Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/472102
President Wilson yester- day nominated E. B. War- mot for post master at Red Bluff. The term of the pres- ent post master, M. J. Cheatham, will expire April 1st at which time Mr. War- moth will take charge of the office. The appointment of Mr. Warmoth marks the close of a more or less spirited con- test in this community for the position that has not been held by a democrat for many years. The editor of this paper was a candidate for the of- fice. We made as good a fight as we knew how, but Mr. Warmoth made a bet- ter one and has won. We congratulate him on his appointment, and no man in this community more sincerely wishes for his success as post mas- ter than the editor of the News. No one who knows Warmoth questions his thorough fitness for the place he has won, as he is a gentleman of splendid abil- ity and integrity. — March 3, 1915 100YEARSAGO... E.B.Warmoth selected as post master for Red Bluff; will be on job April 1 The following informa- tion has been compiled from Red Bluff Police De- partment, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Pa- trol logs. Arrests LeartisK.Caradine:23, Red Bluff was arrested Friday for a felony parole violation. Caradine is on Post Release Community Supervision. Henry J. De La Rosa: 22, Schertz, Texas was arrested on suspicion of felony threatening a crime with the intent to terrorize, ob- struction and misdemeanor driving under the influence Friday. Bail was $70,000. Ashley E. Lakey: was arrested on suspicion of felony failure to ap- pear, forgery, burglary and misdemeanors of receiving known stolen property and paraphernalia Saturday. Bail was $20,000. Jon P. Lareau: Corning was arrested for a felony parole violation Wednesday on Mary Avenue. Lareau is on Post Release Community Supervision. He has out- standing felony charges of possession of a controlled substance, failure to appear and misdemeanors of para- phernalia, obstruction and failure to appear. Brian K. Leon: 47, Red Bluff was arrested on suspi- cion of felony possession of a controlled substance, three counts of failure to appear and misdemeanors of petty the , possession of marijuana, two counts of failure to appear and a resti- tution fine Friday at Colony and Antelope Boulevard. Nick G. Trujillo: San Ber- nardino, was arrested on suspicion of felony selling marijuana, possession of marijuana and misdemeanor disorderly conduct Friday Donnie D. Webb: Corning, was arrested on suspicion of felony attempted murder, criminal threats, inflicting corporal injury on spouse or cohabitant and assault with a deadly weapon Sunday. Animals Dog vs. dog: A dog report- edly killed another dog on E Street in Tehama Saturday night. Burglary 17000block Red Bank Road: A residential burglary was reported Sunday. One person was detained. The 18000block Pine Creek Road: A generator was reported stolen Friday 8000block San Benito Avenue: Change, a cordless drill and tools were reported stolen at Big Foot Recy- cling. Police logs LOS MOLINOS The Mo- lino Star Chapter #83 and the Order of the East- ern Star are sponsoring a pancake breakfast to ben- efit the Los Molinos Li- brary 8-11 a.m. Saturday, March 14 at the Family Service Center, 25020 Te- hama-Vina Road. They will be assisted by Molino Lodge #150. All of the proceeds will go to the Friends of the Los Molinos Library to sup- port the children's summer reading program and new materials for the library. Tickets are a $5 dona- tion and will be sold at the Los Molinos Library and at the door. This fundraiser is an ex- cellent way to enjoy a meal, visit friends and support a library all on the same day. For more information call 384-2945. FUNDRAISER Pancake breakfast to benefit Los Molinos Library Members of the Red Bluff Art Association met recently to judge the Te- hama County Arts Coun- cil's Annual Student Art Contest entries. This year more than 200 entries were received from Tehama County stu- dents in grades K-12. The theme is "Hidden Trea- sures." Entries were judged on originality, creativity of theme, quality of work and adherence to rules. Winning entries in each of the four divisions will receive prizes and a new award, Best of Theme, will receive $50 at an Artist Reception, which will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, March 7, at the State The- atre, 333 Oak St. All entries will be on display 1-9 p.m. at the State Theatre in conjunc- tion with the Missoula Children's Theatre pre- sentation of "Blackbeard the Pirate," with show times at 3 and 7 p.m. Both events are spon- sored by the Tehama County Arts Council. For more information, call Christy Vail at 200-2661 or visit www.tehamaarts. org. TEHAMA COUNTY ARTS COUNCIL Reception for student art contest Saturday at the State Everyone has a differ- ent plan for what suc- cess looks like in their lives. Some plans are huge, lofty goals that if achieved, will rad- ically change ev- erything. Some plans would be seen as more simple, less aspiring, but a goal nonetheless. For some, a plan for suc- cess could be as simple as stopping that one thing you do that keeps setting you back. If you talk to people who ended up where they hoped they would be. The ones who seemed to get what they said they wanted, they most likely will tell you that it was a series of little things, done over and over again that got them the big re- sult. The things they did consistently, when no one was looking that got them the result that ev- eryone can see. They built a firm foundation un- der their success of tiny things done over and again and perfected. These habits, these ways of being, made it possible for bigger things to hap- pen in their lives. For every outward success, there are sev- eral inward habits and ways of being that per- mit the success to hap- pen. Things like tenacity, dependability, dedication and discipline. The quiet times of doing what you don't want to do now, so you can do what you want to do later. The re- quiring more of yourself than you think you have to give or even want to give, sometimes. These are the precursors to big- ger things. If your mindset is that success happens to lucky people, connected peo- ple or people with more money than you, you are giving yourself a cop out and that is the first thing that you need to stop. Life moves in waves and successes come and go. Even the most success- ful people have set backs and unexpected crap that comes into their existence and challenges that make them shake their heads. If you have started making progress in any area of life, only to find out that something came out of nowhere to set you off track. Welcome to the real world. Welcome to the world where things are not always fair, pre- dictable or make sense. You can be a good per- son with every good in- tention and making great strides and still bad things can happen. Keep it up. Don't let the tests of time or the inad- vertent crap throw you off course. Over time, as you keep doing what is right, you will see that you have changed. Your success won't come as a big break where you are discov- ered for the hidden gem that you are. Lasting suc- cess comes from creat- ing a firm foundation un- derneath. Learn to man- age the little things in your life. Be able to con- quer the little mountains and you can traverse the largest ones. Is your home clean? How about your car? Can you move through your day with ease and efficiency? How are your relationships? Are you at odds with lots of people? How over- whelmed are you? Do you know why? How's your health? Are you physically ready to take on the world? The first step to get- ting the bigger goals is the master the ev- ery day elements of life. Make changes and choices in your daily life and the same changes and choices will morph into habits. These habits will become your build- ing blocks for reaching higher goals. FaydraRector,MAisa mental health admin- istrator, author, public speaker, educator and life coach who lives in Red Bluff. She can be reached at lifecoach@shasta.com or view her blogs at fay- draandcompany.blogs- pot.com/ and allaboutdi- vorce.blogspot.com/. FAYDRA RECTOR Littlehabits, big results Faydra Rector It's easier than ever to get what you need from the IRS. Here are the best ways to get the services and prod- ucts you need to do your taxes. E-file your return. The best way to file is joining with nearly 126 million tax- payers who used IRS e-file last year. E-file is the safe, accurate and easier way to file your tax return. If you use IRS Free File, you can prepare and file your taxes for free. Free File is only available on IRS.gov. Go to IRS.gov/filing and review your options. Use IRS.gov. Get what you need 24 hours a day 7 days a week on IRS.gov. Click on the "Tools" link on the home page for a number of online tools. You can get answers to your tax ques- tions with the Interactive Tax Assistant and the IRS Tax Map. Use 'Where's My Refund?' to check the status of your refund. Use the EITC Assistant to see if you're eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit. To view and down- load tax products, click on the 'Forms and Pubs' tab on the home page. You can of- ten view, download or print the many tax products that appear online before paper versions are available. Get tax products online. If you e-file your tax return, you don't need to prepare or mail any paper forms to the IRS. If you still need paper forms or publications you can visit IRS.gov to view, download or print what you need right away. As an alternative, you can go to IRS.gov/order- forms and place an order. If you can't order online, you can call the IRS at 800-829- 3676 to place an order. TAX TIP How to get what you need to do your taxes COURTESY PHOTO Red Bluff Art Association members judge Student Art Contest entries. CANNED FOOD DRIVE *Validonly at H & R Block 1315 Solano St, Corning Call 530-824-7999 for a appointment Bring in 4 cans of food when you come in to get your taxes done, and get $15.00 off your tax preparation fees.* Allcannedfoodswillbedonatedto CorningChristianAssistanceFoodBank. TehamaCountyAuditor isrecruitingfor Auditor Accountant thru March 13, 2015 Job flyer and applications on line at http://co.tehama.ca.us CNAs, On-Call, $13/hr. at Red Bluff Health Care Call 527-6232 555 Luther Rd. EOE (530) 529-1220 100 Jackson Street Red Bluff $25AMonthwith No Enrollment Fee Offer Expires 2-28-2015 Call for details ResidentialDirect Care Staff neededtoworkwith adults with disabilities in residential facility. $9.92 per hour with benefit package. Must be (25 yrs. old+) must be insurable, pass drug screening/negative TB test, DOJ background check and health screen. Apply at North Valley Services, 1040 Washington St. Red Bluff www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service....................(530) 737-5048 Fax....................................................................................... 530-527-5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Main Office............................................527.2151 Toll free................................................................................ 800.479.6397 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..................................545Diamond Avenue, Red Bluff, CA 96080 All Access subscription rates, Tuesday through Saturday: $7.24per week. Digital-only subscription, Tuesday through Saturday $2.99per week. Business and professional rate, Tuesday through Friday: $2.19for four weeks. Prices included all applicable sales tax. (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 address changes to: P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080© 2012Daily News Postage Paid Periodicals NEWSROOM News Tips........527-2151, press 7 Sports............................737-5053 Obituaries.....................737-5046 Fax..................................527-9251 clerk@redbluffdailynews.com ADVERTISING Classified.........1-855-667-2255 Gayla Eckels .................737-5044 Suzy Noble....................737-5056 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 Rich Greene.............................................sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation manager Kathy Hogan.......................................... khogan@redbluffdailynews.com COMMUNITY » redbluffdailynews.com Tuesday, March 3, 2015 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A3