Red Bluff Daily News

November 18, 2014

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Recycleyouroldtelevisions,computermon- itors and equipment, microwaves, DVD/VCR players, cell phones, and other small electronic waste free of charge and help save the Earth at the same time. E-waste is of concern largely due to the tox- icity of some of the substances if processed im- properly. The toxicity is due to lead, mercury, cadmium and a number of other substances. The e-waste will be accepted 8 a.m. to noon at the Tehama County Department of Social Services parking lot at 310 S. Main St. in Red Bluff and the "Park & Ride" parking lot located at the north and east corners of Third Street and Solano Street in Corning on the last Satur- day of each month. For more information, call the Tehama County and Red Bluff Landfill at 528-1103. Do not call the Department of Social Services or the city of Corning. E-waste is every day free of charge at the landfill, 19995 Plymire Road. In order to not be charged, you must let the scale house atten- dant know that you have e-waste prior to drop- ping off the e-waste. This event is coordinated by the Tehama County Sanitary Landfill Agency, Waste Tire Products of Orland, the Tehama County De- partment of Social Services and the city of Corning. ENVIRONMENT Freeelectronicwaste recycling by county Computer monitors, printers and other electronics are collected free of charge the last Saturday of each month. DAILY NEWS PHOTO Most, if not all, of us have some sort of a dream we want to pur- sue. It may be economical, phys- ical, relational or even emotional. We may want more wealth, more prestige, more freedom or more beauty. Somewhere within you lies a dream and a hope to be more than you are today or to have some- thing that you want. I know that you can't have a dream without the ability to achieve it. It is impossible to conceive of something and not find a way to attain it. Having said that, you have the brain power, you may only be lacking the will power. The willpower to do something looks at all of the micro reasons why you aren't getting what you want. It is like the onion theory. There are most likely many lay- ers as to why you lack the willpower to achieve your goal. My bet is that fear is at the root, it usu- ally is. Fear of the un- known, failure, ridicule or loss. Some distorted perception is getting in your way. Sometimes you are lucky enough to be well aware of your fears and how they affect your willpower. Sometimes you may be trapped by long ago locked away is- sues that stop you with- out you even knowing they are there. You have the brain power to do what you want. If you need to learn something tech- nical, that is doable. If you need to make a plan and attack it step-by- step, that is doable. If you need to make signifi- cant changes in your cir- cumstance to do it, that is doable. When your will power is stronger than your won't power you will be able to make it happen. Find out what keeps your willpower from overcoming your won't power. What are you afraid of? Who are you afraid of? Who told you you couldn't? Who made fun of you or stopped your belief in yourself? They were wrong. There is no one stopping you any- more, only your belief that they are. Use your brain power to overcome any nega- tive thoughts. Get up off your butt and do some- thing for yourself that will take you closer to your goals. I promise you it will be hard. I prom- ise you it will take sacri- fice and growth. I prom- ise you that you will feel like giving up from time to time, but I also prom- ise you that nothing beats the feeling of prov- ing to yourself that you could do it. I would rather look back on my life and say that I tried to do every- thing that came to my mind to become bet- ter in all areas of life. I know that sometimes I failed and made mis- takes. Sometimes I had setbacks or earth shat- tering moments that sucker punched me, but oh the moments of brightness, the moments of growth and achieve- ment. Oh the moments of triumph and opportu- nity. It is the combining of the weird, scary, em- barrassing and humili- ating moments coupled with the dynamic, pow- erful, awe-inspiring and accomplished that give our life stories color and interest. Don't sacrifice your brain power. Build your willpower and achieve your goals. FaydraRector,MAisa mental health admin- istrator, author, pub- lic speaker, educator and life coach who lives in Red Bluff. She can be reached at lifecoach@ shasta.com or view her blogs at faydraandcom- pany.blogspot.com/ and allaboutdivorce.blogs- pot.com/. FAYDRA RECTOR Brainpower and will power Faydra Rector Traffic officers from three counties concen- trated their forces in Red Bluff Monday evening for a wholesale raid on automo- biles whose drivers have failed to comply with the state law requiring cer- tain kinds of lights. Un- der direction of George F. Moynahan of Sacramento, chief inspector for the mo- tor vehicle division, the of- ficers notified 50 or more autoists to have their lights adjusted within 24 hours, otherwise they would be subject to arrest and a fine. As a result local ga- rages did a large business Tuesday. — Nov. 18, 1924 90 YEARS AGO... Drivers told to have lights fixed The following informa- tion has been compiled from Red Bluff Police De- partment, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corn- ing Police Department and California Highway Patrol logs. Burglary 24000blockConeGrove Road: A burglary was reported to a shed at Cone Grove Park. 200block Belle Mill Road: A residential burglary was reported Saturday. Arrests Pablo Lopez Curiel: 66, Corning was arrested Friday for outstanding felony charges of possession of a controlled substance for sale, keeping a place to sell drugs, person prohibited from own- ing a firearm and conspiracy to commit a crime. Renee Marie Goss: 25, Red Bluff was arrested Saturday at La Corona on an outstand- ing felony charge of second degree burglary. Charles Vincent King: 33, Red Bluff was arrested Friday at Cedar and Jackson streets for outstanding charges of felony failure to appear, possession of a controlled substance and misdemean- ors of contempt of court and paraphernalia. Bail was $265.000. Trey Clevland King: 27, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday at Burger King for outstand- ing felony charges of false checks and second degree burglary. Fawn Marie Phifer: 30, Mis- soula was arrested Sunday at State Route 36W at Dibble Creek Fire Department for a felony fugitive of justice ar- rest warrant. Fhileen Gillermina Diaz Ruvalcaba: 21, Red Bluff was arrested on suspicion of misdemeanor paraphernalia Friday on the 1500block of Walbridge. Ruvalcaba has outstanding charges of two counts of felony committed while on bail, four counts of failure to appear and misde- meanors of petty the and failure to appear. Bail was $46,000. Anthony Phillip Torres: 23, Red Bluff was arrested Friday at Hooker Creek and Basler roads for outstanding felony charges of failure to appear and felony committed while on bail. Bail was $40,000. Timothy Morgan Wagner: 28, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday at Burger King on outstanding charges of felony vandalism, three counts of failure to appear and misdemeanors of five counts of failure to appear and two counts of driving without a license. Bail was $50,000. Police logs Better Business Bureau Watch out for Craigslist job scams using the names of real organizations to lure in potential job seekers. These posts look just like real jobs, but take precau- tions before sending your resume. How the Scam Works: You see a job post on Craigslist.org. It says Clear- point, a non-profit organi- zation that provides credit counseling, is hiring an 'Of- fice Admin Assistant.' The ad looks completely legiti- mate. The business is real, the job description is stan- dard and the entire post is typo-free. You decide to apply for the job. The 'manager' re- plies to your email, saying that he/she needs further information from you. Un- fortunately, this informa- tion includes your credit card number. Job scams especially have many different varia- tions. Watch out for scams using different business names and position titles. Also, scammers may ask job seekers to pay upfront for training, which never mate- rializes. Or they may 'hire' you and send a fake check. The con artists will instruct you to deduct a fraction for payment and wire the rest back. Tips to avoid falling for fake job scams: Spot a job scam before you waste your time and money. Some positions are more likely to be scams. Use ex- tra caution when looking at ads for jobs with generic titles, such as admin assis- tant or customer service representative. These often don't require special train- ing or licensing, so they ap- peal to a wide range of ap- plicants. Check out the business' website to make sure the opening is posted there. If you are still skeptical, call the business to check on the position. Don't rely on web- sites or phone numbers pro- vided in the advertisement; find the "employer" on your own to make sure it's the real deal. Watch out for these phrases. Scam ads often contain the phrases Tele- working OK, Immediate Start and No Experience Needed. Watch out for ads that urge you to apply im- mediately. Search for the position in Google. If the result comes up in many other cities with the exact same job post, it is likely a scam. Be very cautious of any job that asks you to share personal information or hand over money. Scam- mers will often use the guise of running a credit check, setting up direct de- posit or paying for training. SCAM ALERT Looking for work? Watch for fake job postings The Sun Country Quil- ters Guild will be hold- ing its monthly meeting on Monday, Nov. 24, at the Red Bluff Community and Senior Center, 1500 S. Jack- son St. This month's meeting is the Fall Sew-in and Potluck 3-9 p.m. Bring your sewing ma- chine, sewing supplies, a project or two to work on, along with a dish to share. There will also be a Silent Auction with lots of items to bid on. Don't forget to bring something to share at show and tell. Dinner will be about 5:30 p.m. with a short meeting about 7 p.m. and then onto more sewing until 9 p.m. Interested quilters or non-quilters may attend up to three meetings in a year for a fee of $5 per meeting, or may join the guild for an annual membership fee of $30. More information is available by contacting Sun Country Quilters, P.O. Box 8266, Red Bluff, CA or visit www.suncountryquil- ters.com. SU N CO UN TR Y Qu il ti ng g ro up t o hol d Fa ll S ew -i n an d Po tl uc k PLEASERECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER. Thankyou! RedBluffGardenClub's Dec. 4, 5 & 6 9:30am- 6:00pm Scholarship Christmas Boutique Fresh Wreaths, Arrangements and more NEWLOCATION 645 Antelope Blvd. Ste 10 Frontier Village AcrossfromtheFairgrounds Call to order 529-0809, 527-2226 or 824-4429 For Custom Wreaths & Designs Let'sTalk About Hair JeannieStroing Perm,Cut & Set Special $ 45 longhairextra Now through Dec. 31st 450Antelope Blvd. Bus 528-2900 Cell 526-1304 100JacksonStreet, Red Bluff (530) 529-1220 NEW Membership Specials Call or Come In for details 39 th Annual Fri.,Dec.5 th , 2014 9AM to 8PM Sat., Dec. 6 th , 2014 10AM to 3PM 25076SycamoreAvenue, behind La Corona, Los Molinos TEAANDBOUTIQUE www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service..................527.2151, Ext. 126 Fax.........................................................................................530.527.5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Newsroom .............................................527.2151 Toll free................................................................................ 800.479.6397 A er hours.....................................................................................527.2153 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..................................545Diamond Avenue, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Home delivery subscription rates: Tuesday through Saturday: $4.48 per week; Business and professional rate: Tuesday through Friday, $2.19for four weeks. Subscription rates by mail: $12.20for four weeks in Tehama County; $17.29for four weeks all other areas. Pric- es include all applicable taxes. (USPS 458-200) The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955. Published Tuesday through Saturday by California Newspapers Partnership. Postmaster: Please send addr ess changes to: P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080© 2012Daily News Postage Paid Periodicals NEWSROOM News Tips.......................527.2153 Sports................ 527.2151Ext. 111 Obituaries.........527.2151Ext. 101 Fax..........................530.527.9251 clerk@redbluffdailynews.com ADVERTISING Classified........... 1.855.667.2255 Gayla Eckels .. 527.2151, Ext. 108 Suzy Noble..... 527.2151, Ext. 103 Fax..........................530.527.5774 advertise@redbluffdailynews.com Production manager Sandy Valdivia..........................................sandy@redbluffdailynews.com Publisher, Advertising director Greg Stevens......................................gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Editor Chip Thompson........................................editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports editor Andre Byik................................................sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation manager Kathy Hogan.......................................... khogan@redbluffdailynews.com COMMUNITY » redbluffdailynews.com Tuesday, November 18, 2014 » MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A3

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