Red Bluff Daily News

September 21, 2013

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8B Daily News – Saturday, September 21, 2013 LEGAL NOTICE Self Help Home Improvement Project is looking for C17 Licensed - Glazing Contractors to perform work on the Department of Energy's Weatherization Assistance Program and the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), interested Licensed Glazers should contact Dee Marshall @ 530-3786905 x 121 on or before 10/01/2013 for more information. Publish: September 20, 21 & 24, 2013 Make that chore pay off with a garage sale! Bring in extra cash and get rid of your unused item at the same time! Advertise in the Red Bluff Daily News Classified Ads 527-2151 Web: redbluffdailynews.com E-Mail: advertise@redbluffdailynews.com LEGAL NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013000310 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Richard Pitner Property Inspections 530 586-1946 20469 Womack Ave, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Richard Pitner 20469 Womack Ave. Red Bluff, CA 96080 The registrant commenced to LEGAL NOTICE transact business under the ficFICTITIOUS titious business name or names BUSINESS listed above on N/A NAME This business is conducted by: STATEMENT an individual File No. 2013000307 S/By: Richard Pitner The following person(s) is (are) Richard Pitner doing business as: This statement was filed with NOR-CAL PIPE & STEEL the County Clerk of Tehama 750 Diamond Ave. County on 9/18/2013 Red Bluff, CA 96080 BEVERLY ROSS Patrick S. Hayes Tehama County 20019 Red Bank Rd Clerk & Recorder Red Bluff, CA 96080 Publish: September 21, 28, OctoThe registrant commenced to ber 5 & 12, 2013 transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 9-12-2013 This business is conducted by: an individual S/By: Patrick S. Hayes Patrick S. Hayes This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Tehama County on 9/12/2013 BEVERLY ROSS Tehama County Clerk & Recorder Publish: September 14, 21, 28 & October 5, 2013 LEGAL NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013000306 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Williams Self Mini Storage 612 7th St. Williams, CA 95987 Harold Foster 14400 Del Oro Red Bluff, CA 96080 The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 7-1-2006 This business is conducted by: an individual S/By: Harold Foster Harold Foster This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Tehama County on 9/11/2013 BEVERLY ROSS Tehama County Clerk & Recorder Publish: September 14, 21, 28, & October 5, 2013 LEGAL NOTICE Lien Sale Airport Mini Storage and Affordable Mini Storage will be holding an auction. Auction will be held on: October 8, 2013 @ 11:00 AM www.bidcal.com Place: Affordable Mini Storage 4970 Marguerite Ave. Corning, CA 96021 Christina Shields # 13 Patrick Shields Misc. Items Christina Shields # 34 Patrick Shields Misc. Items At www.bidcal.com Place: Affordable Mini Storage South 3rd St. Corning, CA 96021 Peggy Guice # 47 Misc. Items All units listed above are household items except if stated. The above units will be sold to the highest bidder to satisfy liens. We reserve the right to halt sale of said units. Publish: September 14 & 21, 2013 SPECIAL MEETINGS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS — RED BLUFF— 785 Musick — 529-0301 OR 225-8955 (24 hrs. Redding) SUNDAYS............4PM Book Study........8PM Candlelight MONDAYS........ LIVE & LET LIVE: 9AM, NOON & 8PM TUESDAYS...........LIVE & LET LIVE: 9AM, NOON, 5:30PM & 8PM STEPS & TRADITION WEDNESDAYS....BOOK STUDY 9AM NOON & 8PM LIVE & LET LIVE: NOON & 8PM THURSDAYS.......LIVE & LET LIVE: 9AM, NOON & 6PM TEEN MEETING..............................8PM FRIDAYS..............LIVE & LET LIVE: 9:00 AM, NOON & 8:00PM BUSINESS MEETING 1st FRIDAY OF THE MONTH 6:30 SATURDAYS........LIVE & LET LIVE: ......NOON & 8:00PM Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson TUES....6:30PM BOOK STUDY • THURS....6:30PM OPEN MEETING SUNDAYS............6:30PM.........................CANDLE LIGHT Villa Columba Rio Street Entrance (Non -Smoking) WEDNESDAYS....6:00PM........................OPEN MEETING SATURDAYS........10:00AM ......................OPEN MEETING SUNDAYS............8:30AM........................OPEN MEETING St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Corner Jefferson & Elm MONDAYS...........6:30PM................LADIES BOOK STUDY MONDAYS...........8:00PM..............................MEN'S STAG FRIDAYS..............7:00PM........................OPEN MEETING Bethel Church, 625 Luther Rd. MONDAY-THURSDAY...........................................11:00AM — CORNING — 712 5th Street SUNDAY-FRIDAY....................................1:00PM & 7:00PM SATURDAYS........YOUTH ......................................6:00PM REGULAR MEETING ................8:00PM Foursquare Church WEDNESDAYS....7:00PM....SERENITY 12-STEP GROUP — RANCHO TEHAMA — Rancho Tehama Community Center SUNDAY-FRIDAY.....................................................6:00PM — LOS MOLINOS — Senior Citizen's Hall, Josephine St. & Sherwood WEDNESDAYS....7:00PM........................OPEN MEETING AL-ANON — RED BLUFF — 601 Walnut St. WEDNESDAYS....NOON...........................STEP MEETING THURSDAYS.......7:00-8:00PM................OPEN MEETING Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson MONDAY..............6:00PM WEDNESDAYS.............NOON ADULT CHILDREN of ALCOHOLICS – RED BLUFF — 25 Gilmore Rd., Apt. D (Idle Wheels RB Park) — 529-5667 THURSDAYS.......6:30PM........................OPEN MEETING NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS — RED BLUFF — 900 Walnut St. - Mon, Tues, Wed, Fri, Sat & Sun 925 Walnut St. on Thurs. MONDAYS...........7:00PM - 8:30PM......OPEN MEETINGS TUESDAYS..........7:00PM - 8:30PM..............STEP STUDY WEDNESDAYS....7:00PM - 8:30PM..........CANDLELIGHT THURSDAYS.......7:00PM - 8:30PM........OPEN MEETING FRIDAYS..............7:00PM - 8:30PM........OPEN MEETING SATURDAYS........7:00PM - 8:30PM........OPEN MEETING SUNDAYS............7:00PM - 8:30PM........OPEN MEETING Right Road Recovery Center, 645 Antelope Blvd. MONDAYS...........8:00PM - 9:00PM.........MEN IN ACTION 525 Pine St. MONDAY-FRIDAY...........11:00AM........SOLUTION GROUP First Church of God, Luther Rd & So. Jackson St. THURSDAYS..................8:00PM..................MEN'S GROUP River Park Conference Room, 100 Main St. MONDAYS......................7:30PM.........RED BLUFF GROUP — CORNING — 240 Edith Ave., Rec. Room, 824-6166, 384-1538 MONDAYS...........7:00PM........................OPEN MEETING TUESDAYS..........7:00PM (Non-Smoking)WOMEN'S OPEN — LOS MOLINOS — United Methodist Church, Sherwood & Josephine St. TUESDAYS..........7:00PM..............ANONYMOUS GROUP OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS — RED BLUFF — St. Elizabeth Hospital, Coyne Center, Wood Room MONDAYS...........7:00PM....................12 STEP MEETING TOPS CLUB Take Off Pounds Sensibly, #1711 — RED BLUFF — United Methodist Church, 525 David Ave. TUESDAYS..........9:30AM........WEEKLY PRESENTATIOS WORLD BRIEFING House votes to keep the government open — if 'Obamacare' crippled WASHINGTON (AP) — Charting a collision course with the White House, the Republican-controlled House approved legislation Friday to wipe out the three-year-old health care law that President Barack Obama has vowed to preserve — and simultaneously prevent a partial government shutdown that neither party claims to want. ''The American people don't want the government shut down, and they don't want ''Obamacare,'' Speaker John Boehner said as members of his rank and file cheered at a celebratory rally in the Capitol moments after the 230-189 vote. He stood at a lectern bearing a slogan that read, ''(hash)Senate must act.'' Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said it will — but not the way Boehner and his tea party-heavy Republican contingent want. Assured of enough Senate votes to keep the government open and the health care law in existence, the Nevada Democrat accused Republicans of attempting ''to take an entire law hostage simply to appease the tea party anarchists.'' Behind the rhetoric lay the likelihood of another in a series of complex, inside-the-Beltway brinkmanship episodes as conservative House Republicans and Obama struggle to imprint widely differing views on the U.S. government. In addition to the threat of a partial shutdown a week from Monday, administration officials say that without passage of legislation to allow more federal borrowing, the nation faces the risk of a first-ever default sometime in the second half of next month. US, Iran exchange friendly gestures WASHINGTON (AP) — Iran and the United States are making plenty of friendly gestures, but real progress is going to be harder. A notable first meeting between the two nations' presidents suddenly seems possible next week, but without nuclear concessions the U.S. is unlikely to give Tehran what it wants: an easing of punishing sanctions that have resulted in soaring inflation and unemployment. President Barack Obama and Iran's new president, Hasan Rouhani, both will be in New York next week for the United Nations General Assembly. And a recent flurry of goodwill gestures has raised the prospect that they will meet face to face. Pleasantries aside, however, the U.S. and other world powers are seeking reductions in Iran's uranium enrichment, real-time monitoring of its nuclear facilities and scaled-back production at its underground Fordo facility. Not likely, Iran experts say. At least not yet. ''I'm a bit skeptical that we'll see those kinds of concessions this early in the game,'' said Gary Samore, who until earlier this year was Obama's top arms control adviser. The Obama administration has welcomed the election of Rouhani, a moderate cleric who achieved a stunning victory in Iran's June presidential elections. And upbeat signals have suggested there could be talks between Obama and Rouhani on the U.N. sidelines. EPA proposes first-ever carbon controls on new power plants WASHINGTON (AP) — Linking global warming to public health, disease and extreme weather, the Obama administration pressed ahead Friday with tough requirements to limit carbon pollution from new power plants, despite protests from industry and Republicans that it would dim coal's future. The proposal, which would set the first national limits on heat-trapping pollution from future power plants, is intended to help reshape where Americans get electricity, moving from a coal-dependent past into a future fired by cleaner sources of energy. It's also a key step in President Barack Obama's global warming plans, because it would put in motion proposals to end what he called ''the limitless dumping of carbon pollution'' from all power plants. Under the law once the Environmental Protection Agency controls carbon at new plants, it will also control carbon at existing plants — a regulation the agency said Friday it would start work on immediately to meet a June 2014 deadline. Yet the federal government's own analysis of the new power plant proposal concludes that it would have a ''negligible'' impact on carbon dioxide emissions, pose little to no costs for the industry and provide no additional benefits to the public by 2022. That's because it essentially locks in what was widely expected to happen anyway. Even without new federal regulations, the agency concluded that no new coal plants would have been built without carbon controls. Instead, the bulk of new power in this country would be supplied by natural gas, which already meets the standard announced Friday. ''The EPA ... does not anticipate this rule will have any impacts on the price of electricity, employment or labor markets or the U.S. economy,'' the EPA wrote in its analysis. US-Russia deal on Syria props up Assad BEIRUT (AP) — For Syria's divided and beleaguered rebels, the creeping realization that there will not be a decisive Western military intervention on their behalf is a huge psychological blow. President Bashar Assad's regime has gained strength, largely because the world community is concerned that if he is toppled the result may be an Islamist Syria in the grip of al-Qaida. The immediate result has been an uptick this week in fighting between moderate and jihadi rebels. The long-term outcome is likely to be a prolonged war of attrition that continues the slow destruction of Syria as a coherent state and further fans the flames of sectarian hatred and extremism in a turbulent Middle East.

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