Canada.
Plans call for converting a natural gas line for
part of the route and then
building a new pipeline
to connect to the existing
pipeline in Alberta, Saskatchewan,
Manitoba,
Eastern Ontario, Québec
and New Brunswick.
The
Natural
Resources Defense Council,
Sierra Club and other environmental groups are
concerned about potential spills of tar sands diluted bitumen along the
route in Canada that goes
over thousands of rivers,
streams and lakes. They
also warned a spill along
the East Coast could prove
devastating to communities that depend on tourism and fisheries and are
not prepared to handle an
event of this kind.
The groups held a con-
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Community Nurses, Inc. announces
Butterfly Release event
ST. MARYS – The
Community Nurses 8th
annual Butterfly Release
for Hospice will take place
on Sunday, Aug. 7 at 2 p.m.
at Pinecrest Manor on the
Penn Highlands Elk campus. A ceremony will be
held in the dining room,
including the reading of
names and inspirational
messages. Then, guests
will be led to Pinecrest’s
courtyard, where hundreds of butterflies will be
released in honor and remembrance of loved ones.
When released, some
butterflies flutter away
immediately, while many
others delight the crowd by
staying to rest on hands,
shoulders and nearby
flowers and bushes. Light
refreshments will follow.
Anyone wishing to
sponsor a butterfly in honor or memory of a loved
one may log onto www.
communitynurses.org and
print an order form under “Special Events.” The
cost is $25 each. A limited
number of butterflies will
be available to purchase
on the day of the event
prior to the start of the
ceremony. They will be $30
each.
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• Replacements of: Stickers, Cards &
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Tire Chains &
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7
www.smdailypress.com
Bank announces 2017 calendar contest
Photo submitted
CNB Bank would like to remind residents of its 2017 Calendar Contest, which will again feature
photos of CNB’s market area in Western Pennsylvania with the theme, “Local Bridges.”
CNB Bank would like
to remind residents of its
2017 Calendar Contest,
which will again feature
photos of CNB’s market
area in Western Pennsylvania with the theme,
“Local Bridges.”
Local
residents,
whether they are beginner, amateur or professional photographers, are
encouraged to submit one
or two of their photos online at www.CNBBank.
bank. Photos can be submitted through Aug. 7.
On Wednesday, Aug.
10, 12 winners, including
a Best of Show, and 24
honorable mentions will
be selected. These photos will then be printed
in the Bank’s 2017 wall
calendars, which will be
distributed to customers
in November. The winners will be announced
Friday, Aug. 12.
CNB initiated this
contest to provide an avenue to feature local talent and the communities
in which the Bank serves
through the eyes of residents as they’ve captured
with their camera.
CNB is accepting
photo submissions on
their website through
Aug. 7. Each entrant can
submit up to two photos.
For details on the contest
and photo requirements,
visit
www.CNBBank.
bank and click on the calendar contest ad on the
homepage.
CNB would like to
encourage everyone to
participate and wish all
photographers, beginner
to professional, the best
of luck.
Suspect in student's killing was
convicted of similar attack
"The nature of this
case would cause any
investigator to explore
whether or not this has
happened before," DeWine said. "We know it happened one other time."
Authorities
have
spent the past several
days digging through
the farmhouse and barns
where Worley operated a
small-engine repair shop
surrounded by northwestern Ohio's vast soybean and cornfields.
Worley served three
years of a four- to 10-year
sentence in the 1990 abduction, which happened
about 20 miles from
where Joughin was riding her bike last week
near Metamora.
He entered an Alford
plea to abduction, meaning he didn't admit guilt
but conceded that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him.
Robin Gardner, who
said she jumped out of
Worley's truck after he
ran her down, said she
was shocked but not surprised he'd been arrested
again.
"Of course, I think
he's done it before and after me," she said.
Gardner, who was
then 26 and moved out of
state soon afterward, said
she still has panic attacks
when she's far from other
people.
"I can't walk in the
woods alone, I can't
hike, camp, bird watch,"
she said in an email. "I
get very afraid if people
aren't around to help me
if I'm in need."
She said she was
heartbroken over "knowing the fear that Sierah
experienced and the sadness that her mother is
experiencing."
"My heart aches so
much for Sierah and her
family," she said, adding
that Worley should have
been kept in prison longer. "I wish I could have
done more to protect
them but it was out of my
hands."
d to
Prou
r
no
Ho
Law
orc
Enf
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
— The circumstances,
separated by 26 years,
are chilling — two women
attacked while bicycling
alone down lonely Ohio
country roads on warm
July days.
The first fought off
her attacker on Independence Day in 1990 after he knocked her from
the bike with his truck,
pulled her inside the cab
and handcuffed her.
The second, a 20-yearold college student, never
made it home from her
ride last week. Authorities believe that they
found Sierah Joughin's
remains hidden in a field
of cornstalks— and that
the same man abducted
both women and killed
Joughin.
Now they're looking
into whether there could
be more victims, Attorney
General Mike DeWine
said Tuesday.
James Worley, 57,
who spent three years
in prison after the 1990
abduction, was arrested
Friday, three days after
Joughin
disappeared.
He was charged Tuesday
with aggravated murder and was due in court
Wednesday.
Worley has declined
interview requests, and
an attorney appointed to
represent him declined to
comment.
Autopsy results were
pending, but the sheriff in Fulton County has
said he strongly believes
the remains belong to
Joughin, who was entering her junior year at the
University of Toledo.
DeWine said the fact
that Worley had committed a similar attack before made it worth investigating whether other
women had been victimized.
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JUNE
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
8
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
California
Red Seedless
Grapes
$ 49
1
Lb.
Hormel Always Tender Pork
1893 Premium Beef
Porterhouse
or T-Bone Steak
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Coke or
Sprite
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ect Va
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1.29 2/$5 2/$3 4/$5
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
Minor stars win opening game at state tournament
St. Marys faces
Avon Grove
today at 4 p.m.
The St. Marys Minor
League all-star softball
team made a big statement in their opening
round game of the 2016
Little League 8-10 Year
Old Softball Pennsylvania State Tournament in
Wellsboro on Tuesday afternoon as they took an
early lead and then won
11-2 over the Section 4
champion Indiana Little
League squad. The victory
puts St. Marys into the
semifinals of the winners
bracket.
Kara Hanslovan went
the distance in the circle
for St. Marys, giving up
five hits and striking out
eight while never walking
a batter. Hanslovan also
led the team at the plate
with a 4-for-4 effort with
a triple, a double, and a
pair of singles. She scored
three of the team’s runs.
Indiana was the home
team for the game, and St.
Marys wasted little time
putting three runs on the
Little League
Softball
Minor League
R
DePrator’s
12
St. Marys Tool & Die
8
Battery: Reagan Bauer and Rosa DePrator, DePrator’s; Tori Newton and
Kiri Emmert, St. Marys
Tool & Die.
Home runs - Tori Newton, Emily Mourer.
Triples - Rosa DePrator.
Doubles - Kiri Emmert, Emily Mourer, Gina
Geci.
board in the top of the
opening inning. Sydney
Alexander,
Hanslovan,
and Emily Mourer all singled and went on to score.
Gabby Weisner also recorded a single in the inning and went on to steal
second and then picked
up third on a passed ball,
but she ended up being
left stranded.
Indiana’s
batters
went down in order in the
home half of the inning.
St. Marys’ offense
could not get anything
going in the top of the
second, and Indiana got
their first base runner in
the bottom of the inning
as a batter reached on a
two-out error. However, a
strikeout left her stranded on first.
In the top of the third,
St. Marys managed to
load the bases but were
not able to push through
any more runs. Hanslovan got things started
with a one-out single and
then Mourer joined her
after reaching on an error.
Gianna Surra walked, but
a strikeout left all three
stranded. Indiana left a
runner on second in the
bottom of the inning following a two-out single
for the team’s first hit of
the game.
St. Marys scored another run in the top of the
fourth as Lydia Anderson
led off with a single and
went on to score. Both of
Indiana’s runs came in
the bottom of the fourth,
cutting St. Marys’ lead to
4-2.
Another run for St.
Marys in the top of the
fifth made the score 5-2.
Hanslovan led off with
a single and went on to
score. Indiana was able to
get runners on base in the
bottom of the inning but
failed to answer with any
runs.
St. Marys then exploded with a six-run top
of the sixth to take a commanding 11-2 lead. Ellie
Baron led off with a single, Jianna Gerg followed
that up with a single, and
then Lucy Klawuhn drew
a walk. All three scored
Kings edged by Grays
After battling back
from a 2-0 deficit in the
best-of-five series against
the Brookville Grays
in the opening round of
the Federation Baseball
League playoffs to force a
deciding game, the Kersey
Kings saw their inaugural season in the league
come to an end after being
edged 3-2 by Brookville at
McKinley Field on Tuesday evening.
The game was originally scheduled for Sunday, but was postponed
twice due to inclement
weather.
The loss eliminates
the Kings from the play-
offs, while the Grays will
advance to take on the
reigning four-time defending champion Sykesville Senators in a bestof-seven semifinal series
that will open at 6 p.m.
on Thursday in Reynoldsville.
In the other semifinal
series the DuBois Rockets will take on the Rossiter Miners. That series
is scheduled to get underway Thursday at 6 p.m. in
DuBois.
The Kersey Kings
ended their season with
a 14-15 record. They were
12-12 in the regular season.
Elk County Catholic School System
to account for the team’s
first three runs of the inning. Following a popup,
Izzy Catalone singled and
Hanslovan hit a triple.
Mourer then reached base
on an error. All three also
scored to account for the
other three runs of the inning. After a strikeout, DePrator was hit by a pitch
and then Baron reached
on an error, but a strikeout left both stranded.
A popup to Hanslovan
and a pair of strikeouts
sent Indiana’s batters
down in order in the home
half of the inning, securing the 11-2 victory for St.
Marys.
Also in the opening
round in St. Marys’ half
of the bracket, Section 7
champion Avon Grove defeated Section 6 champion
Northwest 6-4 on Tuesday
afternoon. St. Marys and
Avon Grove will face off
in the semifinals of the
winners bracket today at
4 p.m. on the back field
at the Wellsboro softball
complex.
St. Marys 11
Sydney
Alexander
4-1-1, Izzy Catalone 3-11, Kara Hanslovan 4-3-4,
Emily Mourer 3-2-1, Gabby Weisner 3-0-1, Rosa
DePrator 1-0-0, Gianna
Surra 1-0-0, Ellie Baron
3-1-1, Seanna VanAlstine
1-0-0, Jianna Gerg 3-11, Lucy Klawuhn 1-1-0,
Rylee Nicklas 1-0-0. Totals
28-11-11.
File photo by Becky Polaski
St. Marys Minor League all-star softball team pitcher
Kara Hanslovan is shown in action in a game earlier this
season. Hanslovan not only went the distance in the circle, giving up five hits and striking out eight, in the team’s
state playoff opener on Tuesday, but she also went 4-for-4
at the plate and scored three runs in the team’s 11-2 win
over Indiana.
Local & Area Sports Briefs
Indiana 2
Ullman 3-0-1, Manzek
YOUTH FIELD DAY MEETING TONIGHT
3-0-0, Zimmerman 3-1-1,
The
Elk Co. Youth Field Day Committee will be
Bell 3-1-1, McHugh 3-0-0,
meeting
tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the St. Marys SportsCass 2-0-1, Runge 2-0-0,
men’s
farm.
McAnulty 2-0-1, Lorelli
All chairpersons are asked to attend as well as any2-0-0. Totals 23-2-5.
one wishing to help with the 23rd Annual Elk Co. Youth
Field Day.
Score by innings
R
St. Marys 300 116
11
Volunteers are needed to help make this a successIndiana 000 200
2
ful Field Day.
is still accepting new student
registrations at all grade levels for
the 2016-17 school year!
Law
me
e
orc
Enf
Financial aid is available!
r
no
Ho
More information on our schools can be
found on our website - www.eccss.org!
d to
Prou
The first day of school is right around
the corner, and our preschool and
kindergarten classes have limited space
available - so please contact us
ASAP to register your child!
nt
Thanks for making our community a
safe and better place to live.
Questions or concerns? Please contact:
Frankie Stubber, Director of Admissions
814-834-1480 | [email protected]
1241 Brussells St.
St. Marys, PA
781-3630
11
www.smdailypress.com
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Big League softball team advances to East Regional title game
WORCESTER, Massachusetts – The St.
Marys Big League softball team defeated the
host team from Massachusetts 7-3 on Tuesday
to advance to the title
game of the East Regional softball tournament
in Worcester, Massachusetts. St. Marys will now
meet the New noon with
the winner advancing to
the Little League World
Series to be held in Delaware. New York defeated
Union City (Pa.) in the
other semifinal game by a
10-0 score.
St. Marys was the visiting team as the result of
the coin flip, and got on
the board in the top of the
first inning. Sara Newell
singled and advanced to
third on a single by Abbey
Bauer. Marissa Heary’s
sacrifice fly scored Newell
to give St. Marys an early
1-0 lead. Massachusetts
went down in order in the
bottom of the first.
St. Marys added another run in the second
when Sydney Hoffman
walked, stole second and
scored on an error. Massachusetts was unable to
score in the second as St.
Marys maintained a 2-0
lead.
Neither team was
able to score in the third
or fourth innings, but in
the fifth St. Marys erupted for four runs on four
hits. Maddy Schneider
and Sara Newell singled
and Abbey Bauer walked
to load the bases. Marissa
Heary singled to score
Schneider and Newell.
Jolene Renwick followed
with a double to plate
Bauer and Heary to push
the St. Marys lead to 6-0.
Massachusetts scored a
run in the bottom of the
fifth to cut the St. Marys
lead to 6-1.
A scoreless sixth inning set the stage for the
final frame. Abbey Bauer
singled and advanced
to third on an error and
walk. Cheyenne Bothun came through with
a sacrifice fly to score
Bauer and increase the
St. Marys lead to 7-1. The
host team was able to
score two runs in the bottom of the seventh to set
the final score at 7-3.
Lexi Cunningham singles against the New Jersey team.
Photo submitted
St. Marys native wins
Presque Isle Half Marathon
By Joseph Bell
Daily Press Editor
Photo submitted
Micayla Bothun fields a ball in the outfield against New York.
Photo submitted
Sophie Yanak records an out at first
base against Massachusetts.
Hernandez overcomes shaky
start, Mariners top Pirates 7-4
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Felix Hernandez settled down after a shaky
start and picked up his
first victory in more than
two months when the
Seattle Mariners topped
the Pittsburgh Pirates
7-4 on Tuesday night.
Hernandez (5-4) gave
up four runs — all in
the first two innings —
and struck out three in
six innings in his first
win since May 21. Steve
Cishek worked a perfect
ninth for his 24th save.
Kyle Seager’s three
hits for Seattle included
his 20th home run, and
Franklin Gutierrez added his 10th off Francisco
Liriano (6-10).
Liriano hit his second
career home run, a 416foot shot to center off
Hernandez in the second
inning, but saw his mild
resurgence this month
take a significant step
back. Liriano surrendered seven runs in just
3 1/3 innings as his ERA
jumped to 5.38.
Gregory Polanco collected a season-high four
hits, including his 13th
homer, but the Pirates
left nine men on base
and went 1 for 13 with
runners in scoring position.
Hernandez
spent
nearly two months on
the disabled list due
to a strained right calf
and hardly looked like
his dominant self while
slogging through 6 2/3
innings in a no-decision
against
the
Chicago
White Sox last Wednesday.
It looked like more
of the same early. Polanco’s shot to center field
just cleared the wall in
the first. Starling Marte
drilled an RBI triple off
the wall in right and
Jung Ho Kang added a
run-scoring groundout to
stake Liriano to a quick
3-0 lead.
When Liriano sent a
Hernandez offering into
the bushes beyond center
in the second, the Pirates
appeared to be in command with a 4-1 advantage.
It didn’t last.
Liriano came in off
perhaps his best start
of the year, striking out
13 against no walks in a
win over Milwaukee last
week. But the control issues that have dogged
him this season resurfaced. He threw nearly
as many balls (34) as
strikes (38) while walking four. The pitches he
did get around the plate
were often hammered.
Gutierrez homered leading off the third and Seager tied it at 4 four batters later.
An RBI double by
Shawn O’Malley and a
run-scoring single by
Robinson Cano helped
chase Liriano in the
fourth. An RBI groundout
by Nelson Cruz against
Jared Hughes gave the
Mariners a three-run
lead and gave Hernandez
time to settle down.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Mariners: RHP Taijuan Walker (right foot
tendinitis) will pitch a
simulated game Wednesday in Pittsburgh. It will
be the first time he has
faced hitters since going
on the disabled list July
6. “I’m expecting him to
cut it loose,” manager
Scott Servais said. ... SS
Ketel Marte (mononucleosis) played catch in
Seattle in his first baseball activity since he was
placed on the DL last
Wednesday. Servais said
Marte is still regaining
his strength after losing
eight pounds.
Pirates: RHP Ryan
Vogelsong (facial fractures) will pitch for Triple-A Indianapolis on
Wednesday in Gwinnett.
Vogelsong, out since May
28 after taking a pitch
to the face while batting
against Colorado on May
23, left his last start with
Indianapolis due to neck
stiffness. Manager Clint
Hurdle said the plan is
for Vogelsong to go seven
innings or 95 pitches. ...
The Pirates have yet to
make a decision on who
will start on Friday night
in Milwaukee in place of
injured RHP Tyler Glasnow (shoulder fatigue).
UP NEXT
Mariners: James Paxton (3-4, 4.18 ERA) will
try to back up perhaps his
strongest start of the season on Wednesday. Paxton held Toronto to one
run in seven innings last
Saturday.
Pirates: Gerrit Cole
(5-6, 2.99 ERA) will try
for his first win since May
26. Cole is 0-3 with a 3.96
ERA in his last five starts,
which are sandwiched
around a stint on the disabled list with a strained
right triceps.
Indians rally for 3 in 9th to stun Nationals 7-6
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Francisco Lindor pushed
an RBI single through
Washington’s
drawn-in
infield with one out in
the ninth inning, and the
Cleveland Indians rallied
for three runs in their
final at-bat to stun the
Washington
Nationals
7-6 on Tuesday night in a
matchup of two first-place
teams with sights on October.
Down two runs and
three outs from their losing streak reaching a season-high four games, the
Indians rallied against
Nationals closer Jonathan Papelbon (2-4), who
did not get an out before
he was pulled by manager
Dusty Baker.
With the bases loaded,
Lindor fisted his base hit
into right field and danced
his way up the first-base
line as the Indians celebrated an improbable
victory.
Bryan Shaw (2-4)
got two outs in the ninth
and picked up the win as
Cleveland won its first
home game since July 10.
St. Marys Area native
Colt Mack recently took
first place at the 37th annual Presque Isle Half
Marathon on July 17 in
Millcreek Township.
Mack is a 2008 graduate of St. Marys Area High
School and participated on
the school’s cross country
and track teams. He was
cross country MVP during
his senior year at SMAHS.
He graduated in 2012
from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania with
a BS in Management and
later graduated from IUP
in 2013 with an MBA. He
was team captain at IUP
during his senior year as
he ran cross country, indoor track and outdoor
track from 2008-2013. He
was also All-Academic for
four years at IUP.
At the half marathon
event, Mack found himself
up against friendly running rival Dylan Stevens,
a familiar foe from their
collegiate running days.
Stevens attended Edinboro University.
“I was just trying to
go up in distance,” Mack
said. He said they were
near each other with a
mile to go before Mack
broke away.
Mack, who now resides in Pittsburgh, broke
the tape in one hour, 11
minutes and 10.1 seconds
in the 13.1 mile race.
“I want to give thanks
to all the coaches I’ve had,
past and present, who have
shaped me into the runner
I am today,” Mack said.
“Without each of them, I
wouldn’t be the runner I
am. Starting from the beginning of my running,
I want to give thanks to
my high school coach and
mentor, Stan Foster, who
helped engrave in me at a
young age that there are
no excuses and that there
are no substitutes for hard
work. Without him, I probably would have never
been a college athlete.”
Foster made a surprise appearance at the
half marathon to support
Mack.
“That brought back
positive memories,” Mack
said.
Photo submitted
St. Marys Area native Colt Mack recently took first
place at the 37th annual Presque Isle Half Marathon on
July 17 in Millcreek Township.
He also noted his
thanks to his IUP coach,
Joey Zins.
“[Zins] helped progress my running each
and every year at the
collegiate level and continued to engrave consistency, dedication and hard
work,” Mack said. “We
actually travel and race
together a lot so he has
become a good friend postcollegiately.”
Mack also acknowledged
coach
Sharon
Weisner who is currently
coaching Mack and has
been writing his workouts
for the past 18 months.
“After graduating college and having a severe
brain trauma accident,
she was there to pick up
the pieces of my running,”
Mack said. “She has not
only brought me back but
has helped me have the
best year of my running
yet so far while staying
healthy, and holding me
accountable. I’ve been
fortunate to have coaches
that have cared about me
more than just a runner
through each chapter of
my running career.
“You have to believe
and click with your coaches, no matter what their
philosophy may be.”
Mack’s next race will
be the USATF 20k Championships in New Haven,
Connecticut on Sept. 5.
Colon sharp, Mets beat Cards
3-1 for doubleheader split
NEW YORK (AP) —
Bartolo
Colon
pitched
three-hit ball for seven
sharp innings and the New
York Mets overcame another home run by Jedd Gyorko
to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 3-1 Tuesday night for a
doubleheader split.
Gyorko homered in
both ends and has connected seven times in nine
games. His two-run shot
helped St. Louis win the
opener 3-2.
Colon (9-5) struck out
eight and walked none. After Gyorko homered in the
second and Alberto Rosario
doubled in the third, Colon
set down 14 of his final 15
batters.
Addison Reed worked
the eighth and Jeurys Familia closed for his 36th
save this year and 52nd in
a row during the regular
season.
Asdrubal
Cabrera
ended his 0-for-32 rut with
runners in scoring position with an RBI double
and added a sacrifice fly off
Jaime Garcia (7-7). Wilmer
Flores doubled and singled
twice, and manager Terry
Collins helped, too, winning
his third replay challenge
of the day.
The Mets have alternated wins and losses for
the last 12 games. They returned to Citi Field for the
first time since the All-Star
break, facing their fellow
NL wild-card contenders.
A rainout Monday
forced the first doubleheader between the Mets and
Cardinals since 1999.
Gyorko hit his 14th
homer for an early edge in
the nightcap. The Cardinals lead the NL with 138
home runs, one more than
last year’s total.
St. Louis has homered
in 17 straight games, its
best streak since a teamrecord string of 19 games in
2006.
Cabrera tied it with
a double in the third, and
the Mets took a 2-1 lead
in the fourth on a double
by Flores, a dropped flyball by right fielder Randal
Grichuk and a double-play
grounder.
12
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
Penn State AD: Opposing programs lying to recruits
CHICAGO (AP) —
Penn State athletic director Sandy Barbour said
opposing programs are
lying to recruits by telling
them the Nittany Lions
could be put on probation
by the NCAA in the wake
of recent allegations in
the Jerry Sandusky scandal.
“It’s not factual,” she
said Tuesday at Big Ten
Media Days. “It’s one
thing to take facts and
skew them a little bit. It’s
another thing not to be
factual.”
Barbour
said
the
NCAA is “very pleased”
with how Penn State
handled the matter and
that the governing body
as well as the Big Ten con-
siders the matter “closed.”
Penn State is free of
sanctions and back to the
full 85 scholarships, but
it can’t escape a shadow
cast by one of the biggest
scandals to hit a college
program.
The Sandusky case
has been in the headlines
again lately because of
recently disclosed allegations from men who have
accused Sandusky of sexual abuse that raised new
questions about what his
fellow Penn State assistant coaches might have
seen or known before his
November 2011 arrest
— and why they have
largely kept quiet. The allegations have also raised
questions about just how
Daily Scoreboard
Major League Baseball
By The Associated Press
American League
All Times EDT
East Division
Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
Central Division
Cleveland
Detroit
Chicago
Kansas City
Minnesota
West Division
W L
58 40
55 42
56 44
51 48
38 60
Pct GB
.592 —
.56721/2
.560 3
.51571/2
.388 20
W L
56 41
52 48
49 50
48 50
37 61
Pct GB
.577 —
.52051/2
.495 8
.49081/2
.378191/2
W L Pct GB
Texas
58 42 .580 —
Houston
54 45 .54531/2
Seattle
50 48 .510 7
Oakland
45 55 .450 13
Los Angeles
44 55 .444131/2
___
Monday’s Games
Baltimore 3, Colorado 2, 10 innings
Toronto 4, San Diego 2
Detroit 4, Boston 2
Texas 7, Oakland 6
Chicago White Sox 5, Chicago Cubs 4
N.Y. Yankees 2, Houston 1
L.A. Angels 6, Kansas City 2
Tuesday’s Games
Colorado 6, Baltimore 3
Seattle 7, Pittsburgh 4
Chicago White Sox 3, Chicago Cubs 0
Cleveland 7, Washington 6
Detroit 9, Boston 8
Atlanta 2, Minnesota 0
Toronto 7, San Diego 6, 12 innings
Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Tampa Bay at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Washington (Strasburg 13-1) at Cleveland
(Carrasco 7-3), 12:10 p.m.
San Diego (Perdomo 4-4) at Toronto (Estrada 5-4), 12:37 p.m.
Detroit (Fulmer 9-2) at Boston (Rodriguez
2-4), 1:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Moore 6-7) at L.A. Dodgers
(McCarthy 2-0), 3:10 p.m.
Colorado (Gray 6-4) at Baltimore (Bundy
3-2), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle (Paxton 3-4) at Pittsburgh (Cole
5-6), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Ranaudo 1-0) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 9-5), 8:05 p.m.
Oakland (Manaea 3-5) at Texas (Darvish
2-2), 8:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Foltynewicz 3-4) at Minnesota
(Duffey 5-7), 8:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 7-2) at Houston
(McCullers 5-4), 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 5-10) at Kansas
City (Duffy 6-1), 8:15 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Baltimore at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 8:05
p.m.
Kansas City at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Boston at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
West Division
dusky developments. But
Michigan State’s Mark
Dantonio said it’s not him
or his staff.
“It’s not our MO. And
that’s not how we do business,” he said.
___
IN MEMORY: Dantonio delivered heartfelt
and poignant comments
about former Spartans
punter Mike Sadler, who
along with Nebraska
punter Sam Foltz died in
a car crash after attending a kicking camp in Wisconsin over the weekend.
“He was a giver,”
Dantonio said. “He lived
life. There was no take in
Mike Sadler. He made everybody’s life around him
Transactions
East Division
Washington
Miami
New York
Philadelphia
Atlanta
Central Division
far back late coach Joe
Paterno knew of the situation.
Negative
recruiting is nothing new and
it’s hardly a surprise
that other schools in recent years might have
used the Sandusky case
against Penn State. But
if what Barbour is saying is true, that’s taking
things to a different level.
And coach James Franklin said there are issues
that might need to be addressed at the conference
level.
Barbour would not reveal which schools — or
how many — have been
lying to recruits about
potential sanctions in the
wake of the recent San-
W L
58 41
53 46
52 46
46 55
33 66
Pct GB
.586 —
.535 5
.53151/2
.455 13
.333 25
W L
59 40
53 46
51 48
42 55
39 60
Pct
.596
.535
.515
.433
.394
GB
—
6
8
16
20
W L Pct GB
San Francisco
58 41 .586 —
Los Angeles
56 44 .56021/2
Colorado
47 52 .475 11
San Diego
43 57 .430151/2
Arizona
41 58 .414 17
___
Monday’s Games
Baltimore 3, Colorado 2, 10 innings
Toronto 4, San Diego 2
Philadelphia 4, Miami 0
St. Louis at N.Y. Mets, ppd., 2nd game
Milwaukee 7, Arizona 2
Chicago White Sox 5, Chicago Cubs 4
Cincinnati 7, San Francisco 5
Tuesday’s Games
St. Louis 3, N.Y. Mets 2, 1st game
N.Y. Mets 3, St. Louis 1, 2nd game
Colorado 6, Baltimore 3
Seattle 7, Pittsburgh 4
Chicago White Sox 3, Chicago Cubs 0
Cleveland 7, Washington 6
Miami 5, Philadelphia 0
Atlanta 2, Minnesota 0
Toronto 7, San Diego 6, 12 innings
Arizona at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
Cincinnati at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Philadelphia (Eflin 3-3) at Miami (Conley
6-5), 12:10 p.m.
Washington (Strasburg 13-1) at Cleveland
(Carrasco 7-3), 12:10 p.m.
San Diego (Perdomo 4-4) at Toronto (Estrada 5-4), 12:37 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Moore 6-7) at L.A. Dodgers
(McCarthy 2-0), 3:10 p.m.
Cincinnati (Straily 5-6) at San Francisco
(Bumgarner 10-5), 3:45 p.m.
Colorado (Gray 6-4) at Baltimore (Bundy
3-2), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle (Paxton 3-4) at Pittsburgh (Cole
5-6), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Wainwright 9-5) at N.Y. Mets
(Verrett 3-6), 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Ranaudo 1-0) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 9-5), 8:05 p.m.
Arizona (Bradley 3-6) at Milwaukee (Nelson 6-8), 8:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Foltynewicz 3-4) at Minnesota
(Duffey 5-7), 8:10 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Arizona at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 8:05
p.m.
Washington at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
National League
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Reinstated
OF Hyun Soo Kim from the 15-day DL. Activated
RHP Ubaldo Jimenez from the paternity list. Optioned OF Dariel Alvarez to Norfolk (IL). Designated OF Julio Borbon for assignment.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Recalled INF
Raul Mondesi from Omaha (PCL). Optioned INFOF Whit Merrifield to Omaha.
NEW YORK YANKEES — Added RHP
Adam Warren to the active roster. Optioned LHP
Chasen Shreve to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).
TEXAS RANGERS — Designated RHP
Kyle Lohsed for assignment. Recalled RHP Nick
Martinez and INF/OF Joey Gallo from Round
Rock (PCL). Optioned OF Jared Hoying to Round
Rock.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Acquired OF
Melvin Upton Jr. and cash considerations from
San Diego for RHP Hansel Rodriguez.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS — Added LHP Aroldis
Chapman to the 25-man roster. Designated LHP
Clayton Richard for assignment.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Reinstated C
Eric Fryer from the paternity list. Optioned C Elias
Diaz to Indianapolis (IL).
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Placed RHP
Trevor Rosenthal on the 15-day DL. Recalled
LHP Dean Kiekhefer from Memphis (PCL).
WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Reinstated 1B Ryan Zimmerman and LHP Sammy
Solis from the 15-day DL. Optioned OF Michael
A. Taylor and RHP Lucas Giolito to Syracuse (IL).
American Association
FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS —
Released RHP Cody Scarpetta. S C Tanner
Adam.
GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS —
Signed RHP Carlos Pinales, LHP Braulio TorresPerez and INF Andy DeJesus.
JOPLIN BLASTERS — Signed C Ermindo
Escobar.
LAREDO LEMURS — Signed RHP Brandan Alfson.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Signed RHP
Nigel Nootbarr.
SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS — Signed OF
Levon Washington.
TEXAS AIRHOGS — Signed LHP Derek
Callahan.
Can-Am League
SUSSEX COUNTY MINERS — Signed
RHP Danny Moskovits.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
ATLANTA HAWKS — Signed C Matt
Costello.
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS — Signed
coach Tyronn Lue to a multiyear contract extension.
DETROIT PISTONS — Signed G Ray McCallum Jr.
NEW YORK KNICKS — Signed F Amar’e
Stoudemire, who announced his retirement.
MIAMI HEAT — Signed G Dion Waiters to
a two-year contract.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS — Agreed
to terms with F Maurice Harkless on a four-year
contract.
WASHINGTON WIZARDS — Re-signed
G Bradley Beal.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS — Placed CB
Justin Bethel, S Tyrann Mathieu, DT Frostee
Rucker and LB Zack Wagenmann on the PUP
list.
ATLANTA FALCONS — Released WR
Devin Hester.
CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed WR
Rashaun Simonise. Waived DE Dezmond Johnson and WR DyShawn Mobley. Placed TE Tyler
Eifert, DT Brandon Thompson and WR James
Wright on the PUP list. Placed LB Rey Maualuga
on the active/non-football injury list.
CLEVELAND BROWNS — Waived DB
A.J. Stamps. Placed DB Joe Haden and TE Seth
DeValve on the PUP list and OL Conor Boffeli
and WR Josh Gordon on the active/non-football
injury list.
DALLAS COWBOYS — Waived OT David
Hedelin. Placed OT Charles Brown on the reserve/retired list. Signed OTs Darryl Baldwin and
Cameron Bradfield.
DENVER BRONCOS — Signed LB Darnell Sankey. Waived LS Nathan Theus.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Placed FB
Tyler Varga on the reserve-did not report list.
Signed TE Chase Coffman. Waived CB Daniel
Davie. Placed DE Henry Anderson and TE Darion
Griswold on the PUP list and S Clayton Geathers and TE Mike Miller on the active/non-football
injury list.
NEW YORK GIANTS — Promoted Corry
Rush to vice president of communications.
Named Jennifer Conley director of corporate and
football communications and Dion Dargin communications coordinator.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Placed
WR Louis Murphy and G J.R. Sweezy on the
PUP list and S Elijah Shumate on the active/nonfootball injury list. Signed OL Joel Hale. Waived
OL Garrett Gilkey.
TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms
with OL Will Campbell.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
DETROIT RED WINGS — Signed D
Danny DeKeyser to a six-year contract.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed D
Petter Granberg to a two-year contract.
NEW YORK RANGERS — Signed D Sergey Zborovskiy to an entry-level contract.
American Hockey League
GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS — Named
Jessica Boyer season ticket sales account executive.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
SEATTLE SOUNDERS — Announced the
club agreed to mutually part ways with coach Sigi
Schmid. Named Brian Schmetzer interim coach.
COLLEGE
BYU — Announced men’s graduate basketball G L.J. Rose transferred from Houston.
COLGATE — Named Erin DeMarco assistant director of compliance and student-athlete
academic services.
EMORY — Named Greg Smith assistant
athletics director for events and marketing, Perelini Bush assistant softball coach and Barbora
Krtickova women’s assistant tennis coach.
LA SALLE — Named Andre Nyce and
Lindsay Rangel assistant water polo coaches.
NEW JERSEY CITY — Named Reggie
James, Jr. men’s and women’s cross country,
indoor and outdoor track & field coach.
RIDER — Named Chandler Fraser-Pauls
men’s basketball director of player development.
SAM HOUSTON STATE — Named Trevor Williams strength and conditioning coach.
better. We’ll miss him terribly.”
Sadler was a fouryear starter and four-time
academic All-American at
Michigan State. He finished his college career after the 2014 season.
He was known for his
sense of humor during
his time in East Lansing,
even launching his own
mock Heisman Trophy
campaign one season with
the hashtag #sadler4heisman. He also regularly
exchanged lines on Twitter with the @FauxPelini
account, a popular parody
of former Nebraska and
current Youngstown State
coach Bo Pelini.
To Dantonio, he was
simply a joy to be around,
the sort of player who
forged relationships with
every coach.
Foltz, a senior was
a three-year starter and
the Big Ten’s punter of
the year last season. He
earned a degree in agronomy in May.
Nebraska did not attend Big Ten Media Days,
though Dantonio said he
talked to coach Mike Riley.
“Sam seemed to be
just the same type of person,” Dantonio said. “Well
respected.”
___
DUNN WITH BUCKEYES: Ohio State coach
Urban Meyer slammed
the door on running back
Bri’onte Dunn returning
after being kicked off the
team for violating rules.
“There’s no chance
that Bri’onte will come
back,” he said.
Dunn was the Buckeyes’ most experienced
running back and was
expected to compete for a
starting spot vacated by
Ezekiel Elliott, who was
taken as the fourth overall pick in the NFL draft
by the Dallas Cowboys.
Dunn played in 21 games
in three seasons, running
for 196 yards and two
touchdowns.
Meyer said freshman
Mike Weber figures to
start at running back with
Dunn gone.
___
FIRST
IMPRESSIONS: Illinois quarterback Wes Lunt is making
quite an impression on
new coach Lovie Smith.
The senior reminds him
in some ways of former
Bears quarterback Kyle
Orton.
“Kyle made great decisions, threw the ball to the
right person, good leader,”
Smith said. “Teammates
really liked him, believed
in him. Our players feel
the same way about Wes.
Wes is a good athlete
though.”
Lunt threw for 2,761
yards, 14 touchdowns and
six interceptions while
leading the Big Ten in
completions per game
(22.5) as a junior.
Golf League News
FRIDAY NIGHT CLUBBERS
With one week remaining in the quarter of the Friday Night Clubbers at the Bavarian Hills Golf Course,
the Jones team continues to hold a slight lead over the
Sluman team. Jones has 178 points to Sluman’s 176.
Following Jones and Sluman are Stadler with 175,
Faldo 164, Singh and Hoch 162, Woods and Zoeller 158,
Watson and Duval 151, Mediate 147, O’Meara 142 and
Nelson 140.
Low gross winners for the evening were: A - Steve
Boschert 37, B - Ken Pistner 40, C - Tom Krieg 41, D Luke Salter and Dan Straub 41. Low net winners were:
A - Steve Boschert 31, B - Gary Evans 33, C - Tom Krieg
and Tom Daniels 33, D - Dave Vakiener 28.
High point winners were: A - Steve Boschert 15, B
- Jeff Smith 16, C - Jack Pistner, Chester Cheatle and
Tom Daniels 13, D - Dave Pistner and Dave Vakiener
15.
Flag winners for the evening were, closest to the
pin on #13 - Jason Straub, on #15 - Steve Skok, longest
putt on #11 - Gary Gilmore and on #18 - Dave Decker.
Other low scores were Ken Salter 37, Joe Fleming
38, Dan Cheatle and Terry Gavazzi 39.
In the point race, Bernie Heiberger leads with 189
points followed by Bob Bauer 166, Tim Bauer and Gary
Evans 147. Bernie also leads the points per match category (10 matches) with a 13.50 average followed by
Gary Evans 12.25 and Rick Emmert 12.10.
Team points scored last week were: Stadler 50, Sluman 47, O’Meara 45, Hoch 42, Jones and Zoeller 41,
Singh and Duval 39, Faldo 38, Watson and Mediate 35,
Woods 33 and Nelson 25.
INSPECTIONS
DRIVE AWAY DISTRACTIONS TO PROTECT TEENS BEHIND THE WHEEL
Many don’t recall a time
when they were not continuously connected to their
friends. Cell phones - which
might have been provided as
a safety precaution in case
Mom or Dad was running
late picking them up from
school - are now the source
of constant messaging, sharing and media consumption.
Teens send texts instead
of passing notes in class.
They share moments with
their peers and the world
in the form of photos and
short videos. Music, food
and transportation can arrive on demand, all with the
swipe of a finger. Being away
from their phones, even for
a short period of time, can
even cause a form of sepa-
ration anxiety expressed in
the acronym FOMO (fear of
missing out).
So it should come as no
surprise that cell phone use
is the offense most commonly associated with distracted driving. However, it’s
not the only type of distraction.
A lot of people think
they’re better drivers than
they actually are, which is
why they take unnecessary
risks when they’re behind
the wheel. A lot of insurance claims are related to
distracted driving, including
parents turning to scold arguing children, adjusting the
infotainment system, and
even taking photos while
driving. Your first priority
once you start piloting any
vehicle should be to focus
on the task at hand - driving.”
Ten percent of all drivers ages 15 to 19 who were
involved in fatal crashes
were distracted at the time
of the crashes, according to
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA). NHTSA also reports that 660,000 people
drive distracted every day.
Teens aren’t the only
ones who feel the need to
be connected - adults are
guilty of it, too.
Many of the teens who
are glued to their smartphones have witnessed their
parents answering emails
at the dinner table or have
seen them shoot a “quick
text” while driving. Teens
have grown up learning that
this type of behavior is acceptable and maybe even
expected. However, there’s
a right time and a right place
for everything.
The first thing parents need to do is practice
what they preach. Teenagers won’t always be receptive to ‘because I say so’ or
‘because I’m the adult,’ especially if they witness their
parents actively engaging in
a behavior they’re being told
is bad. We as adults need to
set a proper example - after all, we do have the advantage of more life experience.”
Parents should set a
powerful example by committing not to drive distracted if they want their
children to do the same. If
necessary, parents can also
invest in technology to
monitor and disable phones
while their teens are driving
to eliminate the temptation
altogether.
No Instagram post, bite
of a burger or playlist selection is worth someone
else’s life. People are mainly
in a car to get from point A
to point B, and our wish is
for them to do it safely.
ELK COUNTY COLLISION
Professional Collision Repair
FREE
COMPUTERIZED
ESTIMATES
“DO IT RIGHT OR DO IT TWICE”
809 S. Michael St.
St. Marys, PA 15857
834-1072
13
www.smdailypress.com
4. EMPLOYMENT
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
4. EMPLOYMENT
HELP
WANTED
SUBSTITUTE
DELIVERY
DRIVER
4. EMPLOYMENT
ECCSS is seeking a high/middle school cafeteria
assistant for the upcoming school year. Hours are
from 8 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. for the duration of the 10month school year. Duties include food prep,
serving, and clean-up in a fast-paced environment.
Being a team player with a positive attitude is a
must. Applicants must obtain clearances and pass
background checks.
Please contact Kim Schlimm ([email protected])
or Patty Gabor ([email protected]) if interested.
Elk County Catholic School System, Inc. is an EOE.
The Brookville Area School District has a
Special Education Vacancy.
Approx. 5 hrs
per day.
Must have your
own vehicle &
valid PA
driver’s license.
Call or Text
594-0963
4. EMPLOYMENT
4. EMPLOYMENT
ECCHS is accepting
applications for the
position of
Elk County Catholic School System
Special Education Vacancy
PAID
TRAINING
4. EMPLOYMENT
Interested applicants should include cover
letter, PA standard application, resume,
transcripts, certificate, clearances, Act 168
form(s) and three recent letters of recommendation to:
Dr. Robin Fillman
Supt., Brookville Area S.D.
PO Box 479
Brookville, PA 15825
Deadline is August 2, 2016.
EOE
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGER
MPG Sintered Technologies (Metaldyne) - St. Marys is looking for an
experienced Human Resource Manger.
The HR Manager is responsible for strategic and tactical HR initiatives as well as the development of process and metrics that support the
achievement of the organization’s business goals.
The candidate must be knowldegeable in all areas of HR. Duties will
include but are not limited to:
t Leading the plant safety program and workers compensation
administration.
t Recruiting and staffing.
t Administration of the collective agreement.
t Organizational departmental planning.
t Employee on boarding, development, needs assessment, and training.
t Employee relations and labor negotiations.
t Company employee and community communication.
t Compensation (wage/salary) and benefits administration.
t Payroll.
t Welfare and wellness.
t Compliance with local, state and federal regulations affecting human
resources (OSHA, AAP, EEOC, FLSA, FMLA, etc.).
Candidates must have a Bachelor’s Degree in Business, Human Resources or equivalent and should have a minimum of five years of generalist experience, within a mid-size manufacturing environment (preferable with an automotive supplier), safety leadership experience, and
experience with an automated timekeeping system. Excellent negotiation, communication, problem solving skills and customer service skills
are necessary. Computer applications experience (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook) required.
JUNIOR HIGH
SOCCER COACH
REGISTERED NURSES AND LPNS
In Home Solutions, an affiliate of WRC Senior
Services is looking for part or full time Registered Nurses and LPNs to join our growing
hospice team. We need compassionate nurses
who can administer palliative and supportive care
to patients with terminal illnesses.
This is a job where everything that you do will
make a difference. Candidates will serve clients and families in the Ridgway area. Success will come to candidates who have critical
thinking skills and the desire to help people in
our community.
To apply, please go to:
WRC.org
or contact In Home Solutions Brookville
office at 814-849-5913.
EOE
Become a part of WRC Senior Services, caring
for our community for over 126 years.
CASEWORKER/
CARE NAVIGATOR
Dickinson Center, Inc. Children’s
Prevention Services is seeking to fill a 40
hour per week/10 month (school year)
Caseworker/Care Navigator position
with our Student Assistance Program
(SAP) and Signs of Suicide® Prevention
Program. Position is based in the Elk
County Catholic School System serving
Catholic Middle, ECCHS and Johnsonburg. Qualified applicants must possess
a Bachelor’s degree in health or human
service field and one year of experience
working with children. Strong verbal
and written communication skills, along
with experience working in the mental
health and/or school system are essential.
DCI has embarked upon implementing and embedding Trauma Informed
Care (TIC) principles throughout the
organization. Candidates should be
aware that all employees are involved in
the implementation and practice of TIC
within Dickinson.
For more information or to apply, visit
our website at:
for FALL 2016.
Send letters of interest to:
ECCHS
600 Maurus St.
St. Marys, PA 15857
Attn: Aaron Straub
Deadline: Aug. 3, 2016.
BURKE’S
Home Center
CASHIERS
Part-time Cashier
needed at Burke’s
Home Center.
Must be able to work
all hours and
weekends.
Apply in the office.
HIRING TRUCK
DRIVERS
2 Years CDL Experience
Tanker Endorsement
Necessary
Retirement Plan &
Health Benefits Available.
Competitive Pay
Beimel
Transportation, Inc.
814-885-8990
Interim Health
Care
is hiring a
FULL TIME SALES
& MARKETING
REPRESENTATIVE
Apply now at:
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4. EMPLOYMENT
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EMPORIUM
GKN Sinter Metals is the world leader in the manufacturing of powder
metal parts. We have built a reputation as a “World Class” supplier of
high quality precision parts for the automotive industry. The Sinter Metals Group is a part of GKN Worldwide, one of the oldest manufacturing
companies in the world. We are currently recruiting for a Metallurgist
based in Emporium, PA.
METALLURGIST
This position will report directly to the Quality Manager and will have
technical responsibility within the metallurgical laboratory as it relates to ensuring that production operations are in conformance with
the Corporate quality policy as well as customer requirements. This
position must also ensure that we are verifying metallurgical process
capability and must have an educational background which allows them
to make appropriate material determinations while utilizing techniques
and equipment that are appropriate to the industry and the operations.
A candidate must demonstrate professionalism that will allow them to
positively represent the company for customer technical and material/
product reviews. This position will have Supervisory responsibility for
hourly lab personnel. A person is this position shall possess a minimum
of a Bachelor’s degree in Metallurgy or Materials Science. Experience
in the Powder Metal Industry is preferred.
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Renee McKimm, Sr Human Resource Manager
PO Box 493
Emporium, PA 15834
Or email at [email protected]
Come join our Team!! Metaldyne is a world leader in producing powdered metal components for automotive industry leaders, including Ford,
GM and Honda. We are growing and need talent. Our customers rate us
as one of the best powdered metal companies in North America. Come see
what we are about.
Metaldyne Sintered Components, Ridgway is seeking motivated, responsible individuals for the following position:
PRODUCT ENGINEER
Applicant should have a minimum of an Associates Degree in Engineering (Bachelor’s Degree preferred) and 5 years work experience in the
Powdered Metal industry. This position will be working with customers
from the initial design and development thru the entire life cycle of the
product. Working knowledge of TS16949, Lean Manufacturing, Materials, Kaizen, Minitab, and DOE is preferred. Experience with Pro-E a plus.
Preference will be given to those with experience working with automotive customers.
GKN Sinter Metals is an equal employment employer and is committed
to providing employment opportunities to veterans, disabled individuals, minorities, and females.
All interested candidates should apply by logging on to:
ISO/TS 16949
ISO 14001/OSHAS 18001
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www.metaldyne.com
Metaldyne Sintered Components is an Equal Opportunity Employer, minority/female/disabled/veteran
9. WANTS TO RENT
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14
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
Clinton wins historic nomination,
with a boost from Sanders
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
— Breaking a historic barrier, Hillary Clinton triumphantly captured the
Democratic nomination for
president Tuesday night,
the first woman ever to
lead a major political party
in the race for the White
House.
Delegates erupted in
cheers as Clinton's primary rival, Bernie Sanders, helped make it official
when the roll call got to his
home state of Vermont —
an important show of unity
for a party trying to heal
deep divisions.
"I move that Hillary
Clinton be selected as the
nominee of the Democratic
Party for president of the
United States," Sanders
declared, asking that it be
by acclamation.
It was a striking parallel to the role Clinton
played eight years ago
when she stepped to the
microphone on the convention floor in Denver in
support of her former rival,
Barack Obama.
This time, Clinton
shattered the glass ceiling
she couldn't crack in 2008.
And in November, she will
take on Donald Trump,
nominated last week at
the Republican convention
in Cleveland.
The second night of
the Democratic convention
featured former President
Bill Clinton, who was taking the stage to deliver a
personal validation for his
wife. Former presidents often vouch for their potential successors, but never
before has that candidate
also been a spouse.
Tuesday night wasn't
all celebratory. Moments
after Clinton claimed the
nomination, a group of
Sanders supporters left
the convention and headed
to a media tent to protest
what they said was their
being shut out of the party.
Earlier, several hundred
gathered at Philadelphia's
City Hall under a blazing
Donation to family
sun chanting "Bernie or
bust."
Trump cheered the
disruptions from the campaign trail. In North Carolina, he told a convention
of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars that, "our politicians
have totally failed you."
Indeed, Clinton's long
political resume — secretary of state, senator, first
lady — has sometimes
seemed an odd fit for an
electorate deeply frustrated with Washington and
eager to rally around unconventional candidates
like Trump and Sanders.
Many voters have questions about her character
and trustworthiness, suggesting her years in power
give her the impression
she can play by different
rules.
Clinton's
campaign
views the four-day convention as an opportunity
to introduce her to voters anew. Tuesday night
featured three hours of
speakers who highlighted
issues Clinton championed
for years, including health
care and advocacy for children and families.
Among those pledging
support for the Democratic
nominee were the "mothers
of the movement" — several black women whose children were victims of gun
violence. Clinton has met
privately with the mothers and held events with
them, and they've become
an emotional force for her
campaign.
"Hillary Clinton has
the passion and understanding to support grieving mothers," said Sybrina
Fulton, whose son Trayvon
Martin was killed in 2012.
"She has the courage to
lead the fight for commonsense gun legislation."
Clinton aides believe
a focus on policy is another way to rally Sanders' supporters, especially
those who have threatened
to stay home or vote for
Republican Trump. The
"Fights Of Her Life" segments focusing on Clinton's
accomplishments
were interspersed with
videos featuring Trump's
comments opposing abortion and bemoaning that
women's pregnancies hurt
businesses.
Clinton's
landmark
achievement saturated the
roll call with emotion and
symbols of women's long
struggle to break through
political barriers. Jerry
Emmett, a 102-year-old
woman born before women
had the right to vote, cast
the ballots for Arizona.
Martha
McKenna,
a Clinton delegate from
Maryland, said the night
felt like a celebration for
Sanders' campaign as well
as Clinton's. She added,
"The idea that I'm going
to be here when the first
woman president is nominated is overwhelming."
The Democratic convention drew the party's
biggest stars to sweltering
Philadelphia for the weeklong event. On Monday
night, first lady Michelle
Obama made an impassioned case for Clinton as
the only candidate in the
presidential race worthy of
being a role model for the
nation's children. President Barack Obama and
Vice President Joe Biden
will speak Wednesday,
along with Virginia Sen.
Tim Kaine, Clinton's new
running mate.
Bill Clinton had the
spotlight Tuesday night.
The former president has
campaigned frequently for
his wife during the White
House race, but mostly in
smaller cities and towns,
part of an effort by the
campaign to keep him in
a more behind-the-scenes
role.
The roll call this
year, when each state announced its delegate totals
from the primary season,
affirmed a nomination
Clinton locked up weeks
ago.
PITTSBURGH
(AP)
— A dump truck driver
who said he had a bomb
deliberately smashed his
truck through a security
gate of the FBI's offices on
Tuesday, but no bomb was
found and there appeared
to be no connection to terrorism, authorities said.
The driver, Thomas
Richard Ross, of New Waterford, Ohio, was injured
in the crash, but nobody
else was hurt, they said.
The truck was moving
erratically and ran eight
or nine red lights before
a Pittsburgh police officer
pulled it over late Tuesday morning near the FBI
building on the city's South
Side, authorities said. The
driver initially refused to
surrender and was "acting
erratically, claiming to have
a bomb," and although he
later acted as though he
was going to surrender he
instead floored the gas pedal and rammed the gate,
the Pittsburgh public safety department said.
The truck was disabled
by security barriers meant
to prevent vehicles from
driving into the fenced-in
office complex. The barriers include a large steel
panel that rises out of the
ground at the gate, which
caused the truck to go
slightly airborne before
slamming into a light pole
in a parking lot, FBI special agent Gregory Heeb
said. The driver, who appeared to have hit his head
on the windshield, was
tackled moments later,
Heeb said.
FBI agents checked
the truck for bombs and
other weapons that might
signal an intended attack
and found nothing.
"There's no nexus to
terrorism at all from what
we know now," Heeb said.
"There's no reason to believe that was the case."
Ross was hospitalized
briefly for treatment of
minor injuries, but afterward, while being escorted
to a police cruiser, he tried
to escape, authorities said.
He was taken to Allegheny County jail, where
he couldn't be reached for
comment. No telephone
listing for him could be
found, and it was unclear
whether he had an attorney.
Ross faces numerous
charges including aggravated assault, recklessly
endangering another person, fleeing and eluding
and various driving offenses, the Pittsburgh public safety department said.
The U.S. attorney's office
said he had been charged
with damaging government property, with the
FBI estimating damage in
excess of $1,000.
Local authorities said
they were working with
the FBI on the case. Heeb
said the main focus was
the driver's mental state
and his history.
Officials said the truck
was registered in Ohio but
there was no indication
why it was in Pittsburgh.
recipes used by the staff
have been handed down
through
generations.
Other recipes have been
collected by Armando
throughout his years in
the restaurant business
during which he traveled
around the country. Many
have been modified as a
result of customer feedback.
Salsa's
expansive
menu consists of soups,
salads, appetizers, side
orders, fish and chicken,
vegetarian dinners, and
gluten free options available upon request. Lunch
and dinner specials, Mexico City specials, combination meals, a kids
menu and a to-go menu
are also among their offerings.
Numerous Mexican
desserts range from fried
ice cream and churros to
flan, a Mexican custard,
sopapilla, a deep-fried
tortilla with honey and
cinnamon, and xangos, a
fried cheesecake wrapped
in a tortilla.
In the future they
plan to offer a taco bar
every Tuesday with lunch
and dinner pricing.
Patrons are welcome
to bring their own alcoholic beverages to drink.
Restaurant staff will also
prepare margaritas for
those bringing in tequila.
The restaurant also
offers takeout and catering for large companies to
small events.
St. Marys is the newest location of the family's restaurants located
throughout Pennsylvania
including those in Columbia, Annville and Philipsburg, the latter of the two
having opened within the
past two years.
The St. Marys location employs a staff of six.
Inside the 80-seat restaurant are colorful furnishings including handcarved tables and booths
from Mexico. The brightly
painted walls are adorned
with artwork by Sabrina
Saldana, which is also
available for purchase.
Salsa's has brought
new life into an old building, the site of the former
Dostal's Curiosity Shop.
Renovations
began
several months ago and
included a complete overhaul of the building's inte-
rior as well as new doors
and windows. A fresh coat
of light gray paint was
applied to the building's
exterior along with two
benches for waiting patrons.
Salsa's is open Tuesdays through Saturdays
from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.,
and on Sundays until 9
p.m. The restaurant is
closed Mondays.
Their daily specials
and full menu are available on their website,
www.salsagrillerestaurant.com, or on their
Facebook page.
Photo submitted
Elk County ABATE recently donated a check for $1,136 to the Ed Knight family. The money
was raised through their "Spring Kick Off Bash" and the "Ed Knight Benefit Ride." Ed is a
Navy veteran facing challenges due to illness. Pictured is Jason Chileski, president of Elk
County ABATE, presenting a check to the Ed Knight family.
Police: Dump truck driver says he
has bomb, smashes FBI gate
Salsa’s
Continued from Page 1
more for those who prefer traditional restaurant
fare," Sari said.
Sari
emphasized
while the food is seasoned
there are no spices added
to it that may make it
hot. Customers wanting
a little kick to their meal
need only to ask for their
order to be made spicy.
"This is also an observation we have made
throughout the years,"
Sari said.
Salsa's specializes in
fajitas, offering a wide array of the dish.
A majority of the
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SERVICE DIRECTORY
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www.smdailypress.com
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
DEAR ANNIE®
COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Dear Annie: I am a Care Bear, and
my husband is a cyborg. What I mean
is that I get emotional from almost anything. I once cried during a commercial
for laundry detergent. I know it sounds
cliched, but I love happy endings, puppies, babies, the color pink and -- of
course -- talking about my feelings.
My husband, on the other hand,
is pretty much the exact opposite. I’ve
never seen him cry. He barely talks to
his siblings (although they’re a little
nutty, but that’s a different letter). He is
constantly on his phone either working
or playing solitaire. And getting him to
open up is like pulling teeth. Actually, I
think pulling teeth might be easier, because he wouldn’t have to talk.
We have two kids, and he is great
with them. He is super engaged and
talks to them on their level. Maybe he
feels safe because they won’t judge
him.
He’s not mean or neglectful to
me. He says “I love you.” But I can’t
help feeling frustrated when I love talking about feelings and emotions and he
doesn’t. How do I connect with a man
who is so closed off? -- Funshine Bear
Dear Funshine: Opposites attract
-- and then drive each other nuts. But
with effort, you and your husband can
use your differences as a source of
strength and balance. The key is good
communication, even if your communication styles are totally different.
I would say your husband is more
Secret Bear than cyborg. He has feelings. He just expresses them nonverbally, through actions -- such as spending time with the kids or putting his arm
around you when a Tide ad tugs at your
heartstrings. Try to recognize these as
legitimate expressions of love.
When you’d really like him to talk
about something, let him know. Don’t
be judgmental or accuse him of never
opening up, as this would only make
him withdraw further. Instead, put those
Care-a-Lot skills to work and articulate
how you feel.
Dear Annie: A few weeks ago, my
boyfriend and I went to a beach bonfire
for my cousin’s 15th birthday. We enjoyed chatting and catching up with the
family. Everything was going great until
I had to use the bathroom and, unfortunately, the only bathroom in sight was a
port-a-potty.
I hate port-a-potties. They’re disgusting. I don’t even care if I find a freshly placed port-a-potty and I am the first
person to use it. I still think they’re full of
germs, and I get incredibly grossed out.
Anyway, after weighing my options and realizing that I could not hold
it until I got home, my fate was sealed.
I was going to have to use the port-apotty.
I asked my boyfriend to walk over
with me, and he didn’t get what the big
deal was but agreed to walk with me. I
told him that because he -- as a man
-- doesn’t always have to get near the
seat, he will never understand the trauma that is the portable toilet.
Why is this such an issue for me?
I’m not germophobic or obsessed with
cleanliness, but I can’t stand these
things. -- Reluctant Reliever
Dear Reluctant: I’ve never seen
anyone heading into a port-a-potty
looking especially jazzed, but clearly it
bothers you more than most. Your best
bet is to be prepared. When you know
you’re going to be in a situation where
you might have to use a port-a-potty,
pack some hand sanitizer, toilet paper
and toilet seat liners in your bag. It
might also help to practice holding your
breath.
Send your questions for Annie
Lane to [email protected]. To
find out more about Annie Lane and
read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate website at www.
creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM
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YOUR INDIVIDUAL HOROSCOPE
For Thursday, July 28, 2016 - by Francis Drake
ARIES
(March 21 to April 19)
Try to avoid disputes about money
and possessions today, because
they will be brief but nasty. Since
they will be brief, they’ll be over
quickly. Hang in there.
TAURUS
(April 20 to May 20)
Tread carefully today because
people’s emotions are volatile! It’s
easy to get upset with others or
suddenly have an argument. (This
especially applies to close friends
and partners.)
GEMINI
(May 21 to June 20)
You might be doing a slow boil behind the scenes for some reason
today. Do your best to just let it
pass. Things will get worse if you
make a big deal about them.
CANCER
(June 21 to July 22)
An argument with a friend, especially a female acquaintance, might
break out today. Just remember:
Patience is the antidote to anger.
Remedy: Generously apply patience.
LEO
(July 23 to Aug. 22)
Squabbles with parents, bosses
and authority figures are hard to
avoid today. (This includes the police.) But who needs this? Not you.
Therefore, zip thy lip.
VIRGO
(Aug. 23 to Sept. 22)
Avoid controversial subjects like
politics, religion and racial issues
today, because they will quickly
deteriorate into a nasty argument.
Forewarned is forearmed.
LIBRA
(Sept. 23 to Oct. 22)
This is not an ideal day to discuss
inheritances or how to divide or
share something, because it will
be tough to reach an agreement.
Postpone this discussion for another day.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23 to Nov. 21)
With Mars in your sign now, you are
feisty! (Scorpio is never a wimp.)
Use diplomacy and patience when
dealing with partners and close
friends -- for the sake of everyone.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22 to Dec. 21)
An argument with someone at work
might break out today. Remember
your long-term objective, which
is that you want to get along with
these people in the future, right?
Connect the dots.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22 to Jan. 19)
Parents will have to be patient with
children today, because hissy fits
and meltdowns are likely. Romantic
partners must be patient with each
other as well.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20 to Feb. 18)
Avoid domestic arguments today.
Get out of the house and wait till
this volatile influence passes. Oy!
PISCES
(Feb. 19 to March 20)
Discussions with siblings, relatives
and neighbors could be challenging today, because someone is
looking for a fight. Do what you can
to keep the peace and make your
life easier.
YOU BORN TODAY You are dynamic, energetic and open. You
have a strong sense of responsibility, and you are quick to understand
the needs of others. Good news!
You are heading into one of the
most powerful years of your life -- a
time of accumulation. It’s an excellent year to buy and sell. Whatever
you have done in the past will now
ripen because it’s your time of fruition. At last!
Birthdate of: Jim Davis, cartoonist;
Jacques Piccard, oceanographer;
Lori Loughlin, actress.
(c) 2016 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
“FAST DELIVERY IS OUR SPECIALTY”
ZZZMPGVWRQHVFRP‡+RXUV0RQ)UL‡6DW‡6XQ
16
The Daily Press
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
www.smdailypress.com
'Jesus Christ Superstar' returns to stage
Pro-Dig Enterprises
Excavating, Underground
Utilities, Retaining Walls
& more 594-3797
Pioneer Construction
Excavation, Utilities,
Concrete, Tree Services
& More 814-594-1116
Affordable Contractors
Senior Assisted Living
Bathrooms available
We Call Back 788-0044
Lottery
Numbers
The following winning
numbers were drawn in Tuesday's Pennsylvania Lottery:
MIDDAY
Pick 2
46
Pick 3
121
Pick 4
4652
Pick 5
74955
Treasure Hunt
15 19 20 24 27
Photo by Amy Cherry
King Herod, portrayed by Logan Clingan, appears as a drag queen in the "Jesus Christ Superstar"
musical being presented by the Elk County Council on the Arts (ECCOTA) as part of its adult summer theatre production. The musical is being presented Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday at the
Ridgway Area High School auditorium with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. and showtime at 7 p.m.
Tickets are available at the ECCOTA office or at the door.
Funeral Services
BELSOLE – A Mass of
Christian Burial for Patrick Joseph Belsole will be
celebrated Friday, July 29
at 10 a.m. in the Chapel of
St. George at Gethsemane
Cemetery, 3139 Kutztown
Rd., (Muhlenberg Township), Reading, Pa. 19605.
There will be no public
viewing.
Entombment
will follow in Gethsemane
Cemetery
Mausoleum,
Muhlenberg Township.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to
Pancreatic Cancer Action
Network, 1500 Rosecrens
Ave., Suite 200, Manhattan Beach, Calif. 90266.
Stitzel Family Funeral Homes & Crematory, Inc., Laureldale, is in
charge of arrangements.
For online condolences, visit www.StitzelFamilyFuneralHomes.com.
EVENING
Pick 2
90
Pick 3
952
Pick 4
1518
Pick 5
41562
Cash 5
04 08 30 33 38
Cameron County
Vets Club
Wings at The CMF
every Wednesday @ 3pm
Hollywood Hardscape
Concrete/Hardscaping,
Driveways, Retaining
Walls, Stonework
335-7657
Whissels
Open Daily 2pm-9pm
Closed Mondays
834-4185
Thompson's 834-9781
Marinated Strip
Steak $6.99#
Ham Salad $2.99#
PA Power Washing
Houses, Roofs, Concrete
& More - call 594-5756
Local Butter Sugar
Sweet corn daily @
Burkes & Valley Farm
Market
Moose #146 Cash Bash
8/20 Doors open @4
CFD Training Grounds
W. Creek Rd
For details 834-2781
SMAHS
Class of 1971
45 Year
Reunion
August 27th
1:00pm to 7:00pm
R.S.V.P. by Aug. 20th.
B.Y.O.B..
$15
each
Dan Luchini
Residence
787-7477
1301 Old Byrnedale Rd.
Nussbaums 788-5097
Fresh Hardneck and
Elephant Garlic for Sale
EXCAVATION
Utilities • Driveways
Septic Systems
Auger Services
Stump Removal
French Drains
Demolition
CONCRETE
Sidewalks • Driveways
Foundations • Patios
Concrete Cutting
Pole Buildings
AND MORE!
Colby Klancer
St. Marys, PA
814-594-1116
Mountain Laurel
Federal Credit Union
In House Caterer
Hall Rental
22 West Fourth Street
Emporium, PA 15834
Emporium 814-486-0848
427 E. 3rd St., Emporium, PA • 814-486-3078
“Where it’s good to be a member.”
Opens Daily at 10:00 am
Always welcoming new members!
AUGUST 2016
CAMERON COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Emporium Borough
Council Meeting - 7pm
Emporium Borough OfÀce
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Cameron County Fair
Tractor Parade - 5pm
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Cameron County Fair
Mountain Melodies
1pm-4pm
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 6221 Meeting
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Free Knitting/Crochet
Group • 6:30pm, 34 E. 4th St.
Cameron County
Chamber
Executive Board Meeting
8am - 34 E. 4th St.,
Emporium
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Free Knitting/Crochet
Group • 6:30pm, 34 E. 4th St.
Emporium Senior Center Bingo
1:30-2:30pm
Emporium Senior Center
Cameron County Commissioners
Meeting Noon - Cameron County
Courthouse, Emporium • 10am
Chris Johnson Memorial
Tournament - 8am
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Medix Run Rendzvous - 11:30am
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
ATV Jamboree & Mudbog
2pm-11pm
Cameron County Commissioners
Meeting Noon - Cameron County
Courthouse, Emporium • 10am
Dave Hutton Race
Mountain Melodies
1:30pm-3:30pm
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Emporium Senior Center Bingo
1:30-2:30pm
Emporium Senior Center
Collaborative Board Meeting
10am-11am
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Free Knitting/Crochet
Group • 6:30pm, 34 E. 4th St.
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Emporium Senior Center Bingo
1:30-2:30pm
Emporium Senior Center
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Free Knitting/Crochet
Group • 6:30pm, 34 E. 4th St.
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Tom Ruberto Tournament
Emporium Country Club
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Free Knitting/Crochet
Group • 6:30pm, 34 E. 4th St.
Nick Guisto Memorial
Tournament
Emporium Country Club
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
First Step Seminar
8am-9am
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
American Legion Post 194
Meeting - Vets Club
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Elk Expo
Emporium Senior Center Bingo
1:30-2:30pm
Emporium Senior Center
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
St. Mark Catholic Festival
Spaghetti Dinner
St. Mark Catholic Festival
Empo Zumba Class
Memorial Hall - 9:30pm
Emporium Senior Center Bingo
1:30-2:30pm
Emporium Senior Center
Send your community/non-proÀt events to [email protected]
info@ straubinsuranceagency.com
Straub Insuarance Agency
318 E. 4th St.
Emporium, PA
www.straubagency.com
814-486-7225
P.O. BOX 493
EMPORIUM, PA 15834