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The Red Bluff-Tehama C ou nt y C ha mber of Commerce is once again having a 4th of July fire- works booth and credit and debit cards will be accepted. From Saturday through July 4 the booth will be open 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Belle Mill Shop- ping Center in Red Bluff, just off I-5 at the Ante- lope Boulevard exit. This is a fundraiser for the chamber and a portion of the proceeds benefit the Tehama County fire- works show, so support the chamber as it sup- ports business and tour- ism in Tehama County. ChadBushnellat farmers market Tonight the Chamber's Wednesday night Certified Farmers Market in Down- town Red Bluff, 5-8 p.m., will feature Chad Bushnell playing country music. F r u it s , ve ge t a ble s and merchandise will be on tap for this eve- ning's market. As usual the market will be ac- cepting EBT, credit and debit cards. Good Morning, Red Bluff Good Morning, Red Bluff is scheduled for 7:50 a.m. Thursday at Cornerstone Commu- nity Bank, 237 S. Main St. See you for great net- working. Tap into Tehama The second annual Tap into Tehama micro-brew festival will be held at the Red Bluff River Park on Aug. 16. This event will fea- ture local artisans, West Coast breweries, North- ern California vineyards and a host of local busi- ness sponsors. Last year's participa- tion was tremendous. As participants sampled their way through the many breweries, they shared the experience as a community united in celebration. The proceeds of this non-profit event were used to restore the his- toric Oddfellows Lodge in downtown Red Bluff. This year's net pro- c e e d s w i l l b e u se d throughout the commu- nity by the Chamber of Commerce. The festival stands to double the excitement, with twice as many brew- eries and businesses, food trucks featuring Te- hama County ingredients and a following of craft brew enthusiasts. Sign up to sponsor and pour. For more information, v isit w w w.tapintote- hama.com or stop by the Chamber of Commerce office at the Red Bluff River Park. FireworksboothopensSaturday REDBLUFFCHAMBER COURTESYPHOTO Workers stock the Red Bluff-Tehama County Chamber of Commerce fireworks booth at Belle Mill Landing in Red Bluff. Pricing Your Products & Services to Maximize Profit NEC Small Business De- velopment Center at Butte College is presenting a workshop on "Pricing Your Products & Services to Max- imize Profit." The workshop will be held 9-11 a.m. Friday, June 27, at Medical Spe- cialty Center, 284 Spruce, Gridley. The cost is $30 per person pre-paid or $40 per person at the door. Learn how to make money for your business by ensuring that you have the properpriceforyourproduct and services. You will learn howtousefixedandvariable costs, and materials, labor and overhead costs in your pricing strategies to meet your profit requirement; track results based on out- comeandmeasurablegoals; and develop sales forecasts to increase your profit. New Venture Entrepreneurial Series The workshops will be held 8:30-10:30 a.m. Wednesdays July 9-30 at the center. The cost for the series is $50 per person prepaid or $60 at the door. This four-part training series provides essential information for individu- als thinking about start- ing a new business and new business owners. Top- ics include: New Business Orientation, Market Anal- ysis, Cost Analysis, and Business Plan Overview. You will learn the le- gal requirements for busi- ness start-up, how to as- sess your market and cal- culate start-up costs, and how to plan for direction and to obtain funding. Call or log onto our website for detailed flyer. QuickBooks Online The workshop will be held 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday, July 17, at the center. The cost of the work- shop is $50 per person pre- paid or $60 at the door. This workshop will fo- cus on how QuickBooks Online works compared to the desktop versions. You will learn how to navigate around QBO, how to set up QBO, including importing data and setting prefer- ences, and how to record transactions. Strategies will include brief discussion on chart of accounts, accrual vs. cash basis accounting, and other basic accounting ter- minology. The trainer will be using a live web-based test file provided by Intuit. The trainer is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) and QuickBooks ProAdvi- sor. Includes manual. Pre-registration is re- quired for all courses. Reg- ister online, call or stop by the center at Butte College. 2480 Notre Dame Blvd., Chico, 530-895-9017, www. bcsbdc.org to register and for information. DEVELOPMENT Center offers courses for small businesses The Corning Chamber of Commerce welcomes new member Star Designs, 1306 Solano St. in Corn- ing, (530) 838-4440, which will be opening soon. The business will offer screen printing and pro- motional products. Bakery in Business Spotlight Mama Roselli's is owned by Susanna Roselli at 24420 Citrus Road, Corning. The phone num- ber is 530-586-2113. The business is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and you can also phone to place an order. Mama Roselli's has been in business six months and specializes in Italian biscotti and cookies. Here is a bit about what Susanna would like you to know about her and her business: Baking has always been in my DNA. I have grown from a sugar bay to the cookie lady. I started my cookie business under the Cottage Law. My products are all made in my home kitchen for now, with the end re- sults being the chance to open and expand into a bakery. I do cookies and biscotti for special events and fundraisers, as well as customized orders and gifts. I make several different flavors of biscotti: Anise, which is just the lighter side of sweet; cinnamon, clove, macadamia, which is the other side of sweet; semi-sweet chocolate and salted peanuts, which is an Italian version of a chocolate chip cookie. I also make cookies: oatmeal raisin and wal- nut cookie, which is the heartier side of sweet; oat- meal butterscotch, walnut cookie, which is godfather approved — the flavor you can't refuse. And the most popular new cookie in town is the Kow Chip, which is ud- derly delicious — fresh from the pasture, no two alike. I am a widow. I have one child, a daughter and two grandsons. No other inter- ests at this time. My new business is keeping me quite busy. However, I have an ador- able Shih Tzu puppy. He is the new man in my life for now. He has become the town's mascot. Everyone loves Bosco. I would like to thank the town for all of the local support. Lots of people may not remember my name, but they all know the cookie lady. Fireworks sales Chamber members will be selling fireworks start- ing Saturday, June 28, at different locations. Support your local chamber members — Corning Exchange Club at Corning Ace Hardware parking lot, New Life As- sembly 660 Solano, in their parking lot and on the campus of Harvest Christian Center, 1006 6th Ave. Farmers market Don't forget to stop by the Farmers Market Thurs- day nights 5-7:30 at North- side park. CORNING CHAMBER New printing and design business coming to town By Kelvin Chan TheAssociatedPress HONG KONG World stock markets struggled for di- rection Tuesday after Wall Street fell for the first time in seven days, in a possible sign that investors were pausing to re-evaluate the market's recent highs. By midafternoon in Europe, Germany's DAX was flat at 9.919.08 and France's CAC 40 was up 0.1 percent at 4,518.85. The FTSE 100 index of leading British companies slipped 0.2 percent to 6,784.99. U.S. stocks were sim- ilarly sluggish, with the Dow steady at 16,942 and the broader S&P 500 up 0.1 percent to 1,963.54. The two U.S. benchmarks have failedtogainmuchground in recent days, a possible sign of a summer lull after a record-setting run. Markets had little to go on a day after a mixed batch of economic data re- leases, including upbeat monthly reports on exist- ing U.S. home sales and China manufacturing and a disappointing eurozone business indicator. Con- cerns about geopolitical turmoil stemming from the turmoil in Iraq also lingered. Onemarketthatdidfind somemomentumwasRus- sia'sstockindex,theMicex, which rallied 1.9 percent after President Vladimir Putin asked parliament to cancel a resolution sanc- tioning the use of military force in Ukraine. Themove washailedbyhisUkrainian counterpart as a "practical step"towardbringingpeace to the region. 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BUSINESS » redbluffdailynews.com Wednesday, June 25, 2014 MORE ATFACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A4