Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/95074
Obituaries Gail A. Hogan, age 73 of of Red Bluff, CA passed away Friday, November 16, 2012 at her daughter's home in Grass Valley, CA. Gail was born to Henry & Virginia Lundbald on October 10, 1939 in Worcestor, Mass. Gail lived alone in Red Bluff and was an artist, avid gardner, a seamstress, and was an accomplished tourna- ment poker player. She loved kayaking, snowmobiling, and time with her family. She worked as an executive secretary, a full charge bookkeeper, manager of many corporations, and was the owner of several successful businesses. Gail was a member of the Berean Church in Redding, CA. She was a passionate seeker of God's word. Gail is survived by 5 children; son Thomas Lyons of Princeton, MA., daughter Donna Raibley of Grass Valley, CA., son Michael Haffty of Worcestor, MA, daughter Nora Orebaugh of Sacramento, CA., and Leland Hogan of Red Bluff, CA., grandchildren Jenasis Fullmer, Terah Tribby, Amy Shandel, Ashleigh Johnson, Sierra Orebaugh, Christi- na Haffty, Nicholaus Haffty, great grandchildren Mariah Walton, Michael Walton, Quincy Walton, Hannah Tribby, and Andrew Shandel. In addition Gail is survived by her sister Virginia LaMonda of Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and numerous nie- ces and nephews. Services will be held on January 5, 2013 at Calvary Chapel, 12375 Paskenta Road, Red Bluff at 11am, with a potluck after the services. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Ameri- can Cancer Society or your local Hospice Center. GAIL ANN HOGAN JUNK Continued from page 1A voluntary compliance whenever possible, but staff would be able to Saturday, November 24, 2012 – Daily News 11A issue violation notices. Those notices would identify the violation and proposed penalty amount if corrective action is not taken within a stated time period. If the property owner MIRACLE Continued from page 1A pipe would be needed became a cru- cial aspect of the project. available pipe filled all but three inches that were needed. Folsom credited that accuracy to the blessing of Father Photios of the Monastery of St. John when the pipes first arrived Sept. 13. That's not to say the project did- In the end the 10,120 feet of n't include a number of complica- tions to repair a system that had seen HEALTH Continued from page 1A cent in 2008 to 96 percent in the past year. received a physical exam grew from 81 to 94 per- cent and children who had an oral health exam grew form 73 percent to 96 per- cent. Students who had does not correct the viola- tion, a fine of $100 per day would be recorded as a lien on the property. A second violation within a year of the first offense would lead to a $200 per day fine and sub- six flumes destroyed, wide-ranging debris clogging the ditch and a steeply-sloped, highly-erosive scoured hillside. sequent violations would incur a $500 per day penalty. The public hearing will be held during the Board of Supervisors meeting on Dec. 4. It took four days to excavate a single rock during the project and 76 days after the initial fire, open flames could be seen flaring up again. "We accomplished a miracle up there," Folsom said. A batch of rubber ducks was launched through the pipeline to cel- ebrate the achievement. Since the pipeline's opening coincided with Election Day, a blue duck and red duck were released to oral health exams. Only 69 percent of children had received oral health care previously. represent a Democrat or Republican winning the White House. The blue duck beat the red duck to the end of the pipeline by a minute-and-a-half. Following Folsom's presentation the board approved a contract with the California Department of Com- munity and Services and Develop- ment in the amount of $123,271 to be used for supporting qualified vic- tims of the Ponderosa Fire. The Tehama County Community Action Agency will use the money for activities to support the needs of the low income community in the areas affected by the fire. sional development pro- gram for early educators. A mobile dental clinic Similar numbers were reported in Los Molinos and Gerber, where 90 per- cent of kindergarten stu- dents entered this year with health insurance and 100 percent of students had received physical and PRAISE Continued from page 1A Maudie Hermetet, age 97, of Los Molinos, CA passed away Thursday, November 15, 2012 at Brentwood Skilled Nursing Facility. Maudie was born to William and Lydia Van Houte on August 11, 1915 in Clearwater, Idaho. In 1935 she married George W. Shields of Eureka, CA together they had 4 children. They divorced in 1958. In 1964 she married Don Hermetet, he passed away in 2002, then in 2007 at the ripe old age of 91, Maudie married Howard Jessup, they were very happy until his passing in 2008. MAUDIE HERMETET Maudie's passion was entering the county fairs, she won many ribbons over the years for her pies, breads, pre- serves and pickles. She also enjoyed gardening and writ- ing poetry. She also wrote a cookbook and book of po- ems. She was a member of Los Molinos Methodist Church and Eastern Star, and volunteered for the American Can- cer Society, Hope Chest Thrift Store, and Tehama Muse- um. Maudie is survived by son William A. Shields (Joyce) of Pensacola, FL, daughter Lucretia Betts of Dairyville, daughter Lynn Bierk (Dennis) of Flournoy, and son James E. Hermetet (Linda) of Hampstead, NH, grandchildren Scott and Keith Shields, Renee Mejia, Gina Serrano, Sherry Benson, Staci Bjerk and Brad, Greg and Andrew Hermetet, also 10 great grandchildren, and 4 great great grandchildren. In addition Maudie is survived by numerous nieces and nephews. has taken on the roles of city man- ager, attorney and human resources YREKA (AP) — A Northern California man has pleaded not guilty to a murder charge in the 1997 dis- appearance of a 15- year-old girl. News reports that 57- year-old Edward Hen- The Siskiyou Daily The study found 91 percent of students of Los Molinos entered kinder- garten with some form of prior early childhood edu- cation. In Corning that rate was at 94 percent. In the previous fiscal year First 5 Tehama served 697 children 5 years-old or younger as well as 337 parents, 22 other family members and 20 early educators. Programs included school readiness projects in Corning, Los Molinos and Gerber and a profes- provided health hare ser- vices to 180 children, 17 pregnant women and 19 other family members. Northern Valley Catholic Social Service Corning Family Resource Center programs served 122 children. First 5 Tehama distrib- uted $476,161 in project grant awards in the fiscal year of 2011-12. A major- ity of those funds went to Children Ready for School. programs for children to have play groups, home visits and developmental screenings. After receiving home visits the number of fami- lies who reported reading to their children at least three times a week grew from 77 to 95 percent. First 5 has invested around $9 million during the past decade in Tehama County. Those programs focused on parenting classes and KinderCamp during Carrel's stint on the council. Lastly Carrel thanked the rest of the council for its ability to work as a team. very, very productive," he said. With most of the praise already "The last two years have been First 5, created by Proposition 10 in 1998 uses state tobacco tax funds to improve the development of children 5 years-old or younger. doled out, Flynn responded with an appropriate comment for a man who spent the better part of three decades on the council. "I couldn't add any more to that, I second it," he said. Man pleads not guilty in cold case line, Sr. entered the plea during an arraignment in the far Northern Cali- fornia county of Siskiy- ou on Monday. Henline was arrested last week in the disap- pearance of Hannah Zaccaglini from the community of McCloud. Edward Henline, Jr., of Klamath Falls, Ore. has also been arrested in the case. He was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy and being an accessory. The Siskiyou County His son, 35-year-old what led them to Hen- line, Jr. and Henline, Sr. They say Zaccaglini was last seen walking with the elder Henline near his house in McCloud. A judge set Henline, Sheriff 's Department has not said exactly Sr.'s bail at $500,000 and ordered him back to court on Dec. 11. Facebook and volatile market still chill IPOs By STEVE ROTHWELL AP Business Writer Wall Street Making a killing on initial public offerings used to be easy. She will be greatly missed by all who knew her. Funeral services will be Wednesday, November 28th at 10:30am at Hall Brothers Mortuary in Corning. Internment at Tehama Cemetery with lunch immediately following at LM Masonic Hall. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Ameri- can Cancer Society. Death Notices are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the news- paper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, Katherine B. Duvall Katherine B. Duvall died Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012 at her residence in Red Bluff. She was 70. Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers is handling the arrangements. Published Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Tomas Garcia Ramos Tomas Garcia Ramos died Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012 at his residence in Gerber. He was 57. Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary is handling the arrangements. Published Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. FIRE Continued from page 1A how much water cities and farmers demand, and by environmental conditions. Firefighters were dri- ven out of the structure Thursday when visibility became poor and some- thing fell inside, causing the ground to shudder. smoky, and we were get- ting involved in a lot of life hazards,'' McLean said. ''It was so intense, so showed significant dam- age to wiring and equip- ment, but it was less than firefighters had expected, McLean said. An initial survey CARE TO COMMENT? At redbluffdailynews.com, scroll to the end of any story, click the link and type away. At the peak of the technology boom, little more than a decade ago, a plentiful supply of companies vied to sell stock on the exchanges, and investors were assured mouthwatering returns. These days, the deals are fewer and the returns more modest. Companies are set to raise more than $45 billion through IPOs this year — the most since 2007, according to data provider Dealogic. But if you scratch the surface, there are signs that the market is less healthy than it appears. Almost a third of the money raised in IPOs this year came from one deal, Facebook's $16 billion offering in May, and the number of companies taking themselves public may end at a three-year low. New York Stock Exchange, estimates that more than 90 percent of a public company's employee growth comes after it has listed on an exchange. IPO activity is dictated largely by the health of the overall stock market. Falling markets discouraging compa- nies from going public. The Standard & Poor's 500 is up 11 percent this year, but the advance has been punctuated by sharp declines when investors fretted about European debt, the election and, now, a looming ''cliff'' of tax increases and govern- ment spending cuts. ''The general market has been real choppy this year. It really has,'' says Sal Morreale, an institutional salesman at Cantor Fitzgerald in Los Angeles who tracks offerings. Facebook's calamitous market The pipeline, or backlog, of compa- nies planning to sell stock is also thin- ning. ''It's a reflection of the psychology of the market today. It's not strong. It's moderate to weak,'' says Rob Lutts, chief investment officer at Cabot Money Management in Salem, Mass. While 437 companies have filed for an IPO this year, 178 have withdrawn or postponed their planned listings, Dealogic data show. beyond Wall Street. Besides giving investors the chance to buy into fast- growing parts of the market, offerings give companies the money to expand and hire workers. Scott Cutler, head of global listings at NYSE Euronext, which runs the with Newark, N.J.-based Prudential Financial. ''That IPO really chastened investors.'' The backlog of companies plan- ning IPOs fell to 39 in November, according to data from Ipreo, a market analysis company firm. That is the fewest since August 2009, just after the recession. The tally has been declining steadily since September 2011. The state of the IPO market matters ing was the most keenly anticipated market debut at least since Google's in 2004. But concerns about revenue from smartphone users spooked investors, and the offering was plagued by technical glitches. The stock was priced at $38 and fell almost immediately, dropping as low as $17.55 on Sept. 4. The negative publicity helped shutter the IPO mar- ket for more than a month until EQT Midstream Partners, an energy compa- ny, sold stock June 16. Companies including American Tire Distributors and Crosair, a computer memory com- pany, were among those withdrawing their IPOs. ''That deal has become a textbook case of how not to do a deal,'' says Quincy Krosby, a market strategist debut also put the brakes on IPOs. The social networking site's offer- NYSE's Cutler says that much of the decline is because of a law passed in April designed to make it easier for companies to attract funding. They can confidentially notify regulators of their intention to seek a listing. Cutler says that if the business envi- ronment remains stable, the pace of IPO filling will be ''slightly up'' next year as companies become more familiar with the law. The law allows companies to avoid disclosing competitively sensitive information and come to the market at much shorter notice. Ultimately, it will encourage more companies to seek listings, Cutler says. Despite Facebook's high-profile slump, most companies have left something on the table for investors. The average return for IPOs this year has been 11 percent, according to Dealogic data. That's less than the average 88 percent one-year return that investors garnered in 1999 but roughly in line with the broader mar- ket. Guidewire Software, a provider of software for the insurance industry, and Nationstar Mortgage Holdings, a Texas mortgage provider and ser- vicer, according to data from IPO investment advisory firm Renais- sance Capital. Among the best debuts: You DO have a choice in the Red Bluff area. Caring & Compassionate Service Full traditional burial service or cremation Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff, FD Lic. 1931 527-1732