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Good Sam Club The Tri-County Sams Chapter of the Good Sam Club held its November Campout at Heritage RV Park in Corning, with five rigs camping, two guests and three drive-ins. A Thanksgiving dinner of turkey and all the trim- mings was held Friday night instead of Saturday so members could enjoy Hometown Christmas and the Lighted Parade. John Siemens donated the turkey and prepared it. After dinner, a meeting with nominations and elec- tion of 2010 officers was held. Re-elected were Presi- dent Richard Sol; Vice President Ed Pereira; Secretary Retta Pereira; Treasurer Darlene Dickison; and Wagon Master Vic Dickison. Jack and Bonnie Love of Gerber were new mem- bers and John and Susan Young of Oroville were guests. A meal and a meeting with 18 people was held for December at the City Gates Cafe in Orland. Past Pres- ident Wayne Barry swore in 2010 officers. Charity Chairwoman Erma Cushman prepared a gift basket for a raffle, which was won by Bonnie Love. Former members Evelyn and Mike Schager of Orland were guests for the day. John and Susan Young of Oroville were voted in as new members. The next dinner and meeting will be held on Satur- day, Jan. 9, at The Pocket Cafe in the Java Lanes Bowl- ing Alley. For more information call Vic Dickison at 824-3081 or Richard Sol at 385-1344. Thrift store year end sale The Hospice Second Hand Store, 320 S. Main St. in Red Bluff, will be holding a bake sale along with its half off sale today. The store will be open from 9 a.m to 5:30 p.m. and the bake sale will start at 10 a..m. For information, call 528-9430. All profits will be going to Hospice Care. 2A – Daily News – Wednesday, December 30, 2009 THE VOICE OF TEHAMA COUNTY SINCE 1885 Editor: Chip Thompson editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports Editor: Rich Greene sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation Manager: Kathy Hogan khogan@redbluffdailynews.com Production Manager: Sandy Valdivia sandy@redbluffdailynews.com On the Web: www.redbluffdailynews.com MAIN OFFICE: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Main Phone (530) 527-2151 Outside area 800-479-6397 545 Diamond Ave. Red Bluff, CA 96080 ______________________ Mail: Red Bluff Daily News P.O. Box 220 Red Bluff, CA 96080 Fax: (530) 527-5774 ______________________ CUSTOMER SERVICE: Subscription & delivery Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. (530) 527-2151 Ext. 125 Home delivery subscription rates (All prices include all applicable taxes) Monday through Saturday $9.59 four weeks Rural Rate $10.69 four weeks Business & professional rate $2.21 four weeks, Monday-Friday By mail: In Tehama County $12.29 four weeks All others $16.23 four weeks (USPS 458-200) Published Monday through Saturday except Sunday, by California Newspaper Partnership. NEWS News Tip Hotline: 527-2153 FAX: (530) 527-9251 E-mail: clerk@redbluffdailynews.com Daytime: (530) 527-2151 Sports: Ext. 111 Obituaries: Ext. 103 Tours: Ext. 112 After hours: (530) 527-2153 ______________________ ADVERTISING Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Display: 527-2151 Ext. 122 Classified: 527-2151 Ext. 103 Online (530) 527-2151 Ext. 133 FAX: (530) 527-5774 E-mail: advertise@redbluffdailynews.com VOLUME 125, NUMBER 33 A MediaNews Group Newspaper The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955 © 2009 Daily News N EWS D AILY RED BLUFF TEHAMA COUNTY SPECIAL PAGES ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS Mondays: Kids Corner Tuesdays: Employment Wednesdays: Business Thursdays: Entertainment Fridays: Select TV Saturdays: Farm, Religion HOW TO REACH US Publisher & Advertising Director: Greg Stevens gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com B 6 0 65 N G 52 I 28 B 6 0 65 N G 52 I 28 NO BINGO Friday, January 1 st at Red Bluff Community Center Enjoy New Years 645 Antelope Blvd. #1 in Frontier Village across from the fairgrounds. (530) 527-1420 Holiday Specials $ 4 99 Expires 1/3/10 Double M&M 2 eggs, 2 bacon/sausage, potatoes, toast reg. $6.99 Please mention this ad when ordering. Served 7am till 1:30pm $ 5 49 French Dip w/Fries reg. $8.49 $ 5 99 One Trip Salad Bar reg. $7.99 Community people & events Wilson to serve as Idaho peace officer Captured By Cupid Captured By Cupid Three couples have visited the county clerk‚s office within the past twenty-four hours for licens- es to be joined in the bonds of matrimony. Yester- day afternoon, Olaf Manuel Holthe, 35, and Ade- laide Giffen, 24, both of Corning secured their license and were married by Rev. Edward M. Sharp. John Tucker, 30, and Alberta Hickman, 27, of Oroville were married by Judge J. F. Ellison. Today Louis Milburn Spangle, 20, of Red Bluff and Nora May Shumway, 18, of Proberta secured a license. They will be married in this city today. – Daily News, Dec. 30, 1919 90 years 90 years ago... ago... Setting it straight –––––––– It is the policy of the Daily News to correct as quickly as possible all errors in fact that have been published in the newspaper. If you feel a factual error has been made in a news story, call the news department at 527-2153. It is nearing New Year's Eve and many of you are contemplating making some resolutions. New Year's is always a prompt to us to think about change. It seems that the notion of a new year is that we have a clean slate with which to become something we want to be or let go of something we want to get rid of. I want to speak clearly and heartfelt to those of you who genuinely want change in your life; the broken, the tired, the sad, the lost, the over- weight, the lazy, the abusive and the abused. I want to speak to the lone- ly, the underachieved, the outcast, the martyr and the work-aholic. I want to tell you something that no one else is going to tell you this wondrous new season. I know, first hand, how hard it is in the begin- ning to make change. I know from the depths of my soul how hard it is to believe that you can make some- thing different in your life. I under- stand how it feels to believe that you do not have what it takes, the right background, the right connec- tions, the right gifts, the discipline and the guts to do what you want. I know the feeling of wondering if it is only possible for other people to be, do and have the things in life that you want. I know the painful comparisons you are making to others who seem to have it all, while you are a sad, empty shell of who you hoped to be. I know and I believe, in spite of all that, that you can do it. Here is what I know now that I did not know then. Here are some truths that you need to hear that will make a difference and will empow- er you to take the first step for change. First and foremost, you do not need anyone's permission to change. Other people do not have to accept or understand what you want and why you want it. It is none of their business. You must find the courage to act in spite of people who do not want to see you change. I promise you that if you do, you will live to rejoice about it. Many of you let the fear of the unknown keep you from trying. What if you tried and failed? I say, what if you tried and succeeded? Many of us are more afraid of the success than the failure anyway. Feel the fear, feel the hope. Fear and faith ask the same thing of you; to believe in something you can't see. It takes as much effort to feel afraid to try as it does to feel hope- ful to try. I know that you may not know how, most people who start some- thing new don't know what they are doing. Expose yourself to people who can help you. Educate yourself find a way to start to change. It takes effort to make the first move, but change is like a muscle the more you work change, the easier it is to do the heavy lifting. You have the power within you to make change. Believe. Faydra Rector, MA is a mental health administrator, 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 http://faydraandcompany.blogspot. com/ and http://allaboutdivorce.blogspot.com Do you want to make a change? Faydra Rector Life Coach Courtesy photo The following committee members planned and held the Second Annual Salvation Army Run for the Needy in December. Pictured, back row, from left: Craig Ellis, Will Murphy, Una Jordan and Susan Murphy. In the front row are Mary Ellis, Susie Champion and Tom Moisey. Run for the Needy Courtesy photo Bailey Wilson, 22, graduated from the Idaho Peace Officer Standards and Training Academy on Dec. 11. Wilson, also a 2009 graduate of the University of Idaho, will serve as a patrol officer for the Boise City Police Department. She is the daughter of Tobi and Lauren Wilson of Caldwell, Idaho and the granddaughter of Dave and Kay Sale of Red Bluff, Janie Wilson of Los Molinos and Ruth Prunty of Orland. Community Clips