Yankee Trader 07-19-25

07-19-25 Listings

 

Rick          Center Twp.             724-774-1727

¾ Impact Wrench Air tool that works off of a compressor.  Brand new-still in box.  $50.00

 

3/8 Ratchet Air tool that also works off of a compressor.

Brand new-still in box.  Only $20.00

 

2–12 Ton Pump Jacks. Brand new-still in box.   $25 each

 

Brand new Elvis folding chair with carrying case.  Perfect for the beach, event or relaxing in your back yard.  $50.00

 

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Shirley               (dtr’s #)  724-462-3103

Please call after 7PM or leave a message.

LTB (looking to buy) Full Size gas stove-any color or finish.

 

 

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VAL       (Beaver)        PHONE:  724-513-9390

 

Werner 20 foot commercial aluminum extension ladder. Used very few times around the home.    $100

 

Ladies Wilson GOLF Clubs & Bags.  $100 OBO

 

 

Lovely Wooden Storage Chest/Toy Box with a lid. 31” in length.   PRICE: $45.00

 

Furniture: Jacobean chair, upholstered chair, modern cube end table and more.

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Claire                Chester, WV             (son’s #) 304-387-2800

 

Large set of Fiesta Ware from Homer Laughlin.  The color is Paprika.  Lots of pieces.  Must sell all together (no separates) $450 OBO

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Diane (Vanport)  724-774-1671

 

2 Tires  235/55 R17  Used, but plenty of tread left.

PRICE: $50 for both OBO

 

Diane    724-774-1671

14” Electric Chainsaw.  Craftsman 2.5 hp  PRICE: $49 obo

Includes 1 gallon Bar Chain Lubricant

Pennsylvania seeks comments on stronger methane rules and pollution

(File Photo: Caption for Photo: Smoke emission from factory pipes)

(Reported by Danielle Smith of Keystone News Service)

(Harrisburg, PA) The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection is asking the public to weigh in on a federal E-P-A proposal to curb methane emissions from oil and gas sites. Methane is a greenhouse gas over 80 times more powerful than carbon dioxide, and is thought to be a driver of climate change. Barbara Jarmoska, former head of the Responsible Decarbonization Alliance, says the E-P-A plan is built on Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act efforts. Its federal funding has been cut, but people can still review the plan and share their feedback during the public comment period. She notes the E-P-A’s proposal would decrease pollution, improve air quality and create jobs. She says leaking methane is often accompanied by other volatile organic compounds that pose serious health risks. She lives next to the Loyalsock State Forest, in the heart of Pennsylvania General Energy’s large fracking operations – so close, she says, that P-G-E tested her drinking water before drilling began. The public comment period ends July 30th.

Israeli strike hits Gaza church, killing 3 and wounding priest who was close to Pope Francis

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE -Fr. Gabriel Romanelli, Latin parish priest of Gaza Strip, left, prays during the midnight Christmas Eve mass at Deir Al Latin Holy Family Catholic Church in Gaza City, Dec. 24, 2021. (AP Photo/Adel Hana, File)

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — An Israeli shell slammed into the compound of the only Catholic church in the Gaza Strip on Thursday, killing three people and wounding 10 others, including the parish priest, according to church officials. The late Pope Francis, who died in April, had regularly spoken to the priest about the war’s toll on civilians.

The shelling of the Holy Family Catholic Church in Gaza also damaged the church compound, where hundreds of Palestinians have been sheltering from the 21-month Israel-Hamas war. Israel expressed regret over what it described as an accident and said it was investigating.

Pope Leo XIV on Thursday renewed his call for an immediate ceasefire in response to the attack.

In a telegram of condolences for the victims, Leo expressed “his profound hope for dialogue, reconciliation and enduring peace in the region.” The pope said he was “deeply saddened to learn of the loss of life and injury caused by the military attack,″ and expressed his closeness to the wounded priest, Rev. Gabriel Romanelli, and the entire parish.

President Donald Trump called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to express his frustration over the strike on the church, the White House said. Netanyahu later released a statement saying Israel “deeply regrets that a stray ammunition hit Gaza’s Holy Family Church.”

Hundreds of people sheltered at the church

The church compound was sheltering both Christians and Muslims, including a number of children with disabilities, according to Fadel Naem, acting director of Al-Ahli Hospital, which received the casualties.

The Catholic charity Caritas Jerusalem said the parish’s 60-year-old janitor and an 84-year-old woman receiving psychosocial support inside a Caritas tent in the church compound were killed in the attack. Parish priest Romanelli was lightly wounded.

“We were struck in the church while all the people there were elders, innocent people and children,” said Shady Abu Dawood, whose mother was wounded by shrapnel to her head. “We love peace and call for it, and this is a brutal, unjustified action by the Israeli occupation.”

The Israeli military said an initial assessment indicated that “fragments from a shell fired during operational activity in the area hit the church mistakenly.” It said it was still investigating.

The military said it only strikes militant targets, ”makes every feasible effort to mitigate harm to civilians and religious structures, and regrets any unintentional damage caused to them.”

Israel has repeatedly struck schools, shelters, hospitals and other civilian buildings, accusing Hamas militants of sheltering inside and blaming them for civilian deaths. Palestinians say nowhere has felt safe since Israel launched its offensive in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack.

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni blamed Israel for the strike on the church. “The attacks on the civilian population that Israel has been demonstrating for months are unacceptable,” she said.

Church compounds have been struck before

The church is just a stone’s throw from Al-Ahli Hospital, Naem said, noting that the area around both the church and the hospital has been repeatedly struck for over a week.

The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which also has a church in Gaza that previously sustained damage from Israeli strikes, said the Holy Family Church was sheltering 600 displaced people, including many children, and 54 people with disabilities. It said the building suffered significant damage.

Targeting a holy site “is a blatant affront to human dignity and a grave violation of the sanctity of life and the inviolability of religious sites, which are meant to serve as safe havens during times of war,” the Church said in a statement.

Separately, another person was killed and 17 wounded Thursday in a strike against two schools sheltering displaced people in the Al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, according to Al-Awda Hospital. The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the strike.

The Gaza Health Ministry said that over the past 24 hours, local hospitals received the bodies of 94 people killed in Israeli strikes and another 367 wounded.

Pope Francis spoke almost daily with Gaza church

In the last 18 months of his life, Francis would often call the lone Catholic church in the Gaza Strip to see how people huddled inside were coping with a devastating war.

Francis had repeatedly criticized Israel’s wartime conduct, and last year suggested that allegations of genocide in Gaza — which Israel has rejected as a “blood libel” — should be investigated. The late pope also met with the families of Israeli hostages and called for their release.

Only 1,000 Christians live in Gaza, an overwhelmingly Muslim territory, according to the U.S. State Department’s international religious freedom report for 2024. Most are Greek Orthodox.

The Holy Land’s Christian population has dwindled in recent decades as many have emigrated to escape war and conflict or to seek better opportunities abroad. Local Christian leaders have recently denounced attacks by Israeli settlers and Jewish extremists.

Ceasefire talks continue

There has been little visible progress in months of indirect talks between Israel and Hamas aimed at a new ceasefire and hostage release agreement, after Israel ended an earlier truce in March.

According to an Israeli official familiar with the details, Israel is showing “flexibility” on some of the issues that have challenged negotiators, including Israel’s presence in some of the security corridors the military has carved into the territory.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were discussing ongoing negotiations, said Israel has shown some willingness to compromise on the Morag Corridor, which cuts across southern Gaza. However, other issues remain, including the list of Palestinian prisoners to be freed by Israel and commitments to end the war.

The official says there are signs of optimism but there won’t be a deal immediately.

Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, in the Oct. 7 attack and abducted 251 people, most of whom have since been released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Fifty hostages are still being held, less than half of them believed to be alive

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed over 58,600 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which has said women and children make up more than half of the dead. It does not distinguish between civilians and militants in its tally.

The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government but is led by medical professionals. The United Nations and other international organizations consider its figures to be the most reliable count of war casualties.

Man who sent Facebook message about committing a 2013 campus sexual assault pleads guilty

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Sexual assault suspect Ian Cleary departs from the Adams County Court House in Gettysburg, Pa., May 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, file)

GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) — An American extradited from France to face charges that he sexually assaulted a fellow Pennsylvania college student in 2013 — and later sent her a Facebook message that said “So I raped you” — pleaded guilty Thursday.

Ian Cleary, 32, pleaded guilty to second-degree sexual assault more than a decade after Shannon Keeler says he sneaked into her first-year dorm at Gettysburg College on the eve of winter break and assaulted her. Cleary’s guilty plea was the first time she’d seen him since the assault.

“I had been thinking about this moment for 12 years,” said Keeler, who clenched her husband’s hand as Cleary was led into court by deputies. She called it a surreal moment. A decade ago, a former prosecutor had declined the case.

“It’s taken a lot of twists and turns to get to this point,” said Keeler, now 30. “It took a lot of people doing the right thing to get us here.”

Judge Kevin Hess set an Oct. 20 sentencing date. The two sides proposed a four- to eight-year sentence, which the judge can accept or not.

Keeler, in interviews with The Associated Press, described her decade-long efforts to persuade authorities to pursue charges, starting hours after the assault.

She renewed the quest in 2021, after finding a series of disturbing Facebook messages from his account.

Cleary has been in custody since his arrest on minor, unrelated charges in Metz, France, in April 2024. A defense lawyer told the judge Thursday that Cleary experienced several mental health episodes there and was hospitalized around the time he sent the Facebook messages in 2019.

Cleary left Gettysburg after the assault and finished college in Silicon Valley, California, where he’d grown up. He then got a master’s degree and worked for Tesla before moving overseas, where he spent time writing medieval fiction, according to his online posts.

The AP published an investigation on the case and on the broader reluctance among prosecutors to pursue campus sex assault charges in May 2021. An indictment followed weeks later.

Authorities in the U.S. and Europe tried to track Cleary down for the next three years, but seemed unable to follow his trail, online or otherwise.

In court Thursday, defense lawyer John Abom said Cleary was homeless at times and unaware of the charges. Adams County District Attorney Brian Sinnett on Thursday said he has his doubts, but cannot prove that Cleary was on the run, so it’s unlikely to be an issue at sentencing.

The second-degree sexual assault charge carries a maximum 10 years in prison. His family members have declined to comment on the case and have not attended his court hearings. Abom also declined to comment on Cleary’s behalf Thursday.

The AP typically does not name people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Keeler has done.

“I hope that we as a society, the institutions around us, can make truly successful legal outcomes more viable for victims,” she said after the plea.

“It starts with listening to victims and making sure their voices are heard,” she said, “even if the system’s slow to catch up.”

Ex-Philadelphia officer sentenced and immediately paroled after conviction in traffic stop shooting

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Philadelphia police officer Mark Dial, center, arrives with attorneys Brian McMonigle, left, and Fortunato Perri, right, for a bail hearing at the Juanita Kidd Stout Center for Criminal Justice in Philadelphia, Sept. 19, 2023. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP, File)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A former Philadelphia police officer who shot and killed a motorist during a traffic stop was sentenced and granted parole Thursday by a judge, eliciting condemnations from the city’s district attorney and the victim’s family.

Judge Glenn Bronson sentenced Mark Dial to 9 1/2 months in jail, and immediately granted Dial parole because he had already been jailed for 10 months following his arrest in 2023.

jury in May acquitted Dial, 29, of murder charges, and instead convicted him of voluntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment and possessing an instrument of crime in the fatal shooting of 27-year-old Eddie Irizarry.

Brian McMonagle, Dial’s lawyer, said the judge did the right thing for a “dedicated public servant” who “risked his life every day for perfect strangers.”

District Attorney Larry Krasner said the judge went “way below” sentencing guidelines in handing down a sentence that set Dial free. The low end of the standard range of sentencing guidelines for the conviction was 4 1/2 to nine years in prison, he said.

Krasner declined to criticize the judge but said he was “deeply disappointed with a verdict that I think makes people lose faith in the criminal justice system.”

Zoraida Garcia, an aunt of Irizarry’s, told reporters after the sentencing that if she had committed the crime, “I would have been doing life in prison. But he’s a cop, so he gets the OK.” Another aunt, Ana Cintron, said, “my nephew’s life doesn’t matter at all.”

In court, Bronson said the shooting was not “a classic voluntary manslaughter case,” that Dial’s conduct was “demonstrably out of character” and that Dial was not a threat to the public, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

He also said that Dial, after shooting Irizarry six times, rushed Irizarry to the hospital.

“I’ve never seen that happen in a voluntary manslaughter case,” he said.

Dial’s lawyers have insisted that the 2023 shooting was justified.

They say Dial thought Irizarry had a gun when he approached Irizarry’s car after officers spotted the car being driven erratically and followed it for several blocks before it turned the wrong way down a one-way street and stopped.

Police body camera video of the shooting shows Dial getting out of a police SUV, striding over to Irizarry’s car and firing his weapon six times at close range through the rolled-up driver’s side window.

The video shows Irizarry holding a seven-inch knife before he was shot.

Another officer yelled “knife” as they had approached the vehicle, according to the video, but Dial’s attorneys disputed those assertions, saying the other officer yelled “Gun!,” that the knife resembled a gun and that Dial had acted lawfully and in self-defense.

Dial was released from custody in 2024 after prosecutors withdrew a first-degree murder charge.

The Pittsburgh Steelers make star linebacker T.J. Watt the NFL’s highest-paid defender

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker T.J. Watt (90) celebrates his sack during the first half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Terrance Williams, File)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — T.J. Watt has wanted to be a “one-helmet guy” from the second he arrived in Pittsburgh eight years ago.

The star outside linebacker took one big step toward that goal on Thursday, agreeing to a new pact that will make him the league’s highest-paid defender and keep the perennial All-Pro in black-and gold well into his 30s.

Watt, who was entering the final season of the four-year extension he signed in 2021, is scheduled to make $123 million over the course of the three-year agreement, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the contract had not yet been made public.

ESPN first reported the extension.

Watt appeared to celebrate by making a rare Instagram post on Thursday afternoon, sharing a picture of him flexing in his signature No. 90 jersey. Watt also posted a photo in his Instagram stories of him posing alongside protégé and third-year Steelers outside linebacker Nick Herbig.

The agreement’s average annual value of $41 million eclipses the previous record contract for a defender set by Cleveland defensive lineman and reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year Myles Garrett in March.

The annual average salary is also tick above what Bengals wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase received when he (briefly) became the league’s highest-paid non-quarterback a few days after Garrett agreed to terms with the Browns.

The fact that Watt’s extension is worth 2.5% more per season than Garrett’s (whose overall total value of $204 million is still higher than Watt’s) is not a coincidence. Watt, the 2021 Defensive Player of the Year and a four-time All-Pro and seven-time Pro Bowler, has long believed he is the best edge rusher in the NFL.

For the second time in four years, he’s being paid like it, though he might not hold the distinction of being the league’s highest-paid defender for long. Dallas Cowboys edge rusher Micah Parsons is also due for an extension that — given Parsons’ age (26) and the league’s ever-rising salary cap — figures to set the bar even higher.

Watt, who turns 31 in November, took the unusual step of skipping mandatory minicamp last month in hopes of putting pressure on Pittsburgh’s front office to get something done. Head coach Mike Tomlin brushed off Watt’s absence, saying it was only a matter of time before things worked themselves out.

The timing couldn’t be better. The new-look Steelers — now led by quarterback Aaron Rodgers — report to training camp at Saint Vincent College next Wednesday.

They’ll do it with a familiar face in tow. Watt, who tied an NFL record by racking up 22 1/2 sacks in 2021, is the linchpin of a defense that will be relied on heavily if the Steelers want to end a playoff drought that stretches to the 2016 AFC Championship, a few months before the Steelers selected Watt with the 30th overall pick in the 2017 draft.

While Watt is putting together a Hall-of-Fame worthy resume, the one thing he is lacking is any sort of postseason success. Watt’s singular brilliance has helped keep the Steelers competitive during his tenure, Pittsburgh is winless in the postseason with Watt in the lineup, most of them losses in which the defense has struggled.

Watt, who has 108 sacks in 121 regular-season games, has just one in four playoff appearances.

The Steelers are taking a flyer on 2025 — signing Rodgers and trading for veteran defensive back Jalen Ramsey, among other notable moves — and are intent on trying to find their next franchise quarterback in the 2026 draft, which just so happens to be taking place in Pittsburgh.

The lack of star power under center, however, has given the team the financial flexibility to take care of Watt now, hoping he can remain an impact player into his mid-30s in the same way longtime teammate Cam Heyward has done.

Senator Elder Vogel, Jr hosting his 2025 Beaver County Senior Expo at the Community College of Beaver County in September

(File Photo of Senator Elder Vogel, Jr.)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Rochester, PA) According to a release from Senator Elder Vogel, Jr.’s office, Vogel will host his annual Beaver County Senior Expo on Friday, September 26th, 2025, at the Community College of Beaver County. This is on the Monaca campus from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The free event involves representatives from both Pennsylvania and organizations that are local providing seniors with information about government services, health care and more. There will also be free health screenings, door prizes and refreshments. For more information, call 724-774-0444. 

Recent legislation would give judges guidelines for decisions about pet custody during divorce

(File Photo: Source for Photo: This photo provided by the Allegheny County, Pa., Police Department shows a brown-and-white male French bulldog. Authorities announced on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023, that Allison Lyn Gaiser, the woman accused of intentionally abandoning her French bulldog at a Pennsylvania airport before she boarded a flight to a resort in Mexico earlier this month, has been charged with animal cruelty and related charges. (Allegheny County Police Department via AP)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) Recent legislation that is proposed in Harrisburg would give judges guidelines to make decisions when it does not work out at a home, but someone wants to get a dog or a cat for pet custody. The legislation is titled House Bill 97. The included guidelines are the questions of if the animal was coming into the marriage and who owns responsibility for the well-being of the pet. The last guideline is the questions of who walks or feeds the animal and who brings the animal to the veterinarian. Representative Anita Kulik was the author of this bill, which has exceptions for certified service animals. The expected destination for the bill is the Pennsylvania House for its approval. 

Police confirm high school teacher in Ohio was killed by her boyfriend, who gets murder charge in connection with her death

(File Photo of Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Columbus, OH) According to police, a beloved high school teacher in Ohio was killed by her boyfriend last weekend. A report from WBNS confirms that thirty-seven-year-old Jason Palmer recently got a murder charge that is in connection with the death of forty-six-year-old Rachel Prince. That same report also states that on July 13th, 2025, Prince was found dead at the home of both her and Palmer, which is in Columbus, Ohio.

Teenager indentified that was killed in a roll-over crash in the Point Breeze neighborhood of Pittsburgh; crash still under investigation

(File Photo: Caption for Photo: police car lights at night in city with selective focus and bokeh background blur) Credit for Photo: Courtesy of Getty Images/iStockphoto/z1b)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A roll-over crash occurred in the Point Breeze neighborhood of Pittsburgh on Thursday morning which killed one male teenager and injured three others. According to Pittsburgh Public Safety, first responders were dispatched to the 1200 block of Beechwood Boulevard between Beechwood Lane and Gettysburg Street just before 1 a.m. One passenger in the car that crashed is in critical condition while another passenger and the driver are in stable condition. Eighteen-year-old Jakob James Sirlin was who died at the scene. There is an ongoing investigation for this incident.