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101 reasons to celebrate!

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By: 
Destiny Pifer
Of The Spirit

Like the butterflies that sat on her cake, one woman has soared through good times and bad. She carries with her memories of a life filled with loving moments with her loved ones. And though she had her share of struggles, that never stopped her from soaring high.

On Friday afternoon, Bernice Saeger sat at a table at Mulberry Square surrounded by family, friends and staff members to celebrate her 101st birthday. All the while, Saeger sat smiling at those around her.

Read the full story in Saturday's print edition of The Spirit.

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LINDSAY NAMED 2016 DAYTON FAIR QUEEN

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Staff Writer

2016 Dayton Fair Queen Isabelle Lindsay (left) and runner-up Jordyn Powell were crowned on Sunday evening to kick off the 2016 Dayton Fair. (Photo courtesy of Suzanne Ault Boarts)

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PSP-Punxsy continues to investigate Burnside Twp. thefts

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Staff Reports

Punxsutawney-based Pennsylvania State Police continue to investigate the thefts of many large items at 8274 Main St., Burnside Township. The items were reported to have been stolen between July 14, 2010, and May 13, 2015.

According to PSP-Punxsutawney, the victim, a known 48-year-old male, had previously reported that a vehicle and a gun were removed from that location.

Police said a flatbed trailer, a garden tractor and a 500-600 cc motorcycle were also previously reported to have been stolen.

According to police, these additional items were stolen: A VW motor, a 1989 small black Chevrolet pickup truck, an Odyssey ATV, a Mazda B2000 mini convertible low rider truck with a homemade front tow bar, a 1979 Yamaha YZ250, a 2004 Kawasaki KX125, a Honda 600, a black/cafe racer pocket bike, a 2001 or 2002 50 cc pocket dirtbike and a 410 shotgun with blonde stock in a brown case.

Anyone with information is asked to contact PSP-Punxsutawney at 814-938-0510.

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Pennsylvania's AG Kane found guilty in perjury case

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pa. (AP) — The state's attorney general was convicted Monday of all nine charges against her in a perjury and obstruction case related to a grand jury leak but insisted she's innocent and vowed to appeal.

Attorney General Kathleen Kane, the first Democrat and first woman elected to the office, showed little emotion as jurors announced their verdict Monday. Gov. Tom Wolf, also a Democrat, renewed calls for her to resign, saying she should "do what is right" by putting the state's residents first.

The jurors agreed with prosecutors that Kane leaked information about a 2009 grand jury probe to embarrass a rival prosecutor.

A lawyer for Kane, in closing arguments earlier Monday, had blamed her former top aides for the leak, which found its way to a newspaper. Kane wanted the public to know her predecessor had failed to prosecute a case involving an NAACP official, but she never authorized the leak of secret criminal files, said her lawyer, Seth Farber.

Instead, he said, Kane's chief deputy, Adrian King, abused his power when he sent the files to a reporter through Kane's political consultant. King and the consultant, Josh Morrow, testified against Kane last week.

Morrow, who had a grant of immunity, said he and Kane devised a cover-up story that framed King for the leak. He acknowledged telling the lie to a grand jury.

Farber said Morrow and King "are two witnesses who will say whatever they need to in order to protect themselves. You would not even buy a used car from either one of them."

Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele noted, though, that Kane had chosen the men as confidants. Text messages and phone records show frequent interactions among them on key days in the prosecution's timeline: when the documents changed hands, when the Philadelphia Daily News article appeared and when a grand jury started to investigate the leak.

A top deputy told the jury he was alarmed when he saw the June 2014 article. He testified Kane told him it was no big deal.

"Who would say that other than the person that is responsible for it?" Steele asked.

The leak grew out of Kane's feud with former office prosecutor Frank Fina, he said. According to trial testimony, Kane believed Fina had planted a story that showed she had dropped a statehouse sting.

"She was just hell-bent on getting back at Frank Fina," Morrow testified last week, describing Kane as "unhinged" at the time.

Kane didn't testify or call any defense witnesses after three days of prosecution evidence.

After the conviction, the judge overseeing the trial said she would jail Kane if she saw any sign of witness retaliation and ordered Kane to surrender her passport. She criticized Kane for leaving her office in chaos to go to Haiti for a week with her sister and other office employees, saying Kane left no one "watching the store."

Kane remained free on personal recognizance bail pending a sentence expected within 90 days.

Kane, 50, was once a rising star in the state's Democratic party, using her then-husband's trucking fortune to run for statewide office after stints as a Scranton prosecutor and a stay-at-home mother. But an early honeymoon period in office, when she spoke out for the legalization of gay marriage, was soon marred by turmoil as she sparred with officials inside and outside the office.

She staunchly described the charges as payback for her efforts to take on an "old-boys network" in state government that traded offensive, mildly pornographic emails. Her investigation led two state Supreme Court justices and others to resign.

However, the trial judge didn't let her lawyers wade into that argument.

Public officials convicted of official misconduct in Pennsylvania typically don't have to resign until they're sentenced. Kane could stay in office while she appeals.

Perjury, the only felony charged, can bring up to seven years in prison. The misdemeanor charges included conspiracy, official oppression and false swearing.

Kane lost her law license over the charges and didn't seek re-election. Her term ends Jan. 17, when a new attorney general picked by voters in the November election will be sworn in.

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Ray Dively’s love for the printed word brings him through The Spirit’s offices

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Staff Writer

Ray Dively, a self-proclaimed “newspaper junkie” who has visited 31 newspaper offices in 11 states, recently stopped by The Spirit’s office for a visit with the staff.

Dively has had 1,922 letters to the editor published in 176 newspapers. With a desire to be a journalist, Dively traveled on a path that led him to be acknowledged by some well-known individuals.

Read the full story about Dively in Tuesday's print edition of The Spirit.

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New Pennsylvania AG was prosecutor who didn't charge Cosby

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pa. (AP) — The former county prosecutor taking over for Pennsylvania's convicted attorney general is a central figure in the Bill Cosby case, having chosen a decade ago not to charge the entertainer with sex assault and then saying the decision was binding when called to the witness stand this year by Cosby's lawyers.

Bruce L. Castor Jr., 54, took the oath privately Wednesday as the state's top law enforcement official, an office spokesman said.

He succeeds Kathleen Kane, a Democrat who resigned following her conviction on charges she abused the powers of her office by leaking secret grand jury information to smear a rival and then lied under oath to cover it up. Castor will serve out the five months left of Kane's term.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday as she entered the agency's offices near her home in Scranton, Kane called her last day in office bittersweet and said she had no regrets, but declined to discuss her criminal case.

When Kane is sentenced Oct. 24, she faces prison time. In the meantime, she cannot practice private law after the suspension of her law license.

"I don't know what's next, but I do know somebody has told me that your future is always brighter than your past," Kane said.

Castor, a Republican, served two terms as the district attorney in Montgomery County, in suburban Philadelphia, before becoming a county commissioner. He ran for attorney general in 2004, losing in an expensive and hotly contested party primary to Tom Corbett, who later went on to become governor.

Last fall, Castor made an unsuccessful bid to return as the county's top prosecutor in a race in which he was criticized by his opponent for not pursuing charges against Cosby in 2005.

The district attorney-elect ended up filing a felony sex assault charge against Cosby, the married comic once known as "America's Dad" for his portrayal of Dr. Cliff Huxtable on his top-ranked 1980s TV show. Cosby has denied any wrongdoing.

Castor emerged as a key witness at a hearing in February at which Cosby's lawyers tried to have the comedian's case thrown out. He testified he had promised Cosby that Cosby would never be charged over a former Temple University employee's allegation that he molested her at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. But a judge rejected his claim after prosecutors cited inconsistencies in Castor's accounts and challenged his credibility.

"I thought making Mr. Cosby pay money was the best I was going to be able to set the stage for," Castor testified, noting that the woman who brought the complaint could instead pursue a civil lawsuit, which she did.

Not long after that testimony, Kane tapped Castor as her second-in-command.

At a news conference Tuesday, Castor said he believed he was the right person to take over from Kane, following two years of turmoil in the office.

"I doubt that there's anybody in all of Pennsylvania that has more experience and brings more knowledge to the game than me, which is I think why I was sought out in the first place," Castor said.

Castor has not received any pledges of support from Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf or top lawmakers. The governor has the authority to appoint Kane's replacement, with two-thirds approval of the Republican-controlled Senate, until a successor picked in the November election is sworn in Jan. 17. But Wolf's office said no decision had been made about whether to nominate a placeholder.

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10 Things to Know for Thursday

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Staff Writer

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Thursday:

1. TRUMP PLACING RISKY BET IN QUEST FOR WHITE HOUSE: He's doubling down on the proposition that his brand of fiery populism gives him a better shot at the presidency than uniting his party and rallying moderate voters.

2. 'IT HIT HARD. IT HIT FAST': A ferocious wildfire in Southern California races up and down canyon hillsides, instantly engulfing homes and forcing thousands of people to flee.

3. FLOOD BRINGS HOUSING CRISIS TO LOUISIANA: With an estimated 40,000 homes damaged by high water, the state could be facing its biggest housing crunch since the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina a decade ago.

4. WHAT'S SURE TO ENRAGE PYONGYANG: A senior North Korean diplomat based in London defects to South Korea, becoming one of the highest Northern officials to do so.

5. MAJOR COMPANIES RUSH TO UPDATE DEFENSES AGAINST HACKERS: The leak of what purports to be a National Security Agency hacking tool kit has set the information security world atwitter.

6. BLAZE ABOARD CRUISE SHIP FORCES EVACUATIONS: Five hundred passengers and crew are hustled off the Caribbean Fantasy near Puerto Rico after fuel from a broken hose catches fire.

7. BIG 'FLYING BUM' SENT ALOFT FOR FIRST TIME: A blimp-shaped, helium-filled airship considered the world's largest aircraft takes a short but historic jaunt over an airfield in central England.

8. WHY MORE PEOPLE ARE LEAVING THEIR BODIES TO SCIENCE: The trend is attributed to rising funeral costs and growing acceptance of a practice long seen by some as ghoulish.

9. ARTHUR HILLER DIES AT 92: The director received an Oscar nomination for the hugely popularly romantic tragedy "Love Story" during a career that spanned dozens of popular movies and TV shows.

10. WHO'S LOOKING LIKE THEIR OLD SELVES: Ending a stretch of three close games, the U.S. men's basketball team powers into the semifinals of the Olympics, beating Argentina 105-78.

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Cash prizes to be given away at Down to the Wire show

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Staff Writer

Local classic rock band Down to the Wire will take the stage tonight for the final installment of this summer's Music in the Park series in Barclay Square. The show will run from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Cash prizes totaling $400 will be given away (via drawing) to concert attendees. Don’t forget to bring a lawn chair. Snacks will be available.

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Propane tank fire causes a scare for local crews

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By: 
Larry McGuire
Of The Spirit

Tree limbs entangling with electric lines caused a propane tank to catch fire at 1172 Jackson Run Rd., Gaskill Township, at 1:45 p.m. Thursday.

In the end, the stubborn fire took more than two hours for firefighters to extinguish.

The fire started when a tree that was being cut down fell into the electric wires and pulled them down on the propane tank.

Read the full story in Friday's print edition of The Spirit.

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AP's 10 Things to Know for Friday

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Friday:

1. TOP TRUMP AIDE TIED TO UNDISCLOSED LOBBYING CAMPAIGN: A firm run by Trump's campaign chairman orchestrated a covert Washington lobbying operation on behalf of Ukraine's ruling political party, emails obtained by the AP show.

2. AUTHORITIES CONTRADICT US SWIMMERS' STORY: Brazilian police say Ryan Lochte and three teammates were not robbed in Rio after a night of partying, as they claimed.

3. CLINTON SITS ATOP POLLS DESPITE EMAILS: Faced with the choice of Trump, voters seem willing to tolerate questions about her honesty because of their distaste for the Republican nominee.

4. WHAT OBAMA ADMINISTRATION IS ACKNOWLEDGING FOR FIRST TIME: The State Department says that a $400 million cash payment to Iran was contingent on the release of a group of American prisoners.

5. SUMMER OF PAIN IN BATON ROUGE: The Louisiana city has endured the shooting death of a black man by police, the killings of three officers, and now catastrophic flooding.

6. WHERE UBER SEES ITS BUSINESS HEADING: The option to hail a free ride in a self-driving car will soon be available to users of the company's services in Pittsburgh.

7. NYC MUSLIMS GRAPPLE WITH PRIVACY ISSUES: The daytime slayings of an imam and his friend prompt consideration of the possible benefits of increased police surveillance of the city's Muslim communities.

8. WHO'S FOLDING ITS MEDIA TENT: Gawker.com is shutting down, brought low by the major invasion-of-privacy lawsuit won by Hulk Hogan.

9. R-E-S-P-E-C-T FOR ARETHA FRANKLIN'S CHILDHOOD HOME: A judge says the current owner had made enough improvements to the dilapidated house where the singer was born in Memphis, Tenn., to save it from the wrecking ball.

10. JUDGE TO EX-NFL STAR: CAN'T IGNORE DAMAGE YOU INFLICTED: Darren Sharper is sentenced to more than 18 years in prison for drugging women in order to rape them — double the sentence recommended by prosecutors.

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Florida officials: Zika spread by mosquitoes in South Beach

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP) — South Beach has been identified as a second site of Zika transmission by mosquitoes on the U.S. mainland, Florida officials said Friday.

The discovery prompted the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to announce that it was expanding its travel warning for pregnant women to include the tourist-friendly area of Miami Beach.

In a statement issued shortly after Gov. Rick Scott and health officials released the latest information, the CDC said pregnant women may also want to consider postponing nonessential travel throughout Miami-Dade County if they're concerned about potential exposure to the mosquito-borne virus.

"We're in the midst of mosquito season and expect more Zika infections in the days and months to come," said CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden. "It is difficult to predict how long active transmission will continue."

Five cases of Zika have been connected to Miami Beach, bringing the state's caseload to 36 infections not related to travel outside the U.S., Gov. Rick Scott said at a news conference. In response to a follow-up question from The Associated Press, Florida Department of Health spokeswoman Mara Gambineri said officials believe the cases were transmitted by mosquitoes.

Two of the infected people are Miami-Dade County residents, and three are tourists, including one man and two women, Scott said. The tourists are residents of New York, Texas and Taiwan.

Scott described the new area of infection in the narrow island city as just under 1.5 miles between 8th and 28th streets.

Another infection zone was previously identified across a roughly 1-square-mile area encompassing Miami's Wynwood arts district.

Possible infections outside Wynwood and Miami Beach also are being investigated.

Zika infection can cause severe brain-related birth defects, including a dangerously small head, if women are infected during pregnancy. But the virus only causes mild, flu-like symptoms in most people, making it difficult to confirm local transmissions, the CDC said.

"For this reason, it is possible that other neighborhoods in Miami-Dade County have active Zika transmission that is not yet apparent," the CDC's statement said.

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Garden Club gearing up for another Weeding Wednesday

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By: 
Larry McGuire
Of The Spirit

If you like your town to look nice and spiffy, with no weeds growing in the flower beds or in the cracks in the sidewalk, then you'll want to come out this week for Weeding Wednesday in downtown Punxsutawney.

Gloria Kerr, president of the Punxsutawney Garden Club, has a reminder for those who like to pull weeds — and even those who don't but are willing to when needed — that the club needs some help this Wednesday to clean up the downtown area.

Read the full story in Tuesday's edition of The Spirit.

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PAHS HOLDS ORIENTATION, WELCOMES 8TH GRADE

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Staff Writer

Next week, the lobby and halls of the Punxsutawney Area High School will be abuzz with students, faculty and staff making the best of the new school year. On Tuesday evening, PAHS welcomed its 8th-grade students for orientation. The JV cheerleaders (pictured) served as friendly faces for those coming to the high school for the first time. Cheerleaders serving as the welcoming crowd outside the auditorium were (from left) Holly Hartman, Breelyn Muth, Emily Cavallo, Skylar Brooks, Korinne Anderson and Amber Little. For all of the students attending PAHS, the school year officially begins at 8:05 a.m. on Tuesday morning.

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Soldier who killed 5 Dallas officers showed PTSD symptoms

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Army reservist who killed five Dallas police officers last month showed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder after returning home from Afghanistan in 2014, but doctors concluded that he presented no serious risk to himself or others, according to newly released documents from the Veterans Health Administration.

Micah Johnson had sought treatment for anxiety, depression and hallucinations, telling doctors that he experienced nightmares after witnessing fellow soldiers getting blown in half. He also said he heard voices and mortars exploding, according to the documents obtained by The Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act.

"I try to block those out, but it is kinda hard to forget," Johnson told his care provider, according to the documents.

Johnson, 25, was the sniper who targeted the officers at the conclusion of a peaceful march July 7 in downtown Dallas, where demonstrators were protesting fatal police shootings in Minnesota and Louisiana. Armed with an assault rifle, he took multiple positions as he fired. Hours later, authorities used a bomb-carrying robot to kill him.

During his deployment, Johnson was largely confined to base in an area of Afghanistan that had seen heavy combat but that was relatively quiet when his unit arrived in November 2013, according to his former squad leader.

Upon his return to the U.S. nine months later, Johnson told doctors he was experiencing panic attacks a few times a week, including once while at Wal-Mart, where there was an unspecified conflict that required a police response, the records said.

"Veteran states hearing all the noises, fights and police intervening caused him to have palpitations, 'My heart felt like someone was pinching it while it was beating fast,'" the records state. Johnson said he began shaking, felt short of breath and got chills following the Wal-Mart incident.

The records do not show that Johnson was formally diagnosed with PTSD.

The type of screening that he underwent is typically a first step to determine if the patient should be referred for further assessment to a mental health professional, said Joel Dvoskin, a clinical and forensic psychologist in Tucson, Arizona.

Doctors eventually decided that Johnson presented a low risk for suicide or for hurting anyone else.

Johnson was "not acutely at risk for harm to self or others," according to a medical record from a visit on Aug. 15, 2014. The patient was "not felt to be psychotic by presentation or by observation."

The reservist who specialized in carpentry and masonry told health care providers he had lower back pain and was avoiding "crowds of people and when in the public, scanning the area for danger, noting all the exits, watching everyone's actions."

"I feel like I can't trust all of these strangers around me," Johnson told his doctor, who noted that he had taken to drinking since his return to Dallas, consuming three to four shots of vodka up to three times a week. "It's hard for me to be around other people and I am so angry and irritable."

Records from the Aug. 15 visit state that Johnson described his childhood as "stressful." His responses to a section of the form titled "Sexual/Physical/Emotional Abuse History" were redacted. Johnson was also advised to talk with a health care worker about erectile dysfunction.

Johnson was prescribed a muscle relaxant, an antidepressant and anti-anxiety and sleep medication, and a nurse offered him tips on managing anger, records show.

He also saw a psychiatrist and was further evaluated for his PTSD symptoms in September of that year, but the physician noted that his mood was "better."

When providers called Johnson in October 2014, he requested to put off further assessment for PTSD, saying he was busy remodeling his mother's house, according to the records. He had previously told providers he planned to find a job in construction and that his long-term goal was to become a self-defense instructor.

Johnson's mother, Delphene Johnson, has said her son sought medical care from the VA for a back injury but got no help after filling out forms and going to meetings. He "just finally gave up," she told TheBlaze, a news site founded by conservative talk show host Glenn Beck.

Dallas VA spokesman Ozzie Garza did not immediately respond to questions regarding Johnson's treatment within the VA North Texas Health Care System, the second largest VA health care system in the country.

In May 2014, new patients seeking mental health care at the Dallas VA faced a 50-day average wait, then the 10th longest in the nation.

The mother of Gavin Long, the former Marine and Iraq war veteran who killed three law enforcement officers July 17 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, told PBS' Tavis Smiley that her son had post-traumatic stress disorder and unsuccessfully sought the VA's help.

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It's the pups’ turn to hop in the pool!

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Larry McGuire
Of The Spirit

As summer begins to wind down, the good news is that the Dog Days of Summer are not over, as the George C. Brown Pool is welcoming pooches to come and swim this Sunday, Aug. 28.

Lisa Switlick, Save Punxsy's Local Area Swimming Hole (SPLASH) chairperson, said the Dog Days of Summer Dog Swim will be held this coming Sunday at the pool, located adjacent to Harmon Field on Cypress Street in Punxsutawney.

Read the full story in Friday's print edition of The Spirit.

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Local crews called to Henderson Twp. fire

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Staff Writer

Local fire departments were called to a structure fire at approximately 3:42 p.m. Friday at 3460 Desire Rd., Henderson Township. Check back later for more details.

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Local officials attend Legislative Farm Tour

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By: 
Larry McGuire
Of The Spirit

Farmers are known to “rise and shine” at the crack of dawn. So, it wasn’t all that early, but it was still morning time when government officials and media had their opportunity to visit an actual farm and learn how much it costs to run the operation this past week.

The Jefferson County Farm Bureau and Penn State Extension hosted the Legislature Farm Tour on Friday at the Rick Wise Farm, 161 Cider Mill Rd., near Troutville.

Don Tanner, district director for Penn State Cooperative Extension, thanked Rick and his family for allowing them to come out to this enterprise.

Read the full story in Tuesday's print edition of The Spirit.

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Brookville area boil alert issued

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Staff Writer

— The following areas in Brookville Borough and parts of Rose Township that receive water from the Brookville Municipal Authority system are under a boil water alert until further notice:

• Terri Glenn

• The Brookville Area High School

• Hickory Grove Elementary

• The Alaska Road area

• Northern Allegheny Boulevard

The boil alert was issued as a result of a waterline break on Allegheny Boulevard Monday night. All water to be consumed should be boiled for one minute prior to use. This includes water for washing dishes, brushing teeth, drinking water, making ice, etc.

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Pennsylvania's convicted ex-top prosecutor swiftly replaced

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania lawmakers made a hasty return to the state Capitol from their summer recess on Tuesday as they rushed through a replacement for the state's convicted ex-attorney general.

The unanimous confirmation vote on Bruce Beemer comes less than two weeks after Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf nominated him to head an office racked by infighting and scandal under Kathleen Kane.

Beemer was sworn in privately in Wolf's offices, with Wolf in attendance. Under Senate rules, senators were required to wait until at least Sunday to vote on Beemer's nomination. Senators reconvened and voted with little fanfare in an effort to close an ugly chapter for the state's top law enforcement office.

Beemer told senators he hopes to restore a sense of honor and integrity to Pennsylvania's top law enforcement office. Work must be done to restore the office's credibility with the public and other law enforcement agencies, as well as improving morale, Beemer said.

"It's going to be a challenge, but I look forward to do doing that each and every day," Beemer told reporters. "It's going to be sort of like putting building blocks one on top of each other. Every day we're going to try to make things a little bit better."

In a statement, Wolf said Beemer has the experience and skillset to begin healing the attorney general's office, and he is trusted by its rank-and-file employees and understands "better than anyone what must be fixed to restore the public trust."

One hot-button issue awaiting Beemer is a report commissioned by Kane on a trove of pornographic or offensive emails culled from the agency's servers.

It is perhaps the final act in a scandal that has roiled Pennsylvania's law enforcement and legal communities for two years and felled several top state officials, including two state Supreme Court justices. Kane had released some hundreds of emails her office discovered, but apparently not all.

Beemer would not say whether he would release the report publicly, saying he had not seen it and that people named in it must be afforded due process. But state Sen. Judy Schwank, D-Berks, took to the Senate floor to urge Beemer to deal directly with the "misogynistic, homophobic, bigoted and pornographic emails" and ensure that such a culture cannot exist again in the office.

Kane was convicted of abusing the powers of the state's top law enforcement office by leaking secret grand jury information to smear a rival and lying under oath to cover it up. She resigned Aug. 17, two days after her conviction, and faces prison time.

Beemer, the former top deputy to Kane, was promoted into the post by Kane, but he later clashed publicly with her and provided testimony that helped prosecutors to convict her.

Beemer left his post as Kane's top deputy last month to become Wolf's inspector general, an office that investigates complaints about fraud, waste and misconduct in state agencies.

He is expected to fill the remaining five months of Kane's term until a successor picked by voters in the November election is sworn in Jan. 17.

Beemer, 47, took on some of the office's major legal decisions and openly confronted Kane over the agency's operations after the state Supreme Court suspended her law license last fall.

He also gave unflattering testimony about Kane at her trial earlier this month, including the contention that Kane told him it was "no big deal" when he told her a 2014 article in the Philadelphia Daily News contained information he deemed to be protected by investigation secrecy laws.

The information in the article was leaked by Kane, prosecutors said.

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AP Source: Trump may visit Mexico before immigration speech

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

, Wash. (AP) — In a surprise move, Donald Trump is considering traveling to Mexico on Wednesday, just hours before delivering a highly anticipated speech on immigration, according to a campaign official.

The discussions about a possible last-minute trip come as Trump seeks to clarify his stand on illegal immigration, a contentious issue that has been a centerpiece of his Republican presidential campaign. Trump has long called for deporting people currently living in the U.S. illegally and building a wall along the country's border with Mexico.

But in meetings recently with Hispanic supporters, Trump has suggested he could be open to changing the hardline approach he outlined during the GOP primaries. After one such roundtable this month, his new campaign manager said Trump's stance on deportations was "to be determined."

In the days since, Trump and his staff have broadcast varied and conflicting messages, with Trump himself saying one day he might be open to "softening" his stance, and days later saying he might, in fact, be "hardening."

Last week, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto — who has been critical of Trump's insistence that Mexico would pay for the wall — invited both the Republican nominee and Democrat Hillary Clinton to visit his country. His office says the invitation was well received, but meetings with the candidates have not been confirmed.

The Washington Post first reported the potential trip, adding Trump hopes to meet with Pena Nieto.

Trump is scheduled to speak on immigration Wednesday evening in Phoenix. He was already out West on Tuesday for a campaign stop near Seattle, conceivably giving him enough time to jet down to Mexico for a brief visit before the evening speech.

Foreign trips by presidential candidates, even to a neighboring country such as Mexico, are an enormous logistical and security undertaking. It's unclear whether Trump could receive clearance from Secret Service to make the trip or whether his small campaign team could organize the logistics in time for even a short visit.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a close Trump adviser, has been among those pushing Trump to make the trip, according to a person familiar with their conversations. Christie made his own successful trip to Mexico City in September 2014, and has a warm relationship with the Mexican president.

Both the campaign official and the person with knowledge of Trump's conversations about the trip insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the internal campaign discussions.

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