Anza Valley Outlook

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Anza Events Calendar, A-2

Fun and Safe Halloween Harvest Festival will be held Oct. 31st, A-6

Your life in photos, A-10

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WITH CONTENT FROM

October 30 – November 5, 2015

Local

Anza Water Summit urges well conservation

www.anzavalleyoutlook.com

Section Volume 15, Issue 44

Olivet University busy improving its Anza Campus

Tony Ault Writer Anza Valley Residents, in light of the California drought, were urged to take measures to better conserve and protect their wells at the 2015 Water Summit presented by the Anza Groundwater Association Saturday, Oct. 24. More than 120 Anza Valley residents turned out to hear the AGWA’s annual summit and report. see page A-5

Local

KOYT 96.3 ‘Howls for Halloween’ contest planned Tony Ault Writer KOYT 96.3 radio hoped to be on the air this past week but technical problems are causing delays, however, the station plans to hold a “Howls for Halloween” contest at their studio on Saturday, Oct. 31. see page A-6

Dr. Nathanael Tran and Dr Matthias Gebhardt review plans for the Anza Campus of Olivet University.

Local

Allison Renck Writer

Lecture on fault zones, earthquakes to be held ANZA – Residents are invited to attend an informal lecture by Frank Vernon on Friday, Nov. 6 at 5:30 p.m. titled "Observations from the San Jacinto Fault Zone.” Vernon has been a Research Seismologist at the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and the University of California at San Diego.

Anza Valley Outlook

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see page A-7

Olivet University officials personally conducted a tour of the 888-acre Anza campus this past week showing off the improvements being made to accommodate its 150 full time students. Olivet University, located where

the pavement ends on Tripp Flats Road in Anza, has been conducting classes since the fall of 2014. Currently the campus has 150 students in residence and approximately 1000 students doing distance studies online. There are currently nine instructors living on campus and conducting classes. Dr. Matthias Gebhardt, Dean of

Olivet Theological College and Seminary and Dr. Nathanael Tran, Vice President of Development facilitated the tour of the University with its Doctoral Colloquium of the Zinzendorf School of Doctoral Studies. Gebhardt, at the beginning of the tour, introduced Olivet as a private University of Biblical higher edu-

Allison Renck photo

cation, offering studies in the areas of Theology, Music, Journalism, Graphic Design, Information Technology, Business and Ministry. In 2004 Olivet was incorporated and opened several different institutions located in New York, San Francisco and Nashville. The institutions

see OLIVET, page A-6

Bobcats score 42-0 Homecoming game shutout against Sherman Indian Braves Allison Renck Writer Taking the lead early on, Hamilton High School Bobcats football team overwhelmed the Sherman Indian Braves in their first conference game of the season Friday Oct.23 with a 42-0 shutout at the Hamilton High School Stadium. Filling the stands at the Homecoming game in the Hamilton High stadium were dozens of Bobcats from years past cheering loudly for their Alma Mater’s 2015 football team. Lettermen’s jackets worn by the alumni peppered the stands. Adding to the Bobcat’s victory was the crowning of the 2015-16 Homecoming Queen and King David Isaac and April Kling. The Hamilton school band began the evening by playing the Star

Spangled Banner that ended with resounding cheers. In the first quarter the Bobcats showed their prowess by quickly scoring two touchdowns using their offensive string to its best advantage. The Bobcats continued building momentum for the first two quarters holding the Braves at bay. By half-time the score was 35 to 0 and it appeared the Braves were completely outmatched in the game. While the two teams took a wellearned rest and a little coaching during half-time, the Homecoming Events began with the Hamilton Cheerleaders doing their half-time routine. Trucks came onto the track pulling the Homecoming Floats to present the Homecoming Court.

see BOBCATS, page A-4

Hamilton High School Homecoming King and Queen David Isaac and April Kling. Allison Renck photo

Questions arise in Aguanga officer involved shooting Tony Ault Writer

Officers prepare to enter a crime scene where an officer involved shooting occurred in Aguanga on Friday, Oct. 9. Tony Ault photo

Neighbors and friends of Margaret Wagner, 53, killed in an officer involved shooting in Aguanga Oct.9, have come forward to report that years of alleged domestic abuse may have led to her death by the Riverside County Sheriff’s swat team. The case remains under investigation by Riverside County Sheriff’s homicide detectives who have yet to report any new findings to the local news media. Public Information Officer Michael Vasquez in an inquiry by the Anza Valley see SHOOTING, page A-3


Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

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A N Z A’ S U P C O M I N G E V E N T S The Anza Valley Outlook would like to know if you have an upcoming event, pictures, a letter to the editor or a newsworthy story idea. Please email the Anza Valley Outlook at editor@anzavalleyoutlook.com. Bingo Night Fridays Oct. 30 - 6:30-9:30 p.m. at the Anza Community Hall on Hwy 371 in the Township of Anza, hosted by the Boys and Girls Club. Play all night for a good cause; $10 buy in. Lots of fun, food and drinks for sale; proceeds go to help build the B&G Club’s campus. Regular games held second and fourth Fridays of each month. Questions call Robyn Garrison at (805) 312-0369. Halloween Festival Oct. 31 4-6 p.m. travel through town and go to local businesses for trick or treat; later at the Anza Community Hall- 6 p.m., food, fun and costume contest. For more info call Lorraine (951) 763-0033. Holiday Alpaca Ranch Days Oct 31 & Nov 1- from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Hosted by Alpacas of Anza Valley, at 52700 Ardwell Dr. in Anza. See their ad in this issue of the AVO. Cahuilla Light House Fellowship. Sat. Nov. 7- 10 a.m. Special speaker Robert Salgado of Soboba will share his testimony. Breakfast and Bible study for the public. Meets the first Saturday of the month at 10 a.m. and is located at the tribal hall below the Casino in Anza. For additional information, call Nella Heredia at (951) 7630856. Lecture on Area Earthquake Data- Fri. Nov. 6-5:30 p.m. by Research Seismologist Frank Vernon at the Hamilton Library hosted by Hamilton Museum located at the Hamilton High, 57430 Mitchell Road in Anza. Renaissance Faire Sat. Nov. 14Noon-6 p.m. Theme: Masquerade Ball Place: Kirby & Hwy. 371 in Anza. Beer and Wine Garden; Games for all ages: Rope Pulls, jousting, foil sword fights, Nerf Weapons, etc; Drench a Wench/ Soak a Bloke; Musicians: We have strolling fiddlers, percussion & five piece era band; Royal court, peasants) We have our Queen, Falcons Video show, Knighting ceremony, Costume contest, Pie eating contest, clothes relay, Cake Walk, Cake decorating contest, Shakespearean Reading, Archery Contest, Catapult Contest, Stick/ Sword demonstration; We need your group/Club/non-profit to pick what they would like to do. Vendor opportunities. Please call Lorraine at (951) 763-0033 or Robyn at (805) 312-0369 to hold your place. This is a community fundraiser hosted by the HC Boys and Girls Club. United States flag burning ceremony Nov. 14 - performed by local Veteran of Foreign Wars Post 1873 during the Renaissance Fair. There is a receptacle for old faded, tattered and torn U.S. Flags in the parking lot of the Anza Community Hall or you can drop them off at the VFW see below for VFW info. From The Heart Holiday Fundraising Dinner-Sat. Nov. 14th - 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Enjoy a full dinner with turkey, ham, potatoes, dressing and pie. Join us for an amazing fundraising event for area kids. Event will raise the funds for FTH Christmas Gift event. Tickets are $15 each or $25 for two. For tickets or more info call Christy at (951) 595-2400 or Linda at (951) 216-8895. See ad in AVO for more information. Free entertainment and classes Hamilton Museum. The museum is open Wednesdays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 39991 Contreras Rd. in Anza. For additional information, call (951) 763-1350 or visit www. hamiltonmuseum.org.Check out FB: Hamilton-Museum-and-RanchFoundation. Health, exercise, resources, recovery meetings AA Men’s Meeting at the Anza Community Hall. Meetings take place on Thursdays at 7 p.m. at the Anza Community Hall. ALANON. Tuesday evenings, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Located at 56095 Pena Rd. in Anza at Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church. For more information, call Carol at (951) 763-1022. A L C O H O L I C S A N O N Y M O U S . We d n e s d a y evenings at 8 p.m.Located at 56095 Pena Rd. in Anza at Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church. For more information, call (951) 763-4226. Anza Public Library. Branch Manager Doreen Nagel. Hours during school year, Monday and Friday 9 a.m. - 3 p.m., TuesdayThursday-9 a.m. - 7 p.m., Saturday10 a.m. - 2 p.m., Sunday closed. Summer hours-June and July are different. Location at the right of the Hamilton High School Administration Office 57430 Mitchell Rd., Anza, CA 92539. For more info, call (951) 763-4216. AV Christian Men Service Club.

The club holds its food distribution outreach, USDA inclusive, every third Wednesday of each month at the Anza Community Hall from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Abled volunteer’s skills needed. Must be bilingual, add, spell and read. Carrying weight may be required. Volunteers receive first pick of food for their help. Contact Jeff Crawley at (951) 7631257 for additional information. Fit after 50. Free Exercise Class takes place every Tuesday and Friday from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the Anza Community Hall. Chair aerobics help with coordination and balance and increase muscle tone. There is no jumping in this activity. Wear gym shoes and bring water. The leader of the class is Joe Volkman. He can be contacted at (951) 763-0827. The assistant for the class is Reba Schulz. She can be reached at (951) 763-2254. Free Mobile Health Clinic. The mobile health clinic open every third Wednesday of the month from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. No appointment is needed. Non-insured may only be in the RV in hall’s parking lot or inside the Anza Community Hall. Grief Share. If anyone would like to attend a new session of grief share, please call the church at (951) 763-4226 to preregister. Meetings are held at Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church at 56095 Pena Rd. in Anza. Grief Share is designed to minister to people grieving the death of a loved one. Through videos and discussion, we learn to walk the journey of grief and support each other along the way. It is a place for hurting people to find healing and hope.

Food ministries Let’s Eat at the VFW-As a service to our community, Anza’s local VFW weekly meals are open to the public. Regularly meals are served: Wednesday, 5-7 p.m. for a $6.50 donation; Friday: 5-7 p.m. for a $7.50 donation; Sunday: 8:30-10 a.m. for A $6 donation. Thursday and Saturday’s food and activities vary, check out the monthly meal schedule and post happenings published in the AVO twice a month or go to the AVO’s website to read them. VFW Post is 1/4 mile west on Bailey Rd off Terwilliger Rd. (951) 763-4439. VFW website http://vfw1873.org email:vfw1873anzaca@gmail.VFW now accepts debit and credit cards in the canteen. Free Senior lunches at the Anza Community Hall. Weekly Tuesday and Friday 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Anza Community Hall. If you are new and would like to join, come fill out questionnaire. Community welcome. For more info please call the Pechanga Kitchen at (800) 7328805, ext. 4520. The Most Excellent Way. A Christian center recovery program for all kinds of addiction. The program is court approved and childcare is provided. Help with transportation is available. The program meets Fridays from 7 to 8:30 p.m. and Tuesdays from 8 to 10 a.m. at 58680 Redshank Rd. in Anza. Call Jessica at (951) 5415356. The Most Excellent Way will be moving to 58050 Hwy. 371 (Corner of 371 & Kirby) beginning Nov. 6. Western Eagle Food Box Project. The Food Box project is hosted by Valley Gospel Chapel, but will be taking place at a new time and new location. Pickup is the first Friday of the month. The cost per box is $25 and boxes can only be purchased with cash. A box contains enough food to feed a family of four for one week. Payment should be made at Lorraine’s Pet Supply in Anza by the Wednesday prior to pick up. Pick up at the Little Red School House in Anza. If visiting Valley Gospel during the week, drop off your payment in the offering box. Fill out an envelope and mark it “Food Box.” It must be received the Sunday before pickup. All are welcome to participate in the program. For additional information, call (951) 763-4622. FUN Group Biweekly Food Ministry. The food ministry takes place from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Thursdays only at the Anza Community Hall. To volunteer for a free box be at the Community Hall by 3 p.m. To order a paid box and help feed those who can’t afford to pay, see below. Approximately $100 worth of food is in $30 boxes. Half boxes are available for $15. For every $30 box sold, six people can be fed. Shut-ins are delivered food once a week. There is also a prepared meal ministry for shut-ins, too. If you know anyone who could benefit from this program, or if you need more information, contact Bill Donahue at (951) 288-0903. For prepared meals, call Donald Seddon at (760) 390-5537. Drop off prepaid box donations by Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the ERA Office on Hwy. 371 in Anza. Pay inside or drop off during the day in the red box outside. Put your name and request on an envelope and payment inside

when dropping off in the box. To find pickup location follow Hwy. 371 to Burnt Valley Road at the east end of the valley to Rolling Hills Road. The location is a house behind the Baptist Church at 58680 Redshank Rd. FUN Group’s Free Community Dinner. Dinners take place at 1 p.m. on the last Sunday of the month at the Anza Community Hall and all are welcome. Dinners for November and December will be on Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day only. A regular schedule resumes in January. Donations of time, money, whatever possible are always welcome. The FUN Group gathers supplies donated by individuals, local merchants, restaurants and churches to prepare the best quality and tastiest meal they can for all who attend. To get involved or to donate, call Donald Seddon at (760) 390-5537 or Terry Seddon at (760) 695-7452.

Bible studies ABC’s Wednesday night Bible Study. Bible study takes place from 5:45 to 7:15 p.m. During this same evening time, Pastor Bob leads a weekly Bible study so parents don’t need to go home and come back. This is a casual study time, casual dress, and topics are more in the area of day-to-day life application of Bible principles. ABC’s AWANA Kids Club. Meetings take place from 5 to 7:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. The club is for children as young as three through the 8th grade. Depending on age, students have uniforms that are vests or T-shirts. There is a structured time of learning following the AWANA kids’ handbook. The younger children receive patches or badges for reaching certain milestones. AWANA follows the Hamilton school calendar. If there is no public school, there is no AWANA. Anza Baptist Church. The church is located at 39200 Rolling Hills Rd. in Anza. For more information, call (951) 763-4937 or email info@ anzafsbaptistchurchca. org. Anza’s Mormon Church weekly happenings. Sunday Sacrament, 10 a.m.; Sunday School, 11 a.m.; Priesthood/Relief Society, 12 p.m.; Wednesday Scouts, 6 p.m.; Youth Night 7 p.m.; For more information, call Ruiz at (951) 445-7180 or Nathan at (760) 399-0727. Cahuilla Light House Fellowship. Breakfast and Bible study for the public. Meets the first Saturday of the month at 10 a.m. and is located at the tribal hall below the Casino in Anza. For additional information, call Nella Heredia at (951) 763-0856. From the Heart Christian Women’s Ministries. The group has a monthly potluck. Call founder Linda Heart for more information at (951) 767-9354. From the heart’s mission is to help the area’s neediest children. FUN Group. The FUN Group has started a non-denominational weekly Bible study in conjunction with Living Hope Church of Anza. The Bible study is held on Tuesdays 8 to 10 a.m. at 58680 Redshank Rd. There will be a breakfast buffet and Pastor Kevin Watson will be in attendance. Everyone is invited. The event is casual and discussionbased in nature. For additional information, call Donald Seddon at (760) 390-5537. Living Hope Bible study on Tuesdays from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., located at 58050 Hwy. 371( corner of Kirby) Call Pastor Kevin (951) 763-1111 for questions. All welcome. Monthly Christian Men’s Breakfast. Breakfast takes place the fourth Saturday of each month at 9 a.m. Breakfasts rotate to different locations. Contact Jeff Crawley at (951) 763-1257 for more information. Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church Wednesday Bible Study. Wednesday Bible study takes place at 10 a.m. Church is located at 56095 Pena Rd. in Anza. Call (951) 763-4226 for more information. VGC Women’s. Meetings take place Wednesdays at 7 p.m. All women welcome. Call Valley Gospel Chapel for more information at (951) 763-4622. VGC is located at 43275 Chapman Rd., in the Terwilliger area of Anza. VGC Varsity Youth Church. Wednesdays - Hangout starts at 6 p.m. and meeting starts at 7 p.m. at Valley Gospel Chapel for all high school students. Hangout time includes food, fun, fellowship, games and music. VGC Men’s. Study on Saturdays at 7 p.m. Breakfast is usually served. Clubs High Country Boys and Girls Club. 2nd Monday of the month you can attend committee meetings at ERA Real Estate office in Anza. Bingo fundraisers are held monthly on the 2nd and 4th Fridays at the Anza Community Hall at 6:309:30 p.m., 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturdays

B&G hosts free dirt bike lessons on safety, equipment, rules and how to ride for ages 6-11 and 12-17. Free. Call Bonnie ahead of time at (714) 336-8523. For all other HC Boys and Girls Club info call Pres. Albert Rodriguez at (951) 492-1624 or Sec. Robyn Garrison at (805) 312-0369. Anza Area’s VFW Post 1872named CAPT. JOHN FRANCIS DRIVICK III also includes the Ladies’ and Men’s Auxiliaries. Contact information; PO Box 390433, 59011 Bailey Road, Anza, CA 92539-0433, (951)7634439 HTTP://VFW1873.ORG. Request monthly newsletter and or weekly menu by email them at vfw1873anzaca@gmail.com. 4-H Meetings. Meetings are usually on the third Wednesday of the month (except February) at 6:30 p.m. in the Anza Community Hall. 4-H is a youth organization for youth 5-19 years old that has many different projects that the youth can become involved in. High Country 4-H is open to children living in the Anza, Aguanga and surrounding areas. For further information, please contact Community Leader Allison Renck at (951) 663-5452. Anza Valley Artists Meetings. Meetings are on the third Saturday of the month and are held in different homes. At each meeting a potluck luncheon is served and then there’s a short meeting, often with a guest speaker. For more information on joining the club, please contact President Jill Roberts at (858) 7745855 (cell) or (951) 763-2570. Anza Quilter’s Club. The club meets from 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. the first and third Tuesday of each month at the Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church at 56095 Pena Rd. in Anza. Anza Valley Lions Club. Guest meetings with dinner are held on the first Monday of each month at 7:00PM. Meetings and events are posted on the Anza Lions Club website calendar at www.anzalionsclub.org. Meeting Location Anza Valley VFW Post 1873, 59011 Bailey Rd, Anza, CA 92539Guests and potential members may contact Greg Johnson at (951) 392 -4910. Lions Turkey Shoots. Shoots are held the third Sunday of each month May thru November at 9 a.m. at the Lions Gymkhana Field. Call Chuck Weitlauf for details (951) 760-0411. Lions Cowboy Mounted Shooting Practice. The third Sunday of each month at the Lions Gymkhana field on Kirby Rd. in Anza. This coincides with the Lions Turkey Shoot at 9 a.m. Call Lion Susan Blankfeld for more information at (951) 704-9396. Lions Gymkhana. First Saturday of each month: Events: Key Hole, Pole Bending, Barrel Racing Divisions: Lead Line, Pee Wee (ages 1-7), Int. Jr. (8-12), Juniors (13-17), Seniors (18-39), Old Timers (40 and up) Prices: $3 per event. Food and drinks are sold at family friendly prices. All proceeds go towards supporting local community programs including vision and hearing programs. 2015 season: Oct. 3 - 3 p.m. Sign Ups, 4 p.m. start, November 7 - 3 p.m. Sign Ups, 4 p.m. start or text Lion Roland Vellanoweth at (951) 662-9166. Boy Scouts Troop 319. Cubs meet at 6 p.m. every Tuesday and Boy Scouts at 7 p.m. every Wednesday at the Mormon Church on Contreras Road South of Hwy. 371. For more information, call Richard Hotchkiss at (951) 5513154. Boys Scouts Troop 371. Boy Scouts meet at Lake Riverside. Call Ginny Kinser for details at (909) 702-7902. Civil Air Patrol. Squadron 59 is looking for new members of all ages. They offer many opportunities. If this interests you, please contact the Squadron Commander Major Dennis Sheehan from the Anza area at (951) 403-4940. To learn more and see the club’s meeting schedule visit www.squadron59.org. Fire Explorer Program. The program meets at 6 p.m. every second, third and fourth Tuesday of the month. It’s located at Fire Station 29 on Hwy. 371 in Anza. Call (951) 763-5611 for more information. M-COR General Meetings. Meetings are the fourth Tuesday of the month. They take place at 6:30 p.m. at the Little Red Schoolhouse in the heart of Anza. Visit www.mcor.org for all the M-COR news and events. For more information, email info@m-cor.org Redshank Riders. Back country Horsemen meet at 7 p.m. at the Little Red School House in the heat of Anza, the second Thursday of each month. Visit www.redshankriders. com to learn more or call Carol Schmuhl for membership info at (951) 663-6763. Thimble Club. Meets the first Thursday of the month. Come and enjoy lunch for $5 and more. They normally meet at the Anza Valley Community Hall. Lunch starts at 12 p.m. and there is a meeting

after. The Thimble Club is a local philanthropic women’s group that was started by the local farmer’s and rancher’s wives more than 100 years ago. Over the years these ladies changed and influenced the lives of the people and the communities of the Anza Valley. Join in the proud tradition of the ladies of the Thimble Club, living in the community and serving it. No sewing required. Call Shaaron Chambers at (619) 2061268 for additional information. Organizations AYSO Youth Soccer - Cost: $65 after Sept. 1 (Uniform is included in cost). Some scholarships are available based on financial need. Shin guards and athletic shoes are required. Questions? Call or text Kathy Heinz (860) 303-6145, Rissa King (951) 377-5922, or Marianna Galindo (951) 760-9746 (Spanish). Anza Community Hall. Working board member meetings will now be on the second Monday of the month and the regular general membership meetings will be on the fourth Monday of the month. Both will be 7 p.m. No member input on board meeting dates. Members who join of the community are like a shareholder; membership cost $20 for a family and $35 for a business both get one vote. Membership and swap meets are the main way the Hall pays the bills. No government funds are allocated. Be a voting member, make a difference and receive discounts off of Hall rentals, Swapmeet booths and save on propane gas from Farrell Gas. Mail membership to: Anza Community Building, Inc. at PO Box 390091 Anza, CA 92539. Swap Meet at the Anza Community Hall. Meet the first and third Saturdays of each month, weather permitting, early morning to early afternoon. Vendors wanted for both indoor and outdoor booths. For all Hall inquires: Memberships, Rental, or Swap Meet call the Hall’s new dedicated number (951) 428-0901. Low Cost Water Testing at Swap Meet. If you are concerned about your well water quality, there are low cost tests available. Just visit Merle Johnson’s booth at the swap meet on the first Saturday of the month. If you have questions, call Johnson at (951) 337-7417. AVMAC. Second Wednesday of each odd month at the Anza Community Hall. This group is the local liaisons to the county from the community. Contact info (951) 805-6800. AVPORT. Anza Valley Property Owners Rights Team was founded Sept. 4, 2012. The board would like to invite you to participate in the process of “Citizens assisting Citizens.” To contact, call (951) 389-4884, email Anza.Avport@ gmail.com, visit www.sites.google. com/site/anzaavport or facebook. com/anza.valley.avport/info or mail P.O. Box 391122, Anza, California, 92539. AVPORT Board: Michael Machado - president; Robyn Garrison - vice president; Chrystal Walls - treasurer; Pamela Machado - secretary; Steve Packard - oversight; Alan Thomas - lead inspector; Jeff Walls - Legal Analyst and Research. Read AVPORT’s letter to the editor of introduction at www.anzavalleyoutlook.com/ story/66701/. Park and Little Red School House. Located in the heart of Anza, the park and Little Red School House are for rental. They are cared for by the Anza Civic Improvement League. Membership helps pay for the upkeep of the park. It’s $10 for an individual, $18 for a family or $35 for a business membership. You can conveniently pay online via PayPal, or download the form and mail in your check. Mail membership to P.O. Box 391000, Anza, CA 92539. Call (951) 330-4411 or email info@anzacivic. org. To pay online or learn more, visit www.anzacivic.org. The ACIL was incorporated in 1964. Park and Little Red School House Improvement Meetings. 5:30 p.m. is when monthly meetings at the Little Red School House take place. They happen on the last Thursday of each month. The prime objective is to engage the community to help develop, plan and execute park or building cleanups and repairs, in addition to fundraisers for the ACIL and other community charity events. The park is located on Hwy. 371 at Contreras Road in the heart of Anza. Public Library at Hamilton High School-A joint use library. During school hours the public library hours are as follows: Monday and Friday 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 9 a.m.7 p.m. Lunch: Monday - Friday during school is 11:45 - 12:30 p.m.. Sat. hours 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. Located at 57430 Mitchell Road, in Anza. Librarian Cindy Brenz, Phone: (951) 763-1865. Call to confirm hours.


October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

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Anza Local

November News from ANZA VFW Post #1873 and its auxiliary Tony Ford Special to the Anza Valley Outlook Heads up! Daylight savings time ends Sunday morning. Set your clocks back an hour when you go to bed Saturday night or you’ll be late to church! Also, since it will be getting dark earlier, we will start our Wednesday and Friday meals at 4:30 instead of 5 p.m. Don’t forget to bring your old flags that need to be retired to the post or give them to a member to turn in. We will be having a ceremony to retire these old, tattered flags on Nov. 14 in the Park at the Renaissance Faire.

Flags cannot and should not be thrown in the trash or burned in your barbecue. This ceremony will dispose of them with the respect they deserve. Full dinners are served on Wednesday and Friday 4:30 – 7 p.m. and breakfasts on Sunday 8:30 a.m. till 10 a.m. We’re always ready to bring new members into the post and auxiliaries. We can always use volunteers, members or not, to help with the upkeep, etc. If you’re interested in joining and/or helping out, call the Post at (951) 763-4439. Remember, we’re here for the Veterans. Keep saving those aluminum pull tabs for Ronald McDonald

Anza, Sage schools participate in ‘Great Shakeout’ drill Hamilton High School, Cottonwood K-8 and Hamilton K-8 School participated in the Oct. 15 Great ShakeOut Earthquake Drill. This annual drill is designed for individuals and organizations to practice what to do during an earthquake in an effort to improve their preparedness. There were around 10.3 million people in California who participated in the drill. Individuals, schools, local governments, and many others submitted their names or their organizations to participate. Lyle Radford, Hemet Unified School District’s Safety and Security Technician, said, “The safety of our students and staff is

SHOOTING from page A-1 Outlook said on Oct. 23 homicide detectives are still investigating the case which has been turned over to the Riverside County District Attorney for review. Vasquez said in the homicide i n v e s t i g a t i o n t h e Wa g n e r ’s marijuana farm business “did not play a role in the incident and those details would not be pertinent to this investigation.” Meanwhile, an Aguanga resident and neighbor of Margaret Wagner using the initials L.D. reported the 53-year-old woman (who was earlier reported to be 62) for a long time suffered, sometimes severe domestic abuse from her ex-husband Raimond Wagner. She said that on more than one occasion, Margaret Wagner had come to her home following an alleged attack by her husband. Sheriff’s reports and court documents do indicate that the couple had a history of domestic quarrels, some violent, that ended with each asking the courts for restraining orders against the other. It was a reported domestic disturbance in Idyllwild in the 54000 block of Wildwood Drive on Oct. 9 that ultimately brought deputies to Margaret Wagner’s home in Aguanga. A sheriff’s report said on Oct. 9 deputies received information while investigating the Idyllwild incident that Margaret Wagner was allegedly threatening her ex-husband and his girlfriend with a gun. The victims said Wagner left and may have gone to her rural Aguanga home in the 44000 block of Jacob Court. It was known that Margaret Wagner operated a business growing legal marijuana named the Highway 371 Health and Wellness Center. An Oct. 10 news release issued by the Sheriff’s department reported that when deputies located Margaret Wagner at the Jacob Court home, she had possession of a handgun. Ordered to drop gun “The deputies ordered the suspect to drop the handgun; however, she refused and pointed the handgun at deputies and the officer involved shooting occurred. The suspect retreated into the residence and refused to exit the home,” Vasquez wrote in the news release. The report went on the say that the swat team was called in and after several attempts to peacefully resolve the situation they entered the home and found Margaret Wagner deceased. Vasquez responded to a question about why more than 150 law enforcement officers from as far away as San Jacinto were called in with dozens of law enforcement vehicles, including an armored battering ram and an incident command post. Most of the equipment was set up at the intersection of Barbara Lane on Highway 371. He said, “For the safety of everyone (officers, community members) involved the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department attempted to utilize all

House, cancelled stamps for a Wounded Warrior project, and Campbell Labels for Education. Activities for the first half of November which is (Celebrate Empty Nest Month) are: Oct. 30, Commander’s dinner – beer battered cod, sweet potato fries, salad, chicken soup, coleslaw, bread, dessert ($8.50) Nov. 1, Anna’s Eggs Benedict w/Canadian bacon on English Muffins, baked apples, zucchini bread Nov. 4, Debbi’s Stuffed Bell Peppers and everything that goes with them Nov. 6, Tonie’s Chicken & Dumplings w/ veggies, sliced

Retiring of old Flags at Renaissance Faire All meals include coffee, tea, & hot chocolate. Thursdays: $1 dogs – 4-7 p.m. Saturdays: Pizza – 3 p.m. All community members welcome and remember to bring your guests. If you were born in November, your flower is the Chrysanthemum and your birthstone is a Topaz. (Pronounce this one if you can!) ANATIDAEPHOBIA – Weird fear that somewhere, somehow, a duck is watching you. (This one is a new one for me!)

ConnectAnza soon to link Red Schoolhouse Tony Ault Writer

paramount, so it is important that we practice what we need to do during earthquakes.” The drill started at 10:15 a.m. The Anza and Sage students and staff members with every other HUSD school and the district office dropped, covered, and held on. “Almost all injuries from earthquakes are caused by falling debris, so everyone needs to take cover until the shaking stops,” Radford said. Once staff deemed it safe, everyone calmly evacuated the buildings and took roll call of the students. To comment on this story online, visit www.anzavalleyoutlook.com.

ConnectAnza crews continue to link its fiberoptic internet connection to downtown businesses with the Little Red Schoolhouse next on their list, according to the Anza Electric Coop staff. “We should be connecting the Red Schoolhouse this week,” said Kevin Short, general manager of AEC. Fiberoptic lines have already been connected to the Anza Community Hall and are undergoing testing. Other downtown businesses are scheduled for hookup in the near future. Short, at the Water Summit m e e t i n g S a t u r d a y, O c t . 2 4 introduced Debbie Winger as the

of the resources available.” Deputies remained at the Jacob Court home throughout the afternoon and into the early evening hours with officers and equipment coming and going constantly, according to several witnesses. The battering ram was unloaded and driven down more almost two miles of dirt roads to the home. L.D. and her husband, who live within sight of Margaret Wagner’s home, were reluctant to tell what they saw the day of the shooting and a witness they talked too after the incident. L.D. said they could always see Margaret Wagner going to and from her home at the end of Jacob Court. Jacob Court has only one way in and one way out, she noted. “That day we think she was home all day,” L.D. said. “We didn’t see her come in or leave.” She said that Margaret Wagner, for a long time had “suffered from beatings” allegedly administered by her ex-husband. Police and court records with photographs obtained by the Anza Outlook and Valley News confirmed that numerous court cases and sheriff reports involving the Wagners’ domestic issues are on file. They were in a bitter divorce battle with more than $700,000 in settlement money involved. “Their divorce was to become final the day after she was killed,” said L.D.

by Margaret Wagner. She paid him $20,000 as a down payment on note. He claimed she had not paid him any of $10,000 a month she was supposed to pay him after that. The property itself, according to one of the court documents, may be the subject of a federal tax lien, as well. L.D. went on the say that she tried to go to the Wagner home after the shooting to remove some of Margaret Wagner’s things to give to her Margaret’s daughter who had recently been hospitalized. “When we got there Raimond was on the porch with his girlfriend showing others the blood splatters and body matter from his wife who died in the house. Who would do that?”

Restraining order file That same day, sometime after the incident at his home in Idyllwild, Raimond Wagner, through his attorney, filed a “Request for Domestic Violence Restraining Order” against his wife. The court record gives this written statement from Raimond Wagner under the penalty of perjury, “On today’s date at approximately 6:00 a.m., Margaret Wagner appeared at the residence where I am staying with my significant other, Lori Parker. She drew a gun and was threatening to kill us both. “Ultimately the police were summoned and she has been shot by law enforcement. I have no idea what her condition is. I am concerned that she has large sums of cash and may in fact bail out.” In the court document, Raimond Wagner also indicated Margaret Wagner may have hidden away $100,000. He went on to state he was asking the court for an emergency restraining order. That order, in the form of a temporary restraining order was granted by the court four days after Margaret Wagner’s death. In the original request for a restraining order filed by Raimond Wagner, he gave an account of the couple’s tumultuous marriage relationship with a document including a promissory note from his wife saying she would pay him over time $720,000 for the Jacob Court business. That note and a lease agreement, dated Nov. 7, 2014, was secured by the property and its equipment apparently owned

tomatoes, salad, dessert Nov. 7, Joe’s $1 Tacos (noon – 5), Karaoke with Ralph and Dottie 3 to 7 p.m. Nov. 8, Lions’ Famous Omelets made-to-order, potatoes, toast, fruit, sweet rolls Nov. 10, Celebrate US Marine Corps birthday (call Post for time) Nov. 11, Barbara Ann’s Pork Roast or Pork Ribs w/kraut, potatoes, acorn squash, dessert Nov. 12, Post Meeting 7 p.m. Nov. 13, Mike’s Roast Beef w/ gravy, potatoes, veggies, salad, dessert Nov. 14, Auxiliary Meeting 10 a.m. (District Inspection)

Bullet holes seen She said there were bullet holes in the door. “They were shots fired from outside not from inside,” she claimed. L.D. said a few days after the shooting she received a phone call from a man, she would not identify, and who worked for Margaret Wagner growing the marijuana plants. “I think he was a foreman or something. You know it is Marijuana harvest time,” said L.D. The man, saying he was afraid of the police is now supposedly in the Carolinas, told L.D. that Margaret Wagner was in the house when a large contingent of sheriff deputies arrived outside including a helicopter flying above. He told her he ran to get the papers showing the marijuana grow was legal, thinking the sheriff was there to make a “raid” on the farm. She said the witness, on the telephone, told her the deputies saw him running, grabbed him, handcuffed him and then put him in a car where he remained for almost eight hours as the standoff continued. L.D. said they were other workers at the farm as well. There were two unidentified women seen by an Anza Valley Outlook reporter being questioned by deputies at the incident command post. They were escorted from one police car to another following the questioning. Sheriff’s deputies made no mention of them in the inquiry. L.D. said the foreman claimed, “The deputies just shot her down in cold blood.” As of press time, no contact has been made with the farm worker to verify this information. The sheriff’s office did not respond to the alleged farm worker’s claim, instead maintaining the farm had nothing to do with the incident. “They just shot her through the door,” surmised L.D. “They didn’t even know if she had a gun because she was in the house when they arrived. They didn’t even call an ambulance to the residence.” However, there was an ambulance and fire unit on standby seen at the swat team’s advance point about a half mile from the home. Court records show that the

ConnectAnza telecommunications manager who will be overseeing the fiberoptic internet system. “We will soon be connecting to Anza residents,” Winger said. The ConnectAnza project, according to AEC officials, should provide a better internet connection to most of its customers and others in the Anza and Aguanga Valleys. Currently there are wireless internet systems available to residents but with limited coverage. The AEC Board approved the ConnectAnza project earlier this year since the Anza and Aguanga Valleys are considered a “target area” for better broadband coverage by the California Public Utilities Corporation. Because it is a “target area,” Short said, AEC has applied for a $3.8 million grant through

the California Advanced Services Fund. The grant would cover almost 75 percent of the fiberoptic network costs, Short said. The grant approvals however are on a first come first served basis and the AEC grant application has yet to be reviewed. “It takes a while to get it (the grant application) before the PUC Board,” Short said. “We are confident we will get approval because we are a target area,” Winger said. Short reported that AEC continues to be in a strong financial position. “It should be a strong year financially and could result in cost reductions,” he added. For more local news or to comment on this story online, visit www.anzavalleyoutlook.com.

alleged domestic abuse that occurred was reported by both parties each claiming the other was the victim in the abuse. Margaret Wagner was arrested on one occasion during a confrontation court records show. A case against Raimond Wagner was dismissed. In the Raimond Wagner court document he claims that in recent weeks she had allegedly vandalized his car and his girlfriend’s business in Idyllwild Since the shooting, the sheriff’s deputies out of the Hemet – San Jacinto Sheriff ’s office have been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation. “The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department’s standard procedure is to place the involved officers

on administrative leave after these incidences.” Vasquez said. “The practice is based on Department policy. Again, the names and identities of the involved officers will be withheld at this time.” Many questions surrounding the officer involved shooting remain to be answered and remain under investigation by the Riverside C o u n t y S h e r i ff ’s H o m i c i d e Bureau and the District Attorney. Vasquez said the media will be informed of the final outcome of the investigation as soon as it is available from the homicide bureau. Any information obtained in this ongoing story will be relayed to our readers through the print editions of Anza Valley Outlook and online at www.anzavalleyoutlook.com.

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Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

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Anza Local

Cottonwood K-8 School Fall Festival coming

Cooking Corner

Tony Ault Writer

Food and our favorite recipes are an intricate part of life. We are sharing Donna Schumacher’s private collection of recipes gathered over her 80 plus years. In her life time she was a chef to many famous people as well as those connected to the entertainment industry. As social coordinator for the Treasure Island, a trailer park on the beach Donna’s culinary collection was shared in a monthly newsletter there under the heading of Donna’s Corner. Though Treasure Island no longer exists in Laguna Beach its memories are still alive in Donna’s Cookbook Intro journal and each week a bit is shared. Treasure Island was a home away from home for a lot of Hollywood which is reflected in her story. To review past posts and recipes go to www.anzavalleyoutlook.com or check out previous editions of Anza Valley Outlook. If you make Donna’s Recipes please take a photo of your culinary delight(s) and email it/them to

Students at Cottonwood K-8 School will be preparing for their Friday, Oct. 30 Fall Festival with food, fun and games planned for parents, friends and visitors from 4 to 7 p.m. This year the school’s Fall Festival will be featuring a Chili Cook-off, open to all community members interested, giving visitors an opportunity to enjoy the tasty spicy creations. Jillian Daudert, school spokesperson, said everyone coming is invited to wear their favorite Halloween costume with a costume

contest planned. For the students and children the school will be setting up bouncers and a series of games designed for the whole family to enjoy. There will be booths set up by the students with all donations going to help the school activities for the school year. “We will have sweet treats, music and more,” said Daudert. “Don’t miss this fun evening.” She thanked the community for supporting the school. The Cottonwood K-8 school is located at 44260 Sage Road in Aguanga. For more information send an email to jdaudert@ hemetusd.org.

Hamilton High School Home Varsity Football Schedule • Friday, Oct. 30, 7 p.m. at HHS against Riverside Preparatory School • Friday, Nov. 6, 7 p.m. at HHS against California School for the Deaf, Riverside

Manager/Crew Chief for Hamilton Bobcats Football Team, Brenna Campbell was pleased with her motivated Bobcat Football Players.

Jodi Thomas Area Manager

editor@anzavalleyoutlook.com. Please include a short write up about your experience. More from Donna’s Treasure Island Journal: “Neighbors, Kay and Ray, often visit the Monastery of the Angels in Hollywood as Ray did a lot of work for the nuns there. They would bring back many loaves of this wonderful bread. (Ray passed away March 19, 1993)”-Donna • • • • • • • • • •

With each new play the Bobcats kept the winning momentum against the Braves.

Monastery Pumpkin Bread 3 1/2 cups flour, sifted 3 cups sugar 2 teaspoons baking soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon nutmeg 1 1/2 tablespoon salt 4 eggs, beaten 1 cup oil 2/3 cup water 2 cups pumpkin, cooked and mashed Sift the first 6 ingredients. Com-

Jodi Thomas photo

bine eggs, oil, water and pumpkin and mix well. Stir in the dry ingredients. Grease 3 loaf pans, 8”x4” and pour batter into them. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour, or until toothpick comes out clean. Place walnut pieces on top of bread before baking (just a few down the middle of each loaf). If you are ever in the neighborhood and want to visit; the Monastery of the Angels is located 1977 Carmen Ave., Hollywood. The gift shop is open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and closed Sundays. Information: (213) 466-2186.

The Bobcats move the ball while the Braves prepare for a block. Allison Renck photos

BOBCATS from page A-1 The 9th to 11th grade royalty was announced at the earlier school pep rally. They are: Freshman Jessica Ryan and Marcos Villalobos; Sophomores Nathaly Avalos and Nathan Pina and Juniors Randi Nuanes and Hale Castorena. Another highlight of the event was family members escorting their senior candidates onto the field to stand in front of the Homecoming Crowd. The names of the Homecoming King and Queen were shown to the crowd by unrolling banners with their names, King David Isaac and Queen April Kling. With the Homecoming announcements concluded, the game continued with the Bobcats adding to their score. The Bobcat football players were rotated throughout the game giving every team member a chance to show their individual skills on the field much to the delight of their parents and friends. The Braves continued to try and quell the victory roar from the Bobcats, but unfortunately they lacked the offensive skill and had to accept their defeat. “These boys work really hard

Sophomore Prince and Princess Nathaly Avalos and Nathan Pina.

The Hamilton High School Cheerleaders perform at half-time.

and are self-motivated,” said Team manager and Crew Chief Brenna Campbell, a 2015 Hamilton graduate.

design and hopefully be able to open a Floral Business in Anza or Temecula. The Bobcats next conference game will pit them against Riverside Prep Silver Knights as they at-

Campbell said she enjoys being Manager and Crew Chief and loves living in the Anza area. She plans on completing a degree in floral

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tempt to keep the momentum going to improve their season record on Oct. 30 at 7 p.m. in the Hamilton High Stadium. To comment on this story online, visit www.anzavalleyoutlook.com

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October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

A-5

Anza Local

Anza water summit urges well conservation

Tony Ault photos

Merl Johnson, Water System Management, analyzes a water sample taken from an Anza water well at the 2015 Water Summit presented by the Anza Groundwater Association.

Tony Ault Writer Anza Valley Residents, in light of the California drought, were urged to take measures to better conserve and protect their wells at the 2015 Water Summit presented by the Anza Groundwater Association Saturday, Oct. 24. More than 120 Anza Valley residents turned out to hear the AGWA’s annual summit and report held this year at the Anza Community Hall. Guest Speaker Marea Stinnett, a water conservation expert, gave the residents a number of methods to better collect and preserve natural rainwater falling on their property, particularly with the expected El Nino coming. Merl Johnson, area Water System Management consultant, was on hand to test residents well water samples for any nitrate and coliform contamination with preliminary results available. Members of the AGWA steering committee and local businesses provided a free lunch and door prizes to participants. Other utility and conservation groups provided water saving information and advice at their individual tables. The residents learned that the AGWA’s concern is to provide advice

on groundwater management and planning to those that have their own private wells. AGWA’s representatives reviewed the status of the five major water basins that lie beneath the Anza and Aguana areas and their relationship to individual wells. Each of the basins, including the upper and lower Cahuilla Basins, the Anza Basin, the Terwillinger Basin and the Burnt Valley Basins are monitored by the United States Geological Survey. The basins, because of the drought, have dropped in recent years. Local water districts, like the Eastern Municipal Water District, use the basins to provide water to their customers in cities and nearby unincorporated areas. In Anza Valley most of the residents pump water from their privately owned wells and it is their responsibility to maintain them. AGWA and California’s Department of Water and Power urges well users to regularly monitor the depth and safety of their wells. Brian Baharie, AGWA president, answering a question on water ownership said, “Nobody owns the water in California. So, usually the person with the deepest well gets the most water.” In 2011 the USGS recommended a management program be set up for local water supplies in the Anza and Aguanga Valleys, because of the rapid increase in population and resulting

AGWA steering committee member provides information on how best to preserve groundwater for wells during the WGWA Water Summit at the Anza Community Hall.

water use. AGWA was formed to meet that challenge and obtained a grant to form the organization. Since them the 13-member AGWA has been providing information about how to conserve local water supplies and offering individual well water testing. Stinnett suggested that “every single property is a watershed, and it should be used as that.” She gave advice on how to channel natural rainwater into the ground around their well. She said the ground acts like a huge sponge and soaks up most to the water that is fed into pools and underground springs. She said the roof on homes is the best water catcher. “Did you know that every 1,000 square feet of roof provides 623 gallons of water for every inch of rain that falls,” she said. She suggested homeowners dig channels to their well to catch rainwater as it falls. Johnson, at the conclusion to the summit, announced the results of his tests to residents who brought him samples. He said he took 28 samples and all of the well water tested showed nitrate levels well below 45 parts per million that would require immediate attention. He suggested that any wells that test above 30 parts per million nitrates should test them often to make sure it is not increasing. Only one of the 28 wells tested

showed that level. He said none of the wells showed coliform levels, which if detected, would require immediate cleansing. Excessive nitrates, he explained, if absorbed by the body can cause birth defects and other serious intestinal problems including death. Nitrate poisoning is the cause of what is called “Blue Babies.” Coliform bacterium is extremely dangerous to humans, causing serious intestinal problems and even death. Phil Canaday, who operates the Anza Mutual Water Company, provided information about the water company’s water depths. The latter part of this year Well No. 1 that feeds water to most of the downtown businesses is actually showing higher levels than the same time four years ago. The company’s well level is may be indicative of most wells in the Valley that still have sufficient water to maintain potable and agricultural water uses in the area for some time, despite the state’s water crisis. AGWA maintains well owners must still take steps to maintain their well levels through conservation in the event the drought worsens and water tables continue to drop statewide. The Colorado River water that supplies a portion of the state’s water supply is also showing serious flow reductions.

Baharie told the participants the coming El Nino “will not” break the states drought. “Maybe with same El Nino in three years it might, but we don’t really know.” Residents may obtain groundwater conservation information from the AGWA and are urged to go on their website https:// sites.google.com/site/anzawatermgt/ home and fill out a survey on their water use and needs. To comment on this story online, visit www.anzavalleyoutlook.com.

HAMILTON MUSEUM

“Observations from the San Jacinto Fault Zone” by Research Seismologist

Frank Vernon Fri. Nov. 6th @ 5:30pm at the Hamilton Library

39991 South Contreras Road, Anza 951.763.1350 Museum Hours: Wed & Sat 10-2

Hamilton-Museum-and-Ranch-Foundation

Here Ye, Here Ye! Come One, Come All

Gala Renaissance Faire Free Admission

November 14th Noon-6pm You’re invited to be a part of and experience... • Theatrical production by the Hamilton Players “All’s Well That Ends Well” 2:00 P.M • Strolling Mistrials throughout the day • The Royal Court • Enjoy Shakespearean Readings and the Beer & Wine Garden • Participate in Contests: Costume Contest Pie Eating Contest, Archery Contest, Catapult Contest • Join in Games for all ages: Rope Pulls, Jousting, Foil Sword Fights, Nerf Weapons and • Play Dungeons & Dragons & Magic W/Tier 1 Games • Watch Stick/Sword also Damsel in Defense demonstrations, Falcons Video Show, Knighting Ceremony • Enjoy Animals of the era and Alpaca’s

And so much more...! Are you a vendor, do you play an instrument, juggle, magician, please call Robyn 805-312-0369 or Lorraine 951-551-8038

The event will be held On CA-Hwy 371 at the S.E Corner of Kirby Rd in Anza, 92539


Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

A-6

Anza Local OLIVET from page A-1 include; Jubilee College of Music, Olivet Institute of Technology, Olivet School of Language and Education, Olivet Institute for Global Strategic Studies and Olive Branch Institute of Islamic Understanding. He said the university site in Anza has seen improvements to the interior of most of the structures. The gym received a complete inside make-over with new flooring added. The pool has been completely refurbished. In the Ralph D. Winter Library, the university is in the process of building a computer lab. Many areas have received new paint and areas of concrete were removed for landscaping. Tram said currently they are converting one of the larger buildings into a student Union and Bookstore. At this time the dorm space for students is completely filled. He said in the future it will be necessary to build more class rooms. Gebhardt said the University serves a diverse student population, including many from international backgrounds, who have an interest in Christian missions. Gebhard is originally from Germany and Tram

The Ralph D. Winter Library is located on the Olivet University Campus. Allison Renck photos

The refurbished swimming pool at Olivet University is a delight for students.

is from Seattle, Washington. When asked if the Ralph D. Winter Library would ever be opened to the local Anza and Aguanga community, Gebhardt explained that currently the university is only open to students and staff, but is considering how to “open it for the local community in the future.” He indicated that he would also be

campus was beautiful. Olivet offers degrees and certificates accredited by the State of California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education (BPPE) Olivet is accredited by the Biblical Higher Education (ABHE) to award certificates, bachelors, masters, and doctorates degrees. The university does not offer any Federal or State Financial Aid, although there are various private assistance programs for those that need finical aid, if there are avail-

Students listen to a lecture in an Olivet University classroom.

interested in receiving some input from the Anza community if there is any interest in extension classes. Tram said the University is growing and they are pleased with the implementation of the ConnectAnza Internet services. He said it would help Olivet increase its ability for more on-line classes He said that at the current time they are actively seeking to increase their staff by hiring an English teacher and are looking to the local community for a candidate. Gebhardt said that in the past Olivet students were successful in moving into professional ministry after graduation or pursuing a higher degree. “The Alumni of Olivet University have been the strength of our school and we are very proud and grateful for their success in missions and ministry,” he said. The final leg of the tour included a drive to an area that over-looked the entire campus. Dr. Tram, who had always lived in a city, said it took a while to get accustomed to the quiet in Anza. He exclaimed the view from a spot overlooking the

able funds. Currently the 20152016 fees per unit are $237 per unit for Bachelor Studies and $273 per unit for Masters Studies. For more information on Olivet University go to www. olivetuniversity.edu or call (951) 763-0500 Olivet University is located at 36401 Tripp Flats Road, Anza. For more local news or to comment on this story online, visit www. anzavalleyoutlook.com.

Fun and Safe Halloween Harvest Festival will be held Oct. 31st

Having fun at Anza’s Fun and Safe Halloween Harvest Festival last year are Teasha, Vanessa, Andrew, Dominic Deheer Allison Renck photo

Jodi Thomas Area Manager It is time to gather the kids, their friends and dress up in the most inventive costumes you can think of and take them to the township of Anza for a Fun and Safe Halloween Harvest Festival. Merchants and non-profit organization along Hwy. 371 in the township of Anza are once again creating, a fun

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KOYT 96.3 ‘Howls for Halloween’ contest planned

Anza Gas Service

Tony Ault Writer KOYT 96.3 radio hoped to be on the air this past week but technical problems are causing delays, however, the station plans to hold a “Howls for Halloween” contest at their studio on Saturday, Oct. 31. Bob Giffin, KOYT Board member, said, “We wanted to be on the air Oct. 28, but it looks like it will now be sometime in November.” He explained that some technical problems needed to be worked out before they could broadcast, although most of Studio One is complete. The radio station will serve Anza and Aguanga residents within 25 miles of the station transmitter from the studio located behind Overland Realty on Highway 371. Meanwhile, Giffin said the studio, along with some other businesses in the Anza township

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and safe environment for the area’s families. Trick or Treaters can gather candy and be surprised by the inventive fun they find along on the way as they journey to the Anza Community Hall where at 6 p.m. they will find food, fun a costume contest, games and more that awaits them. For more information call Lorraine at (951) 763-0033.

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area plan to hand out candy and other treats to the children on Halloween Night. “It’s kind of a tradition for businesses in Anza,” he said. In addition to handing out treats the staff will open the recording studio so anyone interested can come in and participate in the “Howls for Halloween” contest. The station’s nickname is Koyote Radio and may include a coyote “howl” sound to help identify itself to listeners. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requires radio stations to identify themselves on a regular basis while on the air. “We will have the kids give their best howl and winner may become the station’s future ‘howl’ sound. It should be a lot of fun, a howling good time,” he said. The station plans to pre-record some of its music and commentaries for broadcast, while other programs will be broadcast live.

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October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

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Anza Local

High Country 4-H members raise funds with help of Tractor Supply company

High Country 4-H members Lyddiah and Gideon Gorino standing in front of the 4-H display at Tractor Supply Company in Murrieta. Allison Renck photos

Piper Bell High Country 4-H Reporter Hi, I’m Piper Bell and I’m in the High Country 4-H and I’m the club reporter. I will be talking about the fundraiser we had on Saturday, Oct. 10 at Tractor Supply. The fundraiser we had at Tractor Supply was to raise money for the National, State, County and Club 4-H programs. This fundraiser was

+ Local Lore + A sheer drop Mallard Fudd Special to Anza Valley Outlook Years ago in Anza California I had the opportunity to ride horse back with two friends of mine down what is known as Coyote Canyon, just east of Anza. It was a great day with blue skies and a warm and friendly breeze. We traveled several miles into the canyon. Wanting to experience the reality of riding a horse in this area we of course shied away from the dirt road that ran the length of the canyon and instead traveled the terrain through brush using whatever animal trails that we could find. The going was slow and that’s how we liked it. There were however several times as during any ride when the riding became a challenge, after all that is what riding is about. The day went on uneventfully and as the late afternoon approached we decided to ride back to Anza. As we were having such a great time riding we made the decision to return later than we would have liked so we eventually decided to use the dirt road on the rest of the return trip. As we were riding up the road we came to a place where cottonwood trees were growing on each side of the road and a small stream about 15 foot wide of mostly standing water crossed the road. As I approached the stream I was momentarily startled by what looked to me like a sheer drop off. As we got closer my mind realized it was a reflection of the trees and sky in the standing water that presented this illusion. I rode on but my horse did not. As a matter of fact none of the horses would cross the water. They apparently saw the drop off too. After nudging and cajoling the animals my one friend became frustrated and began kicking the sides of his horse to force it across. My other friend realized the problem and dismounting his horse, walked him to the edge of the water, where he reached down, cupped one hand full of water and put it to his horses mouth. He then slowly led his horse into the water. As soon as the horse’s feet hit the water the stillness of the stream was destroyed and the illusion of the drop off vanished. The other horses although needing to be lead, now crossed the drop off with no problem. To comment on this story online, visit www.anzavalleyoutlook.com.

fun because we met a lot of people who were in the 4-H club when they were kids. We raised about $445 for the 4-H program that day by going up to people and talking to them about 4-H and all the fun projects we have. I met a lot of the employees and they helped me get used to talking to people. The people who participated in the Tractor Supply Dollars for 4-H fundraiser are

High Country 4-H Club wants to thank Tractor Supply Company and the manager of the Murrieta Store James Blow, pictured with High Country 4-H members Piper Bell, Madison Hebets, Leia Meyer and Alicia Williamson for their support of the 4-H program.

Alicia Williamson, Leia Meyer, Madison Hebets, Lyddiah Gorino, Gideon Gorino, Issidore Landen, Marcelino Landen, and Paloma Landen and I. Our club High Country 4-H wants to thank the manager of the Murrieta Tractor Supply, James Blow and Tractor Supply Co, for helping the 4-H program raise funds. This fundraiser was a lot of fun and I hope everybody who

reads this article will want to join the 4-H or donate money to support our club.

Lecture on fault zones, earthquakes to be held

ANZA – Residents are invited to attend an informal lecture by Frank Vernon on Friday, Nov. 6th at 5:30 p.m. titled “Observations from the San Jacinto Fault Zone.” Vernon has been a Research Seismologist at the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and the University of California at San Diego. He earned his B.S. from UC San Diego and his Ph.D. from Scripps. Since 1982, Vernon has been the principal investigator on the Anza broadband and strong motion seismic network. This network has provided real-time seismic monitoring capability for southernmost California, one of the most active seismic zones in the U.S. He will be sharing the details of the data gathered in the Anza Area at the Hamilton Library hosted by the Hamilton Museum located at 57430 Mitchell Road in Anza, to the right of the Hamilton High’s administration building.


Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

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Anza Opinion Editor’s Note: Opinions do not necessarily reflect the views of the Anza Valley Outlook staff. We invite opinions on all sides of an issue. If you have an opinion, please send it as an email to editor@anzavalleyoutlook.com, or fax us at (760) 723-9606. All letters must include the author’s name, address and phone number. The Valley News/Anza Valley Outlook reserves the right to edit letters as necessary to fit the publication’s format.

Constitutionally the House cannot select a non-member Speaker Harold Pease Ph. D Special to Anza Valley Outlook Perhaps by the time this column is published a new Speaker of the House will have been selected and the issue resolved, for now. At present, with no member of the House wanting the job, the idea of having someone not presently a member selected by the House of Representatives is seriously being considered. Such would break a 225-year tradition and the Constitution. Those arguing for a Speaker not elected by the people do so on the basis that the Constitution does not require that the Speaker be a House member. This is true but a careful reading of the document could lead to no other conclusion. We begin with Article I, Section I: “All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the www.anzavalleyoutlook.com

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United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives.” The Constitution then separates the two bodies, but common to each is that all members are elected, the House by the people and the U. S. Senate by the states. In Section 2, “The House of Representatives shall be composed of Members chosen every second Year by the People of the several States.” This is followed in Section 5, “The House of Representatives,” all elected members, “shall choose their Speaker and other Officers; and shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.” If we start making exceptions for the position of Speaker, making it for the other officers as well could follow. Impeachment is the process of removing elected officers. The idea of giving someone, not elected by the peoples’ representatives, as for instance a non-member Speaker, power to remove someone who had been, runs counter to everything else that the Founders did. This logic has never been challenged, until now.

Presidential succession, with the Vice President replacing the President upon his death or inability to perform his duties, is assumed in the Constitution and established and utilized several times since. Although not in the Constitution as drafted, succession has been established since. Should the Vice President also cease to be able to function, the Speaker of the House is third in line to be president followed by the President pro tempore of the Senate—all elected offices. With all the specific requirements of the offices of House, or Senate, or President, it would be unconscionable that our Founders would allow someone not even an elected House member to be two heart beats from becoming president. Amendment 25, dealing with presidential disability and vice presidential vacancies ratified February 1967, also may shed some light on the question. It definitely gives language to the practice of the Vice President replacing the President with his demise or succession. It

also allows the President to temporarily step down should he feel incapable of fulfilling his duties and reinstate his position when he again feels able to do so. In his absence the Vice President temporarily becomes acting president. In either instance the Amendment directs him to correspond with both the Speaker of the House of Representatives (third in line for president) and President pro tempore of the Senate (fourth in line for president). These two officers of the legislative branch are also called into action should “the Vice President and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive departments, or of such other body as Congress may by law provide, transmit to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” Imagine the Founders of Amendment 25 extending to an unelected House Speaker the power to approve or disapprove a president’s

right to resume his office. No! There exists no language in the Constitution supporting a House Speaker not elected in the same manner as every other House member, or playing a role of power over those who had the people as their constituency, or over an elected President or Vice President. But there is much constitutional language that suggests otherwise. We were unable to determine who first advanced this absurd notion but we hope that we have helped lay this question to rest. Dr. Harold Pease is a syndicated columnist and an expert on the United States Constitution. He has dedicated his career to studying the writings of the Founding Fathers and applying that knowledge to current events. He has taught history and political science from this perspective for over 30 years at Taft College. To read more of his weekly articles, please visit www. LibertyUnderFire.org.

Pets depend on us so know the signs and symptoms of Evans Syndrome Kim Harris Managing Editor Originally I was going to write this week’s column on remembering our veterans, but I will hold that thought for a week to discuss something a little more personal to me, my love affair with my pets. I know I have written about them before, but this time things are different, I promise. My dogs and our one cat are like children to me. They take up a lot of time with all of the petting, feeding, walking and even cleaning up required of a pet owner, but they all bring me joy in their own little ways. The cat, like most cats, is aloof and cool and always lets me know when it is time for some attention, sometimes flopping down on my keyboard while I am working at home. We have an older dog that is super fun, she runs, jumps and chases the other’s around, but when they get out of hand, she turns into their Mama, letting them know right from wrong and what is acceptable.

The Chihuahua is the queen bee, her attitude of being better than all of all totally cracks me up. She hates it when she falls down or slips on the hardwood and realizes we have seen her be less than perfect, hanging her head and slinking away to lick her self-imposed exile until enough time has passed that she believes we have forgotten all about what she perceives to be less than perfect behavior. The baby of the group, a Pekingese and the only boy, is rough and tumble but quick to drop to the floor for a belly rub when anyone is within a 10 foot vicinity of him. Then there was Sandy. A Min Pin Schnauzer mix, she was always loving and kind. This spunky girl was patient, always waiting her turn at dinner time, and super sensitive to our moods, oftentimes laying her head in my lap in an attempt to comfort me after a bad day. Sandy passed away last week, after fighting a disease known as Evans Syndrome for only five days. It’s an insidious illness that manifests quickly, many times without

any particular cause. Her body attacked its own red blood cells and platelets, creating the inability to for the blood to clot. In the days following her diagnosis we spent thousands trying to save her, but ultimately an internal bleed caused her untimely demise and she died in my arms, comfortable and feeling loved thanks to the efforts of my husband, myself and our veterinarian. Only a few short days later as I write this, a tear comes to my eye as I think about the loss my family and I have suffered. So why am I writing about this particular incident which is near and dear to my heart this week? Because Evans Syndrome, while not a common disease, is something that all pet owners should be aware of. Caught early enough, many dogs recover from the illness, about twothirds of them, according to our vet. The signs and symptoms of this auto immune disorder are sometimes hard to spot but can include lethargy, loss of appetite, bruises on the skin, small red spots on the white parts

of the eyes, nose bleeds, bloody urine, bloody stools, pale gums, vomiting and with more advanced cases, such as Sandy’s, swelling in the abdominal area. I would encourage all pet owners, to take their dogs or cats – yes cats can get it too – to the veterinarian of their choice if their animals exhibit any of the above listed symptoms. What appears to be just a tummy ache, which is what we thought Sandy had, can sometimes be something much worse and only your veterinarian can determine the severity of the problem. As far as my beloved little blonde dog, Sandy, she has crossed the rainbow bridge, but I can only hope that her story would save other pets from the same fate. Remember, animals can’t tell us what is wrong; it is up to us to ensure they are taken care of when they aren’t feeling right. We depend on our pets for unconditional love and companionship; they depend on us to stay alive.

What is Democratic Socialism? Jane Chastain Special to AnzaValley Outlook Bernie Sanders, a socialist, has achieved quite a following in the race for the Democratic nomination for president. How many of his followers really know what he stands for? There was a telling moment in the first Democratic presidential debate in which Anderson Cooper tried to pin him down. It took several tries, but Cooper finally backed him into a corner when he said, “You don’t consider yourself a capitalist, though?” Sanders’ final answer to that simple question was, “No, I don’t.” Sanders calls himself a democratic socialist – so what exactly is that? A trip to the Democratic Socialist of America’s website, www.dsausa. org, will help put things in perspective. However, once there, you have to wade through a lot of verbiage to get to the bottom line. Here are the essentials: The Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) is the largest social-

ist organization in the United States and the principal U.S. affiliate of the Socialist International. (About DSA) We are socialists because we reject an economic order based on private profit.(Constitution: Purpose) We are activists committed to democracy as not simply one of our political values but our means of restructuring society. (About DSA) So there you have it. There are two basic economic systems at work in the world today: 1) The free market (private enterprise), better known as capitalism, and 2) socialism. In the free market or capitalist system, individuals own property. Individuals also own the means of production and set the price for their goods and services. In the socialist system, everything is owned collectively by the government. The government also owns the means of production and controls the distribution. The important questions for you to consider are these: In which of these two economic systems are the people free? And, are you really

willing to give up your freedom for free stuff? There are two ways a capitalism system becomes a socialist or communist system: By revolution, it simply creeps in over time. This famous quote by Alexander Fraser Tytler sums it up. “A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship.” In reality, it is hard to find a pure capitalist or socialist system in the world today. Most capitalist systems have at least some socialist programs, and socialism often gives way to communism or a dictatorship. The average life of a democracy is about 200 years. Our Founding Fathers wisely left the power in the hands of the

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people, where the government had very little control. Over the years, that has changed. You have to hand it to Sanders. He is more honest than most of his Democratic counterparts. He wants to dismantle our capitalism system, not by a revolution, but gradually through the ballot box: thus the term “democratic socialism.” During the debate, Hillary Clinton offered these weak statements in defense of capitalism: “I don’t think we should confuse what we have to do every so often in America, which is save capitalism from itself. … And it’s our job to rein in the excesses of capitalism so that it doesn’t run amok and doesn’t cause the kind of inequities we’re seeing in our economic system.” The political arm of the DSA is the congressional Progressive Caucus. Until 1999, it was part the DSA with Nancy Pelosi listed as a prominent member of the executive committee. However, once it was exposed, the caucus disappeared from dsausa.org and reappeared (minus Pelosi who was speaker of the House from 2007 to 2011) as an official arm of the House Democratic caucus. Presently, besides Sen. Sanders, there are 69 other declared progressive (socialist) Democrats, all in the House of Representatives, all in safe seats. Don’t underestimate their collective power. When Democrats last controlled the House, of the 20 standing committees, 10 of the most important were chaired by these progressives. Make no mistake: Democracy and socialism cannot be combined. It’s like trying to mix oil and water. Socialists believe that man can be perfected. Therefore, an all powerful government must be established until man no longer is capable of evil and utopia is reached. A democracy is based on the idea that we are created equal but imperfect. Perfection is the business of God. Therefore, this country has laws, checks and balances to protect us from each other and the government. Are you really willing to change that?


October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

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ANZA VALLEY OUTLOOK LEGAL NOTICES CHANGE OF NAME

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case Number: RIC 1511581 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner: SUMMER LYNN GONZALEZ Filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: SUMMER LYNN GONZALEZ Proposed Name: SUMMER LYNN KING THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: November 6, 2015 Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept: 2 The address of the court is 4050 Main St., Riverside, CA 92502 A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Anza Valley Outlook Date: Sept 25, 2015 Signed: John W. Vineyard, Judge of the Superior Court LEGAL: 2383 PUBLISHED: October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201511582 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: POWER LINE MOTORS 1654 Illinois Ave., Suite 1, Perris, CA 92571 County: Riverside Eric Peter Resch, 11664 Mt Waverly Ct., Rancho Cucamong, CA 91737 This business is conducted by an Individual Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Eric Peter Resch Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 10/19/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2394 PUBLISHED: October 30, November 6, 13, 20, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510659 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: CCI 73110 Hilltop Rd., Sky Valley, CA 92241 County: Riverside Mailing address: 73200 Hilltop Rd., Sky Valley, CA 92241 Custom Concrete, Inc., 44489 Town Center Way, Ste D PMB#475, Palm Desert, CA 92211 This business is conducted by a Corporation This Corporation is located in the state of California Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above on 2009. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Nicole Murdica Gonzalez Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 9/28/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2381 PUBLISHED: October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510581 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: PIZZA REV 2560 Tuscany Ave, Suite 101, Corona, CA 92881 County: Riverside Mailing Address: 3777 Long Beach Blvd., Suite 200, Long Beach, CA 90807 PAISANOS PIZZA, INC. 2933 Denmead Street, Lakewood, CA 90712 This business is conducted by a Corporation This Corporation is located in the state of California Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Olvin Arias Ramos Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 09/25/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2391 PUBLISHED: October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510746 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: WIDE WHITE KUSTOMS 42905 Calle Londe, Temecula, CA 92592 County: Riverside a. John Robert Brown, 42905 Calle Londe, Temecula, CA 92592 b. Otto - - Fonseca, 27985 Breakwater Ct., Menifee, CA 92585 This business is conducted by Co-partners Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed above on October 2014 I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: John Robert Brown Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 09/29/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2393 PUBLISHED: October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2015

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case Number: RIC 1511432 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner: TAUREAN AND PAMELA STOVER Filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: ANNALESIA JOI TERRY Proposed Name: ANNALESIA JOI STOVER THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: November 16, 2015 Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept: 2 The address of the court is 4050 Main St., Riverside, CA 92502 A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Anza Valley Outlook Date: Sept 24, 2015 Signed: John W. Vineyard, Judge of the Superior Court LEGAL: 2384 PUBLISHED: October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case Number: RIC 1511988 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner: ASHELY NUNEZ GEORGE NAVARRO Filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: JULIAN JASON NUNEZ Proposed Name: JULIAN JASON NAVARRO THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: 11-16-15 Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept: 2 The address of the court is 4050 Main St., Riverside, CA 92502 A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Anza Valley Outlook Date: OCT 5, 2015 Signed: John W. Vineyard, Judge of the Superior Court LEGAL: 2386 PUBLISHED: October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 2015 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case Number: RIC 1511920 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner: MA. BENIGNA ALTAMIRANO AZUCAR Filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: MA. BENIGNA ALTAMIRANO AZUCAR Proposed Name: BENINNA ALTAMIRANO-AZUCAR THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: 11-13-15 Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept: 2 The address of the court is 4050 Main St., Riverside, CA 92502 A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Anza Valley Outlook Date: OCT 2, 2015 Signed: John W. Vineyard, Judge of the Superior Court LEGAL: 2389 PUBLISHED: October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201511707 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: AB MARINE TECHNOLOGIES 6635 Lessie Ln, Riverside, CA 92503 County: Riverside a. Bjorn Michael Gerhard Laukenmann, 6635 Lessie Ln, Riverside, CA 92503 b. Andrew (--) Co, 6748 Borges St., Eastvale, CA 92880 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Partnership Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Bjorn Michael Gerhard Laukenmann Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 10/21/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2395 PUBLISHED: October 30, November 6, 13, 20, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510899 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. MORITZ ENTERPRISES 2. LONDONBLACKCAB.INFO 3. LONDON BLACK CAB.US 4. LONDONCABFORHIRE.COM 5. LONDONTAXIFORHIRE.COM 6. HONORTHEIRSERVICE.US 7. YOURMILITARYLEGACY.COM 14420 Elsworth Street, Ste 101, Moreno Valley, CA 92553 County: Riverside a. Mark Franklin Moritz b. J’ona Laverne Moritz Both residing at 14420 Elsworth St, Ste 101, Moreno Valley, CA 92553 This business is conducted by a Married Couple Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Mark Franklin Moritz Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 10/1/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2385 PUBLISHED: October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510469 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. LIBERTYWARE4U 2. DESIDERATA GALLERY 81120 Legends Way, La Quinta, CA 92253 County: Riverside Claudette Mary Armstrong, 81120 Legends Way, La Quinta, CA 92253 This business is conducted by an Individual Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Claudette Mary Armstrong Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 9/23/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2382 PUBLISHED: October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201508508 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. AFFORDABLE MASONRY & LANDSCAPE 2. CAVEMAN BUILDING MATERIALS 24525 Freeport Dr., Moreno Valley, CA 92551 County: Riverside Mailing address: 40960 California Oaks Rd., Unit 154, Murrieta, CA 92562 Ian Patrick Daley, 24525 Freeport Dr., Moreno Valley, CA 92562 This business is conducted by an Individual Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Ian Patrick Daley Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 8/7/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2365 PUBLISHED: September 4, 11, 18, 25, 2015 RE-PUBLISHED: October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015 Second business name was missing from original publication

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510543 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: WEST COAST METAL 1785 Massachuetts, Riverside. CA 92507 County: Riverside Mailing Address: PO BOX 444, Etiwanda, CA. 92507 RCS INDUSTRIES INC. 14202 San Antonio Dr., Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91739 This business is conducted by a Corporation This Corporation is located in the state of California Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Raymond Eugene Schile Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 09/24/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2392 PUBLISHED: October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201511248 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: BEAST MODE MOVING 27724 Genevieve Dr. Sun City, CA 92586 County: Riverside Stephen Gabriel Franklin 27724 Genevieve Dr. Sun City, CA 92586 This business is conducted by an Individual Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Stephen Gabriel Franklin Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 10/09/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2387 PUBLISHED: October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510843 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: FLOOD RESPONSE 72-104 Corporate Way, Thousand Palms, CA 92276 County: Riverside Mailing address: Same MacDonald Service Group, Inc. 72-104 Corporate Way, Thousand Palms, CA 92276 This business is conducted by a Corporation This Corporation is located in the state of California Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed above on 2005. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Neil MacDonald Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 9/30/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2388 PUBLISHED: October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 2015

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: R-201510906 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: WISEMOTORS AUTO SALES 39683 Corte Santa Barbara, Murrieta CA 92563 County: Riverside a. Nancy -- Zuniga b. Andres Felipe Zuniga Both residing at 39683 Corte Santa Barbara, Murrieta CA 92563 This business is conducted by a Married Couple Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious name(s) listed above. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Registrant: Nancy -- Zuniga Statement was filed with the County Clerk of Riverside County on 10/02/2015 NOTICE—IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (a) OF SECTION 17920, A FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENT GENERALLY EXPIRES AT THE END OF FIVE YEARS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH IT WAS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, EXCEPT, AS PROVIDED IN SUBDIVIONS (b) OF SECTION 17920, WHERE IT EXPIRES 40 DAYS AFTER ANY CHANGE IN THE FACTS SET FORTH IN THE STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 17913 OTHER THAN A CHANGE IN THE RESIDENCE ADDRESS OF A REGISTERED OWNER. A NEW FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT MUST BE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION. THE FILING OF THIS STATEMENT DOES NOT OF ITSELF AUTHORIZE THE USE IN THIS STATE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME IN VIOLATION OF THE RIGHTS OF ANOTHER UNDER FEDERAL, STATE, OR COMMON LAW (SEE SECTION 14411 ET SEQ., BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE). LEGAL: 2390 PUBLISHED: October 16, 23, 30, November 6, 2015

Legal Advertising TRUSTEE SALE

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE File No. 7023.102991 Title Order No. 120329405 MIN No. 1001416-0000008611-1 APN 583-220-008-8 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 12/21/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER.A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in §5102 to the Financial code and authorized to do business in this state, will be held by duly appointed trustee. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to satisfy the obligation secured by said Deed of Trust. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or other common designation, if any, shown herein. Trustor(s): Margaret G. Moreno, an unmarried woman Recorded: 01/11/2007, as Instrument No. 2007-0024929, of Official Records of Riverside County, California. Date of Sale: 12/09/2015 at 9:00 AM Place of Sale: 2410 Wardlow Road #104, Corona, CA The purported property address is: 47480 CAMERO ROAD, AGUANGA, CA 92536 Assessors Parcel No. 583-220-008-8 The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is $63,140.32. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid, plus interest. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the beneficiary, the Trustor or the trustee. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 877-484-9942 or visit this Internet Web site www.USA-Foreclosure.com or www.Auction.com using the file number assigned to this case 7023.102991. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: October 20, 2015 NORTHWEST TRUSTEE SERVICES, INC., as Trustee Julian Ojeda, Authorized Signatory 1241 E. Dyer Road, Suite 250, Santa Ana, CA 92705 Reinstatement and Pay-Off Requests: (866) 387-NWTS THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. MORENO, MARGARET G. ORDER # 7023.102991: 10/30/2015,11/06/2015,11/13/2015

Notice To Readers: California law requires that contractors taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor or materials) be licensed by the Contractors State License Board. State law also requires that contractors include their license number on all advertising. You can check the status of your licensed contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking jobs that total less than $500 must state in their advertisements that they are not licensed by the Contractors State License Board.

Run your legal notices in the Anza Valley Outlook, adjudicated for Riverside County. n Application Order for Publication of Summons/Citation..........................$400 for 4 Weeks n Notice of Petition to Administer Estate ....................................................$300 for 3 Weeks n Order to Show Cause for Change of Name........ (Each additional name add $5.00) $80 for 4 Weeks n Fictitious Business Name Statement ................ (Each additional name add $5.00) $52 for 4 Weeks n Abandonment of Fictitious Business Name Statement ..............................$52 for 4 Weeks n Notice of Lien Sale.......................................................................................$60 for 2 Weeks n Notice of Application to Sell Alcoholic Beverages ....................................... $35 for 1 Week

......................................$80 for 3 Weeks

n Request for Proposal .................................................................................$250 for 4 Weeks n Notice to Defendant ..................................................................................$400 for 4 Weeks n Notice of Hearing -Decendant’s Estate or Trust ........................................$300 for 3 Weeks n Notice of Sale or Unclaimed Personal Property .......................................$150 for 2 Weeks n Trustee’s Sale ....................................................................... $200 for 3 Weeks • 1 col x 8 in

..................................................................... $250 for 3 Weeks • 1 col x 10 in

n Notice to Absent Spouse ...........................................................................$150 for 4 Weeks n Dissolution of Marriage.............................................................................$250 for 4 Weeks n Land Patent ...............................................................................................$280 for 3 Weeks

Deadline: Fridays at 3pm for following week’s publication. To advertise call Lisa at 760-723-7319 or email lhasler@thevillagenews.com


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Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

Faith

The Manifold Wisdom of God should be made to all Dick Mills Special to Anza Valley Outlook “The manifold wisdom of God should be made known by the church.” Ephesians 3:10 God is a God of variety. He doesn’t put us all through the same cookie cutter. We are not carbon copies, clones, or a ditto of His making. Each human being has his own individuality, his own identity and his own personality. This word manifold is a word that has a lot going for it. The New Testament originally reads “polupoikilos” and is defined as multifarious, much variegated, and having multiplicity; in

other words, wisdom with many shades, hues, tints, or facets. The church of the Lord Jesus Christ has been chosen to show how much variety exists in God’s nature. The same word was used to describe Joseph’s coat of many colors. Joseph’s 11 brothers all wore the same designer fabric, probably a seamless light purple. When Joseph’s father Jacob dressed him up in a coat of many colors, it put a distance between him and his brothers. It even caused them to be envious of what they interpreted as “favorable status.” Later the Lord used him to help his brothers make it through a seven-year famine.

Like-minded in Christianity Kim Harris Managing Editor I have a confession to make. I haven’t been to church in three weeks. Not because I don’t want to go, I just have been letting life get in the way. Last weekend, it was the need to get mulch down in the garden beds, the week before I was down sick with a virus. Three weeks ago one of my kids had a project for school that had been left until the last minute. Other than not wanting to expose the entire congregation at my church to a nasty illness, there really isn’t a valid excuse for my not getting up and getting my family to church. I can tell when I haven’t been to church for a while. It’s not like my life is falling down around me, it’s more of the little things. Maybe my fuse is a little shorter; maybe things just don’t go the way I want or need them to or maybe it’s nothing definite I can put my finger on. I feel just a little out of sorts when I miss church. Fellowship is important when you talk about growth in Christ. I have always heard that you should surround yourself with like-minded people and I believe that is a true statement. My church-going friends just seem to “get it” when I talk about my faith. Those who aren’t churchgoers don’t always understand where I am coming from when I talk about something like forgiving someone who has wronged me. My like-minded friends understand where I am coming from. Philippians 2:2 tells us “then make my joy complete by being like minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and of one mind.” I Peter 3:8 says, “Fi-

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p Gos

ley l a V pel a h C Pastors Blake and Stephanie Booth and the Church Family at Valley Gospel want to meet you. Come visit us at

nally, all of you, be like minded, be sympathetic, love one another, be compassionate and humble.” It sounds to me that being like-minded in Christ is something that we should strive to be. Showing others compassion, love and sympathy is not a difficult thing to do and perhaps if we all showed more of those qualities this world would be a better place. Another thing that occurs to me as I write this column is how important fellowship and worship with like-minded people really is to spiritual well-being. Acts 2:42 tells us, “And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.” Colossians 3:16 says “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God.” Matthew 18:20 is perhaps the most powerful verse to me when I think about worshipping in fellowship with other believers in Christ. “For where two or three are gathered in my name, there I am among them.” The Bible is full of verses regarding worship, giving us guidance on that aspect of our lives. God doesn’t care if you worship in a mega-church or a field out on the back forty. He just wants us all to worship together and spread the Word. He gave his only son for you and I. Life didn’t get in the way when God created the earth or when Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane. I think the least I can do is make sure life doesn’t get in my way on Sunday mornings.

How does the manifold wisdom of God apply to you and me? The New King James translates the word as many-sided wisdom. When Martin Luther lit the fires of reformation, the Lord was showing another side of his wisdom. John Wesley came along and showed another facet of wisdom. Subsequent visitations and demonstrations of God’s Holy Spirit added luster to the body of Christ. At this present time there are indications by the Holy Spirit’s activities of yet another demonstration of God’s wisdom and power. You can be the recipient of His glory and presence. The Lord wants to take you to places

you have never been before, show you things you’ve never seen before, cause you to say things you’ve never said before, do things you’ve never done before, and hear things you’ve never heard before. It’s found in Ephesians 3:10 and is yours for the asking. Godspeed Translation -”So that the many- sided wisdom of God may now through the church be known to the rulers and authorities in heaven”. Editor’s note: Dick Mills was well known for sharing “ I have a good word for you” out of his simple obedience of sharing a word from the Lord... a worldwide ministry was formed. He

was a deep scholar of Bible Scriptures and their meanings. He was friend and confidant and encourager to many Pastors and Evangelists. Dick spent his last days in Anza living with his daughter’s family. Even though he has passed on, his ministry lives on through his son and grandsons. With permission Anza Valley Outlook will be sharing some of his wisdom from his devotionals which he wrote with the intention to strengthen faith. To learn more about Dick Mills and his ministries go to www. dmm.org.

Your Life in Photos Every week, the Anza Valley Outlook gives locals the opportunity to share their captured moments with others. From birthday parties and graduations, to landscapes and wildlife, Anza Valley Outlook is looking for photos of all sorts and the stories that go with them. Those who would like to submit a photo(s) with an accompanying caption(s) should send them to the editor@anzavalleyoutlook.com. Malia, Michelle’s oldest daughter and Michelle share the same horse War Paint’s Red Cloud AKA Tic-tac a handsome Tennessee Walker in the local Gymkhanas. Last year they won the 2014 end of the season Anza Lions Buckles; Malia in the Junior Class and Michelle in the Old Timer’s Class. This makes four such buckles for Tic-tac; 2011, 2012 and two buckles in 2014. This was a great feat for him as Gymkhana Games such as pole bending, key hole, and barrel racing, are not easily for gaited horses. Michelle Trist photo

(Right and below) Sandy Fletcher, who took the photos from Table Top Mountain, said, “Amazing Summer Sunsets are always a proud moment. We have the best view of the sun setting behind the Cahuilla Mountain.”

Sandy Fletcher photo

New Pastors- New Outlook Building a “Church Culture” that develops a Spirit of Giving, Strong Faith, Strong Families Sandy Fletcher photo

Breakfast - Meet and Greet 9:30am Sunday Service 10 am Child care is prov ided

43275 Chapman Rd, Anza 951.763.4622 www.Valleygospelchapel.org

Tabitha Dawes of Anza shares her photo of Clouds in an October Sky above Coyote Canyon. Tabitha Dawes photo

From the Heart Holiday Dinner Grieving? Know someone who is?

When you are grieving a loved one’s death, the holiday season can be especially painful. Our Surviving the Holidays seminar helps participants prepare for the holidays and even discover hope for the future.

Join us Friday, Nov. 20th at 1pm Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church

56095 pena road, anza • 951.763.4226 for directions

Saturday, November 14th

6pm-8pm Anza Community Hall in Anza Join us for an amazing fundraising event to raise money for our Christmas Gift Program for area kids. Enjoy a Full Dinner with turkey, ham, potatoes, dressing and pie. Also enjoy music, fun, fellowship and raffle opportunities.

Tickets $15 Each or $25 for Two RSVP Recommended - Call Christy 951-595-2400 or Linda 951-216-8895


B

ANZA VALLEY

OUTLOOK

Section

WITH CONTENT FROM

October 30 – November 5, 2015

www.myvalleynews.com

Volume 15, Issue 44

REAL ESTATE / HOME & GARDEN

Healthy & Beautiful Gardens The Fall Garden

Linda McDonald-Cash Landscape Designer Hello Fellow Gardeners and Neighbors! Where does the time go to? Can hardly believe it’s already Halloween – again! Anyway, the good news is the weather will be getting cooler and that’s always great for both us and our plants. I’d like to talk a bit about what to do in your garden at this time of year, October into November. Obviously, as your leaves fall, you might like to tidy them up a bit and I suggest composting them of course, they’re too precious to just throw away and will really add to your compost pile, which I just know you have! Read my past articles on composting, should be able to pull one up from the internet edition of the paper, at www. myvalleynews.com. Personally I

love seeing orange and red leaves in the landscape and I don’t consider them messy but I guess I’m kind of different. Something that I just started here at my house, and I suggest you might like to grow some as well, are Sweet Peas. What I do is soak the large seeds for a day or two, you will see some tiny white sprouts coming out of the seeds if you leave them in long enough (several days) and that’s ok. From this point you can start potting them, I’ve got four small pots with approximately eight baby plants in each pot now. You could also put them right in the ground, but make sure they get watered regularly though. The reason you want to get these going now, they are “cool season” plants and they will be blooming their heads off right when you really would love to see some color in the garden, and not only that but the fragrance is to die for! Sweet peas are one of my absolute favorites for cutting and filling vases in the house with, that way you really get to enjoy not only their beauty but scent up close. Lots of varieties to choose from – I like the Heirloom or Old Fashioned varieties, and it will state that on the package, they twine and will need support like any vine or you can let them sprawl if you so desire. These are annual vines, but you can save the seeds, like I do, and plant again next year!

Tulips and daffodils in bloom.

Courtesy photo

They come in single colors, like scarlet, magenta, pink, lilac, white and bi-colored, or mixed. Next recommendation on my list would be bulbs since this is the time of year to plant them, lots of varieties available, just make

sure they’re healthy good sized bulbs. I know Armstrong and most dedicated nurseries will carry good stock, not sure about the “big box” stores, but you can try them if you are on a tighter budget. One of my personal favorites are Paperwhites

(very fragrant) – in the same family as Daffodils – both are Narcissus and will do excellent in our climate zone. I like to “force” some into bloom early, before the normal

see FALL, page B-2

Market at a glance (As of October 25, 2015) TEMECULA No of Homes Sold Inventory of Properties Listed

(24)

28

MURRIETA (34)

37

WILDOMAR (8)

7

LAKE ELSINORE (18)

CANYON LAKE

20

(5) 4

MENIFEE (26)

30

SUN CITY

HEMET

(7) 7

(39) 41

(486) 476

(473) 449

(100) 107

(316) 314

(154) 157

(203) 198

(241) 241

(642) 633

Average Selling Price

$457,502

$410,270

$297,114

$293,518

$436,250

$289,086

$187,971

$181,127

Average List Price

$714,645

$623,314

$365,677

$340,669

$549,256

$354,926

$251,415

$211,790

Median List Price

$516,500

$419,900

$349,990

$325,000

$449,500

$344,450

$239,999

$189,900

Asking Price per Square Foot

$190

$167

$149

$149

$194

$145

$119

(76) 79

(94) 100

$775,000

$539,990

$1,750,000

$125,000

$195,000

$25,000

$9,500

27

13

27

32

39%

50%

44%

42%

33%

10%

10%

10%

9%

9%

Average Days on Market

(109) 111

Most Expensive Listing

$7,700,000

$3,788,000

$1,099,900

$1,750,000

$2,500,000

Least Expensive Listing

$30,000

$139,000

$115,000

$32,000

Average Age of Listing

16

17

19

21

% of Properties w/ Price decrease

49%

45%

38%

% of Properties Relisted (reset DOM)

19%

10%

11%

% of Flip properties (price increase)

(91)

98

(68)

68

(83)

84

(86) 86

$144 (72)

73

6%

5%

8%

8%

2%

5%

8%

6%

3000

2913

2209

2198

2274

2438

1618

1512

8001-10,000

8001-10,000

8001-10,000

6501-8000

6501-8000

6501-8000

6501-8000

6501-8000

Median Number of Bedrooms

4.0

4.0

4.0

4.0

3.0

4.0

3.0

3.0

Median Number of Bathrooms

3.0

3.0

2.5

2.5

2.5

2.5

2.0

2.0

Seller (38.5)

Seller (40.4)

Seller (42.4)

Seller (39.2)

Seller (32.8)

Seller (40.8)

Seller (39.5)

Seller (38.3)

Median House Size (sq ft) Median Lot Size (sq ft)

Market Action Index*

*This Index measures the current rate of sale versus the amount of inventory. Index above 30 implies a seller’s advantage. Below 30, conditions give the advantage to the buyer. Market data provided by Escrow Leaders (Altos Research) and is current as of 10/26/15. Sales Data provided by SRCAR (MLS) and current as of 10/25/15. Boxes with multiple entries have previous week’s numbers (in parentheses) and this week’s number for comparision purposes. Strong Trends (multiple weeks) in each area are indicated by color: green indicates upward trend; pink indicates downward trend. Valley News makes no representation as to the accuracy or completeness of this data.

Various ways to put pumpkins to use TEMECULA – Few items signal the fall harvest season more than the bright, orange pumpkins that dot fields and liven up displays outside of homes and businesses. Come fall, many pumpkins are turned into grinning Jack-o-lanterns just in time for Halloween. But there are many other uses for pumpkins as well. Pumpkins are believed to have originated in North America. Early Native Americans relied on pumpkins as a source of food that helped them survive long winters. Pumpkins could be roasted, baked, boiled, and dried, and they were eaten and used as medicine. Pumpkin blossoms were added to stews. The shells of the pumpkins could be dried and used as eating and storage vessels. While pumpkins may now be symbolic of Halloween, the following are a handful of additional ways this versatile fruit can be put to use.

Pumpkins can be used as more than just tasty pie fillings.

Courtesy photo

Beauty regimen Pumpkins contain a number of essential vitamins and minerals that can help replenish the skin. Pumpkin puree can be mixed with honey, aloe vera gel, olive oil, and a bit of cornmeal to create an exfoliating

mask for the face or body. Pumpkin also can be used to rejuvenate dry or tired skin from cold weather. Honey, pumpkin and yogurt can be mixed together and used to condition hair. Let the mixture sit for 15 to 20 minutes, and then wash it out and shampoo. Foods and beverages Pumpkin puree is the basis for many tasty, pumpkin-infused treats. Puree can be used in pies, cakes, muffins, breads, and many additional foods. Pumpkin puree also may be found in certain beverages, such as smoothies and shakes. A bit of spiced puree may appear as flavoring in teas and coffees. Roasted pumpkin seeds make a healthy treat. Foodies suggest using the seeds from sugar pumpkins or the ones best for making pies. Boil the seeds for a few minutes before draining. Spray a baking sheet with non-stick spray and put the seeds in a single layer. Bake at 400 F for 20 minutes. Allow to cool and serve. Pumpkin wines and beers are popular as well. There are many recipes for developing sweet, fermented beverages, which tend to be

especially popular in the fall. The “guts” of the pumpkin can be simmered along with aromatics and other vegetables to create a vegetable stock perfect for soups and broths. Decorations Pumpkins can also add to one’s home decor during the fall. Pumpkins can be carved for Halloween displays, hollowed-out to hold tealights or simply left on tables and used as centerpieces. Larger pumpkins may be used as natural flower pots for mums or other seasonal floral displays. As the Native Americans once did, pumpkins can be hollowed-out and used as bowls to serve favorite soups and dips. Use a hollowed, small pumpkin as a natural aromatic candle holder. Cut holes in the sides to vent the exhaust. Rub aromatic spices, such as cloves, nutmeg, allspice, cinnamon, and vanilla bean, on the inside of the pumpkin. Insert a beeswax candle in the bottom of the pumpkin and let it send inviting aromas into the air. Pumpkins are a versatile fruit that can serve many purposes beyond just jack-o-lanterns and pies.


Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

B-2

Home & Garden / Real Estate times and make a beautiful display. For those of you who actually grow your own veggies – good for you! This is the time, if you haven’t already, to get those cool season crops into the beds. You’ll find great selections at the nurseries, such as broccoli, kale, lettuce, carrots, and even biennials such as Parsley. Seeds will work, but take awhile to germinate and get going, so radishes and carrots are two of those, you don’t buy those in six packs! November is probably the best month of the year for planting just about any type of ornamental shrubs and trees, they’ll have all winter to spread out roots and acclimate before the hot weather hits, and with the rain we’re expecting that will really give them a great start in your garden. Don’t forget to amend the soil and compost is the best, especially home made, but any type of organics will

FALL from page B-1 spring bloom, and the way you do that is chill them, or ask if they’re pre-chilled already, for about a month (I’ve potted them and even squeezed the entire pot into the fridge occasionally, husband didn’t appreciate it though!) leave them there for about 4-6 weeks, then bring out into the warmth of the house, water and put into a cabinet where it’s a little dark for them to root. You will eventually see shoots coming up from the top – time to bring them out and give them some light! They will flower approximately 2-3 weeks later. You can do this with hyacinth bulbs, Amaryllis, and many others. I’m seeing Dutch Iris coming up in my garden right now, and its waaaay too early for them, must be the crazy weather. Also fun to mix bulbs in a large container, they usually come up at different

Paperwhite grown in a bowl with just rocks and water.

help the soil, and for our heavy clay I recommend lots! Starting in December you’ll be finding deciduous trees bare root, much cheaper that way, so if you’d like deciduous (lose their leaves now) wait until then to buy them. You’ll also be finding bare root roses and fruit at that time, and I will be doing another entire article on roses close to that time. I don’t know about your roses, but mine are blooming their heads off right now, October is usually the best bloom next to May of the year, they may continue into November as well, but don’t prune yet, late winter is when you’ll want to do that. I’ll let you know when and how. I don’t really recommend fertilizing anything at this point, probably should have done that in September, because we don’t particularly want to encourage new growth heading into the winter months. Evergreens would be fine with some, especially if you see that they really needs, yellowing on green leaves would be a good sign that they need iron and nitrogen, I assume you’re not overwatering! Our weather and seasons are so off now that my apple tree, I’ve got a Dwarf Fuji, produced one crop already, more are coming on about the size of golf balls, and also have blooms, all on the same tree at the same time! Crazy! Well, that’s about it for this week, remember if you have any questions or topics you’d like to see written about here, please contact me and let me know. Have a great week out there in the garden!

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Hyacinths have very fragrant blooms and can be either forced or Courtesy photos planted in garden.

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October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

B-3

Home & Garden / Real Estate Recent Home Sales

List of transactions from selected cities in Southwest Riverside County • 191 closed transactions for 10-19-15 through 10-25-15.

www.srcar.org • (951) 894-2571 Murrieta Chamber of Commerce’s 2014 "Medium Size Business of the Year" City Anza

Canyon Lake

Hemet

Lake Elsinore

Address

Sale Price

Sq. Ft.

Bedrooms

Bath

Days on Market

Murrieta 26529 Jefferson Ave. City

Sale Price

Sq. Ft.

Bedrooms

Bath

Days on Market

City

Address

Sale Price

Sq. Ft.

Bedrooms

Bath

Days on Market 33

37515 Bohlen

$230,000

1688

3BR

3BA

122

53235 Champlain Street

$325,000

2867

4BR

3BA

17

30830 Prairie Sun Way

$390,000

2384

4BR

2BA

$127,500

1288

3BR

2BA

116

15221 Golden Sands Street

$289,900

1362

3BR

2BA

42

42623 Meadowlark

$745,000

3472

4BR

5BA

15

53110 Benton Way

$205,000

1508

3BR

2BA

107

15711 Lake Ridge Road

$280,000

2020

4BR

2BA

38

39775 Ashland Way

$430,000

2990

5BR

3BA

41

61264 Spanish Dagger Lane

$249,000

1728

3BR

2BA

105

$240,000

1728

3BR

2BA

189

23593 Schooner Drive

$300,000

1653

3BR

2BA

23494 Schooner Drive

$330,000

2004

3BR

30312 Point Marina Drive

$875,000

3052

951 Johnston Avenue

$60,000

Murrieta

Menifee 27070 Sun City Blvd.

56550 Valley View Road

23118 Big Tee Drive

Lake Elsinore

Address

Hemet 2355 E. Florida

31993 Sugarbush Lane

$330,000

2457

4BR

3BA

8

39457 TANGLETREE Way

$310,000

1420

3BR

2BA

36

29403 Aquifer Lane

$324,000

2854

4BR

3BA

117

23682 Kathryn Street

$440,000

2788

5BR

3BA

5

145

27620 Boston

$247,000

2011

3BR

2BA

293

$325,000

2076

4BR

2BA

3

2BA

107

31280 Geary Street

$100,000

1078

2BR

2BA

229

23540 Mountain Breeze Drive

4BR

4BA

101

29051 Hogan Drive

$235,000

1635

2BR

2BA

146

212

2156

3BR

2BA

207

25073 Babbling Brook Circle

$315,000

2459

5BR

3BA

99

Menifee

24979 Rhine Street

$210,000

2147

4BR

2BA

230

30646 Lake Pointe Drive

$317,500

2374

4BR

3BA

123

305 Mayberry Avenue

$172,000

1631

3BR

2BA

188

26468 Nova Lane

$269,900

1954

4BR

2BA

73

467 Terry Lane

$185,000

1696

3BR

2BA

147

30054 Wales Court

$378,416

2310

3BR

2BA

38

4885 Creekridge Lane

$251,500

2689

5BR

3BA

123

29685 Calle De Caballos

$380,000

1926

4BR

3BA

58

1456 Saint Croix Drive

$134,900

1674

2BR

2BA

106

27781 Lake Ridge Drive

$343,000

2854

4BR

3BA

68

2725 Manzanita Way

$80,000

1440

2BR

2BA

121

26114 Mantle Drive

$295,000

2064

4BR

2BA

82

25891 Baylor Way

$64,500

860

2BR

1BA

136

30818 Falcon Ridge Circle

$350,000

2562

4BR

4BA

41

26755 Hemet Street

$124,000

980

2BR

2BA

28

31645 Mayhew Lane

$237,000

1196

3BR

2BA

51

41960 Whittier Avenue

$244,900

1425

3BR

2BA

118

26456 Nova Lane

$265,000

1715

3BR

2BA

60

657 Holly Drive

$128,000

1320

2BR

2BA

155

28683 Chaparral View Drive

$348,000

2953

5BR

3BA

80

4820 Woods Lane

$270,000

3128

5BR

3BA

71

26732 Cactus Creek Way

$328,000

2921

4BR

3BA

36

2769 Grand Teton Avenue

$189,000

1462

3BR

2BA

84

29204 Deer Creek Circle

$275,000

1272

3BR

2BA

73

1140 Whittier Avenue

$122,000

1392

2BR

2BA

83

29278 Pineleaf Street

$373,450

2892

4BR

3BA

25

40534 Whittier Avenue

$160,000

1217

3BR

2BA

62

28197 Orangegrove Avenue

$238,000

1206

3BR

2BA

68

1267 Silica Court

$200,000

1318

3BR

2BA

84

27220 Wentworth Drive

$157,000

992

2BR

1BA

36

41943 Butler Lane

$138,000

912

3BR

1BA

20

30144 Via Amante

$287,000

1743

3BR

3BA

26

27400 Pachea

$465,000

4917

5BR

5BA

8

27841 Winter Branch Court

$262,000

1297

2BR

2BA

19

261 Mary Lane

$87,500

996

2BR

1BA

84

28588 Sunridge Court

$315,000

2376

4BR

2BA

48

3842 Paris Street

$230,000

1640

4BR

2BA

55

27218 Monk Street

$230,000

2011

3BR

2BA

36

25075 Liege Drive

$165,375

1324

3BR

2BA

42

29442 Castaway Court

$339,999

2763

4BR

3BA

4

4337 Annatto Lane

$295,000

2925

4BR

4BA

34

28627 Woodchester Way

$310,800

3356

4BR

3BA

19

5676 Corte Ruiz

$257,500

1689

2BR

2BA

46

28711 Bridge Water Lane

$279,000

1777

4BR

3BA

44

41952 El Camino Drive

$230,000

1404

3BR

2BA

18

30157 Calle Pompeii

$340,000

2373

5BR

3BA

10

421 Thompson Street

$139,900

927

2BR

1BA

18

28960 Boulder Crest Way

$295,000

2152

4BR

2BA

15

820 Costo Lane

$116,000

996

2BR

1BA

27

27632 Camino Bella

$237,500

1835

4BR

3BA

11

3035 La Habra Avenue

$157,000

1216

2BR

2BA

7

27454 Yellow Wood Way

$332,325

3073

4BR

3BA

279

41182 Mcdowell Street

$239,000

2183

3BR

3BA

50

38200 Bear Canyon Drive

$825,000

3763

3BR

4BA

165

Murrieta

44826 Cornish Avenue

$85,000

1344

2BR

2BA

12

27525 Sunray Court

$276,000

1797

3BR

3BA

186

41649 Lomas Street

$261,500

2325

4BR

2BA

50

23591 Gingerbread Drive

$320,000

2757

5BR

3BA

110

41748 Erin Drive

$198,000

1686

3BR

2BA

14

35923 Red Bluff

$418,000

3146

4BR

2BA

116

25945 Carbob Lane

$250,000

1988

4BR

2BA

7

41784 Leila Verde Street

$640,000

3361

5BR

4BA

132

8070 Bay Hill Avenue

$220,000

1532

2BR

2BA

42

34127 San Sebastian Avenue

$337,075

3235

5BR

5BA

60

924 Dennis Way

$47,000

784

2BR

2BA

10

23539 Taft Court

$405,000

2828

4BR

3BA

97

42807 Seal Rock Court

$175,000

1133

3BR

2BA

25

41998 Kodiak Court

$470,000

2328

4BR

3BA

90

973 Lexington Street

$210,250

1552

3BR

2BA

2

41196 Mountain Pride Drive

$302,000

1277

3BR

2BA

28

2864 Lynae Way

$149,900

1214

2BR

2BA

4

23603 Euclid Street

$426,000

3632

5BR

3BA

69

2212 El Rancho Circle

$136,500

1320

2BR

2BA

32

35799 Wolverine Lane

$319,000

2738

4BR

3BA

53

26509 Chestnut Drive

$143,000

1616

3BR

2BA

1

25188 Corte Sur

$342,000

1825

3BR

2BA

56

332 Tabby Lane

$345,000

2616

4BR

3BA

0

35929 Wolverine Lane

$350,000

2520

4BR

3BA

19

459 Langer Court

$335,000

2665

2BR

2BA

19

35807 ALPENTAL Lane

$261,000

1456

3BR

3BA

82

34310 Blossoms Drive

$269,000

1846

3BR

2BA

228

31131 Old Trail Circle

$425,000

3213

4BR

4BA

46

32465 Skylark Drive

$260,001

1900

4BR

3BA

2

24455 Mooncrest Court

$321,500

1579

3BR

3BA

68

4181 Ladrillo Street

$350,990

2232

4BR

3BA

123

29369 Lynn Court

$435,000

2315

4BR

3BA

69

34010 Winterberry Lane

$280,000

1880

4BR

3BA

139

23719 Tatia Drive

$407,500

2469

5BR

3BA

43

30690 Brookstone Lane

$507,500

2324

4BR

2BA

137

35375 Sumac Avenue

$460,000

2720

4BR

3BA

45

45021 Carla Court

$345,000

3081

5BR

3BA

91

23819 Cork Oak Circle

$299,900

1277

3BR

2BA

67

29284 Sandpiper Drive

$325,000

2595

4BR

3BA

30

37303 Hydrus Place

$343,500

2575

3BR

2BA

59

32585 Wildflower Drive

$243,460

1916

2BR

3BA

14

29684 Rossiter Road

$439,900

3595

5BR

4BA

16

725 Acacia Street

$238,000

1300

4BR

2BA

46

30305 Powderhorn Lane

$461,000

4506

5BR

5BA

10

29700 WISE Street

$160,000

621

2BR

1BA

37

30618 Lily Pond Lane

$475,000

3105

5BR

3BA

27

4153 Alderwood Place

$340,000

2852

5BR

5BA

23

30400 BUCCANEER BAY

$255,000

1387

3BR

3BA

24

31173 Kansas Street

$255,000

1088

3BR

2BA

59

39710 Cedarwood Drive

$373,775

2162

4BR

3BA

52

31011 Sedona Street

$285,000

2517

4BR

3BA

64

23986 Via Pamilla

$299,000

1585

2BR

2BA

37

16950 Grand Avenue

$256,500

1104

3BR

2BA

7

36147 Vence Drive

$296,000

1535

2BR

2BA

47

34136 Hillside Drive

$280,000

2326

4BR

3BA

0

27672 Passion Flower Court

$299,500

1797

3BR

3BA

24

33430 Landerville Boulevard

$250,000

1698

3BR

3BA

22

22925 Banbury Court

$925,000

4372

4BR

4BA

4

San Jacinto

Sun City

Temecula

Wildomar

476 Camino Los Banos

$190,000

1375

3BR

2BA

1845 Estero Court

$265,000

2650

3BR

3BA

143

1681 Arenas Lane

$230,000

1992

4BR

3BA

129 66

1644 Arenas Lane

$230,000

1992

4BR

3BA

1440 Vanessa Lane

$200,000

1315

3BR

2BA

85

1473 Burns Lane

$299,000

3087

6BR

3BA

79

411 Angela Way

$145,000

988

3BR

1BA

78

1234 Sierra Seneca Drive

$190,000

1615

4BR

3BA

9

526 Pleasant Hill Road

$140,000

1108

2BR

2BA

15

123 Lily Lane

$240,000

2087

4BR

2BA

59

1847 Ibsen Circle

$275,000

2764

4BR

3BA

9

251 Dillon Avenue

$127,000

1130

3BR

2BA

14

510 7th Street

$169,000

1638

3BR

2BA

6

27190 El Rancho Drive

$260,000

3639

4BR

3BA

287

26041 Bonita Vista Court

$125,000

1285

2BR

2BA

136

26248 Sunnywood Street

$159,000

908

2BR

2BA

41

28130 Auckland Court

$187,000

1195

2BR

2BA

15

27065 Rangewood Street

$193,000

1199

2BR

2BA

12

28141 Auckland Court

$191,900

1873

3BR

2BA

42

27798 Foxfire Street

$199,900

1538

2BR

2BA

12

30370 Tradewater Court

$390,000

2604

4BR

3BA

244

31720 Abruzzo Street

$549,346

2886

4BR

5BA

18

33695 Summit View Place

$465,000

3609

5BR

5BA

165

27272 Savoy Lane

$405,000

2876

4BR

3BA

99

33235 Via Alvaro

$375,000

1636

3BR

2BA

106

44992 Dolce Street

$442,000

3106

4BR

3BA

110

41575 Via Anita

$879,000

4500

7BR

4BA

101

43283 Via Angeles

$418,800

2799

4BR

3BA

73

45476 Peacock Place

$469,000

3090

4BR

3BA

73

41149 Via Halcon

$247,500

900

2BR

2BA

26

43927 Country Ridge Court

$550,000

3609

6BR

6BA

100

44830 Potestas Drive

$349,500

1364

4BR

2BA

59

27511 Parkside Drive

$290,000

1571

4BR

3BA

75

44024 Rivo Court

$280,000

1218

3BR

3BA

84

40212 Holden Circle

$372,500

2210

4BR

3BA

77

33592 Winston Way

$265,000

1408

3BR

2BA

70

31115 Kahwea Road

$680,000

3361

3BR

3BA

54

32240 Via Cordoba

$340,000

1668

3BR

2BA

64

30070 CORTE COELHO

$829,000

3619

4BR

4BA

35

44276 Echelon Court

$538,020

3280

5BR

5BA

1

40450 Calle Cancion

$495,000

1716

3BR

2BA

55

45038 Silver Rose Street

$462,000

2786

4BR

3BA

50

32086 Sycamore Court

$435,000

2426

3BR

3BA

49

39685 Oak Cliff Drive

$302,000

1245

3BR

3BA

16

44721 Duckhorn Street

$599,900

2400

4BR

3BA

38

33755 Pauba Road

$605,000

3097

3BR

3BA

65

31382 Royal Oaks Drive

$432,500

2874

4BR

3BA

44

42233 Camino Romo

$344,000

1360

3BR

2BA

25

23207 Cannery Road

$290,000

2467

4BR

3BA

132

35595 Winkler Street

$395,000

3646

4BR

3BA

183

21490 Vine Street

$205,000

1413

3BR

2BA

107

21800 Waite Street

$175,000

1175

3BR

2BA

103

36249 Madora Drive

$369,900

2844

4BR

3BA

98

33775 Canyon Ranch Road

$274,900

1270

3BR

2BA

17

23128 Cannery Road

$370,000

2467

4BR

3BA

31

How to tend to an indoor herb garden

Service & Real Estate Directory BUILD DESIGN/CONST.

FLOORING

REAL ESTATE

TEMECULA – Fresh herbs and recently picked ingredients can add flavor to any meal. A home chef can even improve the flavor of store-bought or prepared foods with an herb garnish that can transform otherwise bland dishes into something you’ll want to eat again and again. Harvesting fresh herbs is easy for homeowners who have gardens right in their backyards. However, everyone does not have a backyard, and even those that do might find their gardens threatened by changing seasons or unwanted critters. When gardens are moved indoors, the bounty of fresh ingredients continues no matter the date on the calendar. Herb gardens are perhaps some of the easiest gardens to cultivate indoors because they don’t require large pots or much space. The plants themselves are relatively compact, and it only takes a pinch of herbs to give a meal some extra flavor. When growing herbs indoors, your indoor growing area must have adequate light to simulate the longer days of summer; otherwise, the plants may go dormant. It’s ideal to have a southern exposure on the herbs, with at least eight hours of sunlight per day. If you do not live in a particularly sunny locale, consider supplementing the plants with grow lights, which will provide the full spectrum of light the plants need to thrive. Indoor air can become too dry for herbs, so you will need to compensate by providing humidity. While there may be added humidity in a kitchen greenhouse window, it still may not be enough to keep the plants healthy. Think about misting the plants daily to create some extra humidity, or place herb pots on top of a water-filled tray

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A sunny location is necessary when cultivating an indoor herb Courtesy photo garden.

with pebbles so the evaporating water will add moisture without making the roots soggy. Insects are another threat to indoor gardens because there is no cold weather to inhibit the hatching of insect eggs. Soil from outdoors may be more susceptible to insects that are already living in the dirt. Instead of soil from outside, use packaged soil or a non-soil alternative that will hold moisture without the added risk of bugs. If small insects appear, use a mist of soapy water to kill the bugs without harming the plants or making the herbs unfit for eating. Group herbs together according to their watering needs to make maintenance that much easier. New sprouts generally need more water than established plants. Prune the herbs as needed for recipes. If the herbs experience a growth spurt, trim some of the plants and freeze the herbs for later use. Many indoor herb gardeners begin by growing parsley, chives, oregano, and basil, but you can experiment with just about any herb.

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Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

B-4

Home & Garden / Real Estate

Buy a house or a condo, which is right for you?

John Occhi & Mike Mason Special to the Valley News

homeowners who do not want to take care of the exterior maintenance of the structure or a landscaped yard. It is important to investigate and find out exactly what maintenance the condo association provides for the monthly HOA dues you’ll be paying every month. Typically, the HOA will pay to have the complex grounds professionally maintained and you take care of the interior of your unit. Collectively, every condo owner shares in the cost for this service as part of the monthly HOA dues. Privacy: A single-family home is generally much more private than a condo. As a single-family home, it is self-contained on its own land with at least some space and a fence or wall between houses. On the other hand, condo’s typically share at least one wall. Privacy is perhaps the biggest differentiation point between owning a single-family home and a condo and a personal decision that you must make on your own. If distance between you and your neighbors is a high priority, then you’ll likely opt for the privacy that a single-family home offers. On the other hand owning a condo typically offers some unique advantages that could be cost prohibitive if purchased individually and added to a single-family home. Most condo’s offer a variety of amenities that may include (not all offer all) a swimming pool, a jetted hot tub, sauna, fitness center, and a children’s playground. Many people like the closeness of the condo community as it is typically much easier to meet your neighbors and find new friends. Financial Health: While some single-family homes are in a community that has a Home Owner Association (HOA) nearly every condo has an association that is responsible for managing the financial affairs of the neighborhood. Typically each owner is assessed a monthly or quarterly fee (dues) that cover the common use expenses such as the insurance, maintaining the landscape, trash service, general maintenance of the building exteriors, pool maintenance and taking care

When you decide to enter the housing market, there are many decisions to be made. One of the first is always deciding on what type of residential real estate you want to call home. There are two basic choices – a house or a condo. There are benefits and downsides to each and the ultimate experience of living in either can vary greatly. While the appeal of a single-family home for most families is rather obvious it is important to understand the basic difference between a single-family home and a condo before the decision is made and one or the other is ruled out completely. You just may find that depending on your situation that a condo or a home is the only real reasonable option for you. Follow along as we examine the pros and cons of owning and living in a condo and a single-family home. Condo vs. Home: The Pros and Cons Size: In most cases a singlefamily home will have more square footage than a condo. This is not always the case as there are some small two bedroom houses and some very large three and four bedroom condos out there. Typically though, you can expect to find smaller spaces in a condo. Depending on your particular needs you may find a smaller living space to be more ideal. You’ll have less to decorate (less clutter), clean and heat/air condition. With a house, you’ll typically have the option of adding additional space and repurposing space while in a condo it will be impossible to add on to your home. Maintenance: Many who choose the Condo lifestyle do it because of the lack of required maintenance. This is especially true with older

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of other amenities and equipment owned by the association for use by association members. If you own a free-standing single family home, without an HOA, typically you won’t be concerned if your neighbors fall behind on their HOA dues or other obligations. Purchase Financing: The process of obtaining financing for a condominium can be very different for financing a single-family home. With the purchase of a single-family home you can use any home loan that you qualify for – whether it be a Conventional, FHA or VA loan. With a condominium, it’s important to verify that the specific condo will qualify for a specific loan – this can be tricky at best. There are many Condo Developments that are not FHA approved. One reason might be that the Condo Association does not want to spend the money to be approved by the FHA. While it is not terribly expensive, there are some associations that are penny wise and pound (dollar) foolish; locking out the large pool of First Time FHA buyers and thus reducing the salability of individual units, which in turn holds property values down. Another common reason that a Condominium complex does not qualify for an FHA Loan, is that the ratio of owner occupied and rental units. The advantage of FHA financing, particularly with first time buyers is that the buyer only needs a 3.5 percent down payment. When you decide to pursue the purchase for a Condo, have your real estate agent identify those Condo Complex’s that are FHA Approved. HOA vs. CONTROL: When buying a single-family home outside of an HOA, you are buying a home that you can pretty much do what you want with – inside and out. On the other hand, when you buy a home – either single family or condominium – with an HOA you are subjecting yourself to the rules and regulations of the HOA. For anyone who wants total control over their home and property, then an HOA is probably not going to work. With control of your property you do not have the safety-net that an HOA provides by maintaining the property and that all owners/ occupants have to comply with the rules that have been agreed upon. Of course, because it’s yours, you can do anything you want that the city/county will allow you to do. This could include painting your home purple, building a new structure, parking cars anywhere you want on your property or filling your yard with plastic pink flamingos. In an HOA home, you will not be able to indulge in any of the above; rather you’ll be limited in what you can do. Like all of your neighbors, you’ll have to observe the rules of the HOA. There will be restrictions as to what you can do with your homes exterior and even where you can park your car. These types of restrictions are intended to maintain the integrity and value of your neighborhood.

Purchase Price: Typically, a single-family home will be more expensive than a condo, for a number of different reasons that we’ve already discussed above. While a single-family home may be more desirable on many different levels, purchasing a condominium may make financial sense for the first time home buyer with a more limited budget and less cash available for a down payment. Condo’s also make perfect sense for empty nesters or anyone on a fixed income budget and wanting to make the dollar stretch further. What is right for you? There is no right answer for everyone – you must decide for yourself if buying a condo or a single-family home makes sense for you. Let’s take a look at the Pro’s and Con’s of buying a house vs a condo. Single-Family Home – Pros and Cons Private yard Maintenance and landscape is always the homeowners expense No restrictions (typically – unless imposed by the city or county) on what color you paint your home or what style mailbox you install or anything else you want to do to the property – inside or out. All costs – Insurance, Trash, Maintenance are the homeowners to pay (and select) No Condo Fees Control of the property is the homeowners Condominium – Pros and Cons Restrictions such as age, pet and ratability may be in place. Depending on the buyer, this can either be a good thing or a bad one.

If you want to change anything on the exterior of your unit like landscaping, raising a flag or changing any aspect of the unit, you must ask permission from the HOA Condo’s may offer amenities that otherwise could not be afforded – pool, gym, craft room, clubhouse or other frills. Maintenance expenses cannot be paid on you schedule but are subject to the HOA The advantages and disadvantages of single-family homes and condominiums are numerous. While we can’t cover every aspect of the decision making process, hopefully it will allow you to grasp some of the differences and allow you to explore the options that fit your personality, your lifestyle and your budget further. From both a financial and an emotional standpoint, give yourself ample time to decide which is right for you and your own unique situation. Call us today at (951) 296-8887 and get the information you need to make the right decision. For questions regarding available inventory and/or other real estate matters contact, Mike@ GoTakeAction.com. Mike Mason, Broker/Owner of MASON Real Estate Cal. BRE: 01483044, Board of Director of your Southwest Riverside County Association of Realtors®, Traveling State Director, California Association of Realtors®. John Occhi is a semiretired Temecula Realtor® who is pursuing his dreams and passions traveling the country, in an RV on the “American Wine Trail.” Follow his RV Wine Adventures at www. TheAmericanWineTrail.com.

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TEMECULA – Lucy Zion, a real estate agent with Rancon Real Estate has earned the nationally recognized Military Relocation Professional Certification. The National Association of REALTORS® confers the MRP certification to agents who want to help military personnel and veterans find housing solutions that best meet their needs and allow them to take full advantage of their military benefits. When military staff and their families relocate, the services of a real estate professional who

understands their needs and timetables can make the transfer easier, faster and less stressful. Real estate agents who earn this certification know to work with active duty military buyers and sellers, as well as veterans. “Homeownership is an important part of the fabric of America, and having a stable home environment is vital when men and women of the military are called away to serve their country. Working with a REALTOR® who understands specific needs and timetables related to military service will help

make their transfers easier, faster and less stressful,” said NAR President Gary Thomas, broker-owner of Evergreen Realty, in Villa Park, Calif. “The Military Relocation Professional certification will help REALTORS® hone their knowledge and skills for working with veterans and active duty military buyers and sellers to ensure that homeownership remains affordable and accessible to them.” Zion can be contacted at (951) 348-8878 or www.ZionRealtors. com.

Trick-or-treat safely TEMECULA – As thousands of children prepare to embark on their trick-or-treating jaunts in neighborhoods near and far, it is best to once again revisit safety tips that can help ensure this Halloween is enjoyable and injury-free. Visibility is key when donning a Halloween costume. Children should be dressed in highly visible costumes so drivers can easily see them. Parents and chaperones also should be dressed in bright colors. Reflective tape and flashlights also make pedestrians more visible to oncoming cars. Children and adults should plan their trick-or-treating routes ahead of time. This way they kids can be found quickly if they are sepa-

rated from their groups, and parents can choose safe neighborhoods. Choose neighborhoods and paths that have the least amount of automobile traffic. Walk, don’t run. Trick-or-treaters should stick to sidewalks and only cross the street at intersection crosswalks. Make sure kids know to avoid darting out between cars or cutting across lawns and driveways. When darkness sets in, fast-moving children can be difficult to see. Visit only lit houses. Residents who don’t want to answer the door will typically leave their homes’ exterior lights off. Only visit homes that are decorated, bright and welcoming to trick-or-treaters.

Go in groups. Children should go out in groups and always be accompanied by an adult chaperone. Everyone should wear well-fitted costumes that do not drag on the floor or impede mobility. Choose face paint over masks so that vision is not obscured. Beware of fire hazards. Keep clear of jack-o-lanterns that are lit by real flames. Homeowners can opt for LED lights or other, safer methods of illumination rather than candles and open flames. Halloween is an exciting day for youngsters, and following a few safety can make the day both fun and safe. To comment on this story online visit www.myvalleynews.com.


October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

B-5

Education

Middle school students have a doggone good time following fundraiser

David Brown Middle School students raised $900 dollars for the organization Pennies 4 Paws. $600 dollars went to Crissie, a blue nose pitbull who suffered from a neglected chemical burn and $300 went to FTA Spay in Wildomar, a low cost spay and neuter facility for dogs and cats.

Tina Raborn of Doggy Smiles Rescue introduces David Brown Middle School students to Runner. The rescue facility is caring for Runner who was abandoned and not in good health when he was found.

LEUSD honors October Students of the Month LAKE ELSINORE – Seven high school seniors from the Lake Elsinore Unified School District were recently honored by the Student of the Month program under the auspices of the Lake Elsinore Valley Chamber of Commerce and BMW Management, which owns and manages Sizzler restaurants. Students are individually nominated by teachers and selected for their character, love of learning, leadership, community service, and perseverance. October ‘Student of the Month’ Honorees were:

David Brown Middle School students get a close look at Taco, a Chihuahua who suffered a chemical burn on his back. Students at the school raised money by having the option to donate $1 to not run during a PE class and donate $5 if the students want to not wear their Shane Gibson photos PE clothes or run during PE class.

Elsinore High School Chase DeLong has set a goal of attending Johns Hopkins University to pursue studies in biomedical engineering. Campus life includes volunteer tutoring, and participation on the rigorous EHS Academic Decathlon team (one of Riverside County’s top three teams). A severe gymnastics injury taught him to persevere, and today he is recognized as a top student and a valued student leader. Jasmine Le has selected UC Davis in her pursuit of a degree in computer engineering. She aspires to work for Google, a giant in innovation. Campus life includes NHS, Model United Nations, and academics. Growing up with five competitive siblings, a life lesson is not to measure personal success against others, by learning to fearlessly be her own person.

BYU—Provo after graduation. Her passion is servant leadership, as demonstrated by a desire to make school—and the world—a better place. Campus life includes varsity tennis captain, varsity basketball, and ASB vice president. One life lesson is not being afraid to stand up for one’s beliefs, a perspective honed after volunteering hundreds of hours after school, and as a student leader in her church.

Lakeside High School Triston Bowe plans to attend UC San Diego to study engineering. He is captain of LHS’s undefeated water polo team. Campus life includes the mad science club, varsity water polo, and academics. His family nearly lost him to a car accident when he was 12; as a result, he is self-aware and seeks to bring people and ideas together in inspiring ways. Triston is a natural leader, with big dreams and goals. Rebekah Kaiser plans to attend

Keith McCarthy Academy Collin Chostner clearly feels a calling to study neurobiology, and a career in the medical field. The onset of a medical condition early in his high school career might have discouraged Collin from reaching his goals, yet today he is set to graduate early. Collin has a talent for math tutoring, which is valued by fellow students. While polite and soft-spoken, his teachers remind us that Collin is highly driven to succeed, as exhibited by his ability

Lake Elsinore Unified School district recently announced its students of the month for October. Seated from left are: Jasmine Le (EHS), Rebekah Kaiser (LHS), Jenna Hoskinson (TCHS). Standing from left are Sally Myers, program founder; Mario Herrera, Field Representative, Office of Assembly member Melissa Melendez, Megan Locke, Field Representative, Office of Senator Jeff Stone, Chase DeLong (EHS), Triston Bowe (LHS), Luis Hurtado (TCHS), Collin Chostner (KMA); and Kim Joseph Cousins, CEO/President of the LEVCC. Courtesy photo

to adapt, to persevere, and mentor others. Temescal Canyon High School Luis Hurtado is on a path of lifelong learning that includes attending Cornell, and the London Business School. He is a serious IB scholar, member of Rotary Interact Club, and a three-season athlete (soccer, track and football). A life lesson put into practice every day is to live with no regrets. Luis embraces challenges, curiosity, opportunities, and reflection as a way of heightening life experiences. Jenna Hoskinson is an IB scholar who has set a goal of attending USC, majoring in environmental studies and international relations. She plans to become an environmental attorney. Campus life includes ASB, CSF, Rotary Interact, and Peer Buddies. She is among the top of her class, yet makes time for community service through the Interact Club and ASB leadership opportunities.

Beth Newhill of Doggy Smiles Rescue speaks about the care involved for the dogs that were found with chemical burns and explains what the shelter in Lancaster does for rescued animals during an assembly at David Brown Middle School in Wildomar on Oct. 15.

Azusa Pacific University Murrieta Regional Center

Earn Your Degree From a University Known for Excellence in Education Karina Quezada ’08, M.A.Ed. ’09 and ’11 School Psychologist Victor Elementary School District

Parmer named to GSU’s summer 2015 President’s List

S TAT E S B O R O – G e o r g i a Southern University recently recognized 175 students on the 2015 Summer Semester President’s List. Hunter Parmer majoring in Chemistry from Menifee has been named to the list for excellence in academics. To be eligible for the President’s List, a

student must have at least a 4.0 grade point average and carry a minimum of 12 hours for the semester. Georgia Southern University, a Carnegie Doctoral/Research University founded in 1906, offers 125 degree programs serving more than 20,500 students. Through

eight colleges, the University offers bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degree programs built on more than a century of academic achievement. Georgia Southern is recognized for its student-centered approach to education. For more information, visit http://GeorgiaSouthern.edu.

Azusa Pacific’s School of Education stands as a trusted leader in the field, known for producing many of Southern California’s finest teachers, school counselors and psychologists, and administrators. In answer to the state’s growing shortage of qualified educators, APU equips graduates to make a lasting difference as creative, collaborative professionals and dedicated advocates for the students they serve. Choose from more than 20 ways to earn your degree and credential at APU’s Murrieta Regional Center, and join a mentoring community of educators who will help you make an even greater impact.

Programs start in Murrieta throughout the year! Contact us today at (951) 304-3400. 40508 Murrieta Hot Springs Rd., Murrieta, CA 92563

School of Education apu.edu/explore/education AZUSA | HIGH DESERT | INLAND EMPIRE | MURRIETA ORANGE COUNTY | SAN DIEGO | ONLINE

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Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

B-6

Health

OsteoStrong Murrieta to host events focusing on osteoporosis MURRIETA – OsteoStrong Murrieta is pleased to present two events featuring Dr. John Jaquish, developer of the bioDensity machine on Wednesday, Nov. 11. The first event, Osteogenic Loading Benefits for Individuals with Osteoporosis and Type II Diabetes will be held at 2 p.m.

at OsteoStrong Murrieta, 25190 Hancock Ave., Suite C in Murrieta. The second event, An Evening with Dr. John Jaquish, will take place at 5:30 p.m. at RJ’s Sizzling Steer, 41401 Kalmia Street in Murrieta and will include food and beverages, a presentation by Jaquish, and a question and answer ses-

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sion for physicians and healthcare providers. Bioengineer, author, and researcher, Jaquish will discuss his experience with osteoporosis, osteogenic loading and non-pharmaceutical approaches to bone health, as well as exciting new research regarding osteogenic loading and insulin resistant diabetes for physicians and health care providers. Jaquish has presented at international osteoporosis conferences in Milan, Hong Kong, Vancouver and Moscow. His most recent published research studies include “The Effects of Axial Bone Osteogenic Loading-Type Resistance Exercise on Adults with Risk of Moderate – Metabolic Dysfunction: A Pilot Study,” and “Axial Bone

American Counseling Association Special to Valley News If you’re in a work situation where you aren’t getting along with your supervisor or boss, it can be easy to forget that the person who keeps giving you a hard time is also a human being with feelings and problems you aren’t seeing.

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events, call OsteoStrong Murrieta at (951) 461-9584 or email Gale Jungemann-Schulz at galejs@ osteostrong.me.

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Osteogenic Loading – Type Resistance Therapy Showing BMD and Functional Bone Performance Musculoskeletal Adaptation Over 24 Weeks with Postmenopausal Female Subjects.” He is co-author of “Osteogenic Loading, A new modality to facilitate bone density development.” “I am very excited to see osteogenic loading applied in Murrieta California. In the coming weeks when I am in Southern California, I plan to spend my time sharing experiences and answering questions for the referring physician groups in the area,” said Jaquish. For more information about OsteoStrong, the bioDensity machine, or to reserve you seat at one of the

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appreciate employees who, rather than complaining, understand that bosses face pressures, too. They’re also usually more open to hearing from such employees about their own scheduling problems and work demands. You want to keep communication open and a two-way street, rather than appearing closed off and unapproachable. Good ideas seldom follow a schedule, and emergencies never do. Make it easy for your supervisor to talk to you. And, sometimes, take the initiative. Do a quick check-in with your boss on how things are going, or to discuss an idea or concern of yours. Make it your job to create a positive relationship with your supervisor. Each of you should feel that you understand the other and can openly talk to each other. With such a relationship, it usually means a more positive, enjoyable work environment where sharing ideas and positive accomplishments can flourish. Counseling Corner” is provided by the American Counseling Association. Comments and questions to ACAcorner@counseling.org or visit the ACA website at www. counseling.org. For more health news or to comment on this story online, visit www. myvalleynews.com.

And why does that matter to you? Because studies have shown that one of the most important things affecting someone’s job performance, stress levels, and overall job satisfaction and happiness is the relationship they have with the person above them. So what can you do? The only way to improve such situations is for you to take a proactive role in creating a more positive relationship with that person above you. Start by learning what’s important to him or her as a person. Make an effort to find out if there are pet peeves, or things about your department or company that matter greatly to him or her. Does your boss have a difficult boss? Try to understand what your supervisor expects from you. It isn’t always obvious. Ask questions and seek clarification. Is it timely reports, meeting deadlines, and showing initiative? A certain dress code? Or seemingly trivial things that he or she finds important? Understanding what matters to your boss makes it easier to meet such goals, or to discuss alternatives that will still keep him or her happy. It also helps to be flexible and understanding. While it’s frustrating to have meetings rescheduled or interrupted by phone calls, there’s often a reason for a supervisor to make such changes. Supervisors

The benefits of summertime pregnancies TEMECULA – Researchers at Cambridge University have concluded that the best time to have a baby is summer time, the Association of Mature American Citizens reported this week. The researchers’ massive study of some half a million English men and women shows that they grow up healthier, are heavier at birth and

taller as adults. The investigators believe that it has something to do with the greater amounts of vitamin D the embryos have access to in June, July and August as a result of increased amounts of sunshine. Kids born in December, January and February are at a disadvantage in that regard.

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October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

B-7

Health New American Spine clinics practice regenerative medicine for spine care and pain management

Courtesy photo

LAKE ELSINORE – American Spine Group recently opened two new locations. Patients can now see the team of spine and pain specialists at the Lake Elsinore and Temecula clinics conveniently located at 31569 Canyon Estates Dr. Ste. 135, Lake Elsinore and

31565 Rancho Pueblo Rd. Ste. 102, Temecula. Both clinics use regenerative medicine, an innovative pain management technique that uses the patient’s own body to heal itself. This form of healing has been proven to promote cell reproduction – an es-

sential aspect of healing tissues and bones. “Regenerative medicine” is actually an umbrella term that covers platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections and stem cell therapy. PRP injection treatment is used to treat muscle and ligament conditions, particularly degenerative conditions and sports-related injuries. PRP injections started to gain popularity after sports professionals like Kobe Bryant and Tiger Woods used them to bounce back from their injuries quickly. When patients have a PRP injection, a small sample of blood is taken and put into a centrifuge that separates the platelets from the blood. The platelets are then mixed with dextrose and citrate to make the platelets pure and ready to be injected at the site of pain. The doctors know that blood is integral to the healing process, so why does American Spine Group want the platelet-rich plasma inside the blood specifically? It’s because

platelets have qualities that allow them to improve cell production, as well as soft tissue and bone regeneration. Stem cell therapy is used to regenerate healthy cells and replace aging cells. This outpatient procedure uses cells collected from bone marrow and other tissues to help treat a number of painful conditions. The cells are injected directly into the site of injury or

I live my life in 90 minute chunks For people who suffer from Overactive Bladder (OAB), the symptoms can be distressing. However, no one medication works the same for everyone and every age group. It is a goal of clinical research to find out who can receive the most relief from a medication and why.

Veterans Day fundraising fitness event being held in Temecula TEMECULA – This Veteran’s Day, IgniteRx Medical Fitness, fueled By 79 South CrossFit, will be hosting the Three Wise Men Veteran’s Day Tribute; a national fundraising event to benefit those who have survived their military service, but are still struggling, financially or emotionally, after returning home. The Three Wise Men Foundation was created in honor of Jeremy, Ben and Beau Wise; three brothers who all chose to serve their country in the armed forces. Tragically, both Jeremy and Ben were killed while serving in Afghanistan. Beau still remains on active duty in the U.S. Marine Corps. With the suicide rate of returning veterans skyrocketing in recent years, the Three Wise Men Foundation, founded by the Wise’s cousin, Nathan Fletcher, was created to raise awareness and funds for re-

turning servicemen and their families to help with living expenses and emotional support. In order to help raise money for the cause, on Saturday, Nov. 11, at 5 a.m., 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., IgniteRx Medical Fitness is hosting a fundraiser in the form of a CrossFit-style work out named for the three brothers. The community is invited to join IgniteRx for this special tribute work out, which is being held on Veteran’s Day at CrossFit gyms all over the country. You do not have to be a member to participate and, although the CrossFit brand may sound daunting to someone who has never tried this type of fitness before, the Three Wise Men Tribute work outs will be scaled to the individual needs of each participant, so no prior CrossFit experience is necessary. It is a great way for the entire Inland Empire community to be able to

degeneration, making this therapy especially useful to patients with degenerative conditions like arthritis or degenerative disc disease. American Spine Group’s physicians are expertly trained to use the patient’s own resources to heal their body. If anyone has any questions or concerns regarding regenerative medicine, they can call (951) 7347246 for more information or to schedule an appointment.

contribute to this worthwhile cause while also burning a few calories! To participate in this fun and interactive fundraising opportunity, a $25 donation needs to be made in advance, or on the day of the event. To register, visit www. threewisementribute.org/nearestparticipating-affiliate/ and choose the affiliate name IgniteRx Fueled by 79 South CrossFit. There is also an opportunity on the website to donate funds, even if you can’t make it to the event. For more information about the Three Wise Men Veteran’s Day Tribute event and how the Inland Empire community can participate in this wonderful salute to our nation’s living heroes, please call Holly Herndon at (858) 3374749 or email holly@igniterx.com. To comment on this story online, visit www.myvalleynews.com.

The PILLAR clinical study is researching a medication approved to treat OAB symptoms. We are looking for men and women 65 years of age or older with OAB to participate. Study-related procedures and medication will be provided at no cost. If you or someone you know is interested in learning more about this study, feel free to contact us. General good health is required for participation.

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Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

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October 30, 2015 • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • Anza Valley Outlook

B-9

The Valley

M A R K E T P L AC E Call (951) 763-5510 or go online at www.anzavalleyoutlook.com to place an ad today! LOCAL CLASSIFIEDS Animals Boarding & Sitting

Employment and Jobs

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PET SITTING IN MY HOME. Great sleeping area in house, heat/air. Huge fenced area, reasonable rates/ references. For reservations, call 760723-6675

HOUSECLEANER NEEDED TOP pay and benefits since 1985. Immediate Fallbrook opening. Ideal addition to family income. PAID holidays, vacation, mileage, bonuses, training. Need phone, car, references, basic English. Background check and drug screen. Fallbrook office interview. HomeLife ® Housekeeping: (760) 728-0906

F R E E N E W S PA P E R S Moving, painting, new pet? Lots of extra newspapers leftover after cleaning out our archive shelf. Come pick up at The Village News. 1588 S. Mission Rd. Suite #200. Open 8am-5pm.

A S P H A LT H A N D Y M A N Asphalt Handyman. Licensed and Insured. Low prices guaranteed. Patching, seal coating, crack filling, line striping, etc. Family owned and operated. Over 20 years experience. Commercial and residential. Stanley Handyman Service (951) 722-1364.

Commercial/Industrial Building LARGE RETAIL STORE (2400sf) corner of Main & Hawthorne. Available November 1st, A/C, new paint, new carpet, very reasonable rent with lease. (760) 728-1281. RETAIL/OFFICE SPACE available. Call or text (858) 699-6318 or 760415-6504 COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL Several units available in same complex. 8751465 sq.ft. Located on Industrial Way in Fallbrook. Call for more information 760-728-6131 SHOP SPACE W/OFFICES 1,000 sq. ft. to 1,800 sq. ft. in Fallbrook. 760-728-2807 or 760-212-0584. www. fallbrookindustrialspace.com

Commercial/Industrial For Rent 6,300 SQ.FT. FALLBROOK BLDG 3,300 sq. ft. office: current floor plan, waiting room, lunch room, accounting, estimating, plan room, foreman’s room, private offices, dry bar. Rear storage. Men’s & women’s restrooms. Complete Cat 5 wiring for data/phones. Two separate A/C systems. Alarmed. 3,000 sq. ft. industrial shop. 12x12 front roll up. 6x10 rear roll up. 3 phase power. Compressed air. 3 private offices, 2 propane high volume heaters, alarm system. Please call (951) 973-7680

Employment and Jobs L A N D S C A P E C O M PA N Y i n Murrieta is looking for experienced Irrigation Technician and Labor (no experience required). Call (951) 6949787 or visit our website http://www. adamslandscaping.com/ for more information. Compañia de Landscaping en Murrieta esta contratando Tecnicos de Irrigacion, y Trabajadores. Llame a (951) 694-9787 o visite nuestra pagina de web http://www.adamslandscaping. com/ para obtener mas informacion. EXPERIENCED KITCHEN HELP Line Cook/Prep needed for fast paced Mexican restaurant in Fallbrook. Bilingual a plus. Call Jon 760-728-4556

For Rent 2 BD/2 BA single family residence. Nice quiet neighborhood. 5 miles to 215 freeway. Must be employed. $975/month + deposit. 951-473-0644. Located in Nuevo.

For Sale 29 ACRES DE LUZ/FALLBROOK Remote, peaceful. Small young avocado in flower grove. Well water, electricity on property. Seasonal stream with waterfall. Asking $425,000. Will carry paper on loan. Saturday-Tuesday (760) 728-2012, (310) 612-3547

Health & Fitness WELLSPRING HERBS & VITAMINS offers a wide selection of herbs, vitamins, essential oils, homeopathics, teas, flower essences and other lotions and potions. Iridology and Live-Cell appointments are available. Come in for your FREE Bio-Scan! Bio-Scan will scan your body and tell you where your deficiencies are. We are located at 1223 S. Mission Rd. (Behind PizzaHut) 760-728-1244 www.nutrastar.net.

Yard Sale/Garage Sale/ Moving Sale JEREMIAH’S RANCH is collecting items and seeking volunteers for rummage sale. Nov 7 at 911 E Elder. Call Karen 760-672-8872, Linda 760805-5214, or Pauline 760-521-4421 for information.

Painting

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O L S O N PA I N T I N G Professional house painting. Reasonable prices. Interior, exterior. Licensed and Bonded LIC # 926734. Free estimates. Eric (951) 941-4554. KENWAY PAINTING Professional quality. Reasonable rates. Interior, exterior. Licensed and bonded. LIC#633502. Free estimates. (951) 652-3505

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GARAGE SALE 11/6/15 & 11/7/15 Meadow View area Temecula, 40545 La Cadena Ct. Patio benches, clothes, bird houses, tools, barbecues, childs patio set. Hope to see you there!

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Miscellaneous Wanted

CALSCAN CLASSIFIEDS

PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical, and continued support afterwards. Choose adoptive family of your choice. Call 24/7. 1-877-879-4709 (CalSCAN)

Yard Sale/Garage Sale/ Moving Sale

Property Management with Personal Attention

See a complete list of available rentals at: murrietatemeculapropertymanagers.com

Murrieta

2BR/2BA condo with garage. Ground level. Fridge, w/d. Small patio. Cat ok. 776 sf. $1275

Wildomar

3BR/2BA mobile in The Farm. New carpet, blinds, cooktop. No fridge. Pet, on approval. 1740 sf. $1275

WOOD’S PAINTING CONTRACTORS Interior ~ Exterior Professional Workmen! Reasonable Rates, Free Estimates Lic#700305 Fallbrook / North County 760-728-1796 / 760-723-1736 Temecula 951-246-0350 / 951-676-6530 www.woodspainting.com

Attention Rental Owners & Investors

We are in need of single-family homes and condos to rent. Please call for information & the management plans we offer.

Call 951-696-5920

39429 Los Alamos Road, #E, Murrieta

Mon-Fri 9-5 & Sat 10-3 • Lic #01130743

(760) 717-0338 ROOFING

MOUNTAIN VALLEY ROOFING Above All-A-SUPER-ROOF Specializing in Leak Repair and Roof Certification Over 40 years experience! State License 613515-C39 Call Tim (951) 323-7201.

Business directories have worked for those who are on a tight budget. Call today. 760-723-7319

HELP WANTED/DRIVERS ATTN: CDL Drivers – 2 CPM Pay Increase! $2k Sign-On Bonus. See The Country. Love your Job and Truck. CDL-A Req - (877) 258-8782 www. drive4melton.com (Cal-SCAN)

INSURANCE/HEALTH Lowest Prices on Health & Dental Insurance. We have the best rates from top companies! Call Now! 888989-4807. (CalSCAN)

MEDICAL SUPPLIES/ EQUIPMENT Safe Step Walk-In Tub! Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-799-4811 for $750 Off. (CalSCAN)

3 convenient locations: Menifee ~ Hemet ~ Temecula

Will Price Match Any Doctor in

$59 $79

All Renewals A

New Patients

Temecula Valley!

Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-6735926 (Cal-SCAN)

Anza Valley Outlook - more local news stories & features than any other publication. Mail in this completed form to: Anza Valley Outlook, 1588 S. Mission Rd. #200, Fallbrook, CA 92028 or call us at 760-723-7319 Anza Valley Outlook Subscription: o New Subscriber o Renewal Name: ______________________________________ Address: ____________________________________ City:______________ State:________ Zip: _________ Phone: _____________________________________ Email: ______________________________________

Subscription Payment Options (Choose One) o $25.00 one year subscription o Visa o Mastercard o Check o Cash Cardnumber: __________________________________ Expiration Date: ________________________________ Signature: ____________________________________

*Subscription rate is $25 per year. Renewals will not be charged until the last paid subscription period expires. This agreement remains until cancelled by subscriber in writing or by calling the Village News, Inc. Full terms and conditions can be found at www.anzavalleyoutlook.com.

Subscribe or Renew for just

$25 anzavalleyoutlook.com


Anza Valley Outlook • www.anzavalleyoutlook.com • October 30, 2015

B-10

24 hour Emergency Service

When you need PLUMBING, you need it to be ACCURATE, 24/7. We have the latest equipment and technology—from detecting leaks, replacing a water heater to clearing/camera sewer lines—our trained technicians will take care of all your plumbing needs.

CUSTOMER ORIENTED Customer service is our #1 priority. No job is too big or too small… we’re here for you 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Contact us today for more info about our plumbing services.

INSURANCE FRIENDLY Our experts inspect your property, review the repairs with you and present a complete itemization of the repairs to your insurance adjuster. We deal directly with your insurance adjuster to ensure that repairs are handled properly.

WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED Four offices in So. California cover areas in Lancaster, Palm Springs, L.A., Hollywood, Orange County, Riverside, Murrieta, Temecula and surrounding areas.

Proudly serving all of Southern California for over 21 years.

888-333-LEAK (888) 333-5325

www.AccurateLeakLocators.com

License # 850152

MENIFEE PLUMBING By Falco & Sons

Full Service Plumbing • 21+ Years Experience Repipes

Menifee Plumbing by Falco & Sons (A division of Accurate Leak Locators), grew up in Menifee.

Slab Leaks

We use only state-of-the-art equipment to detect leaks and perform our repairs or replacements.

Slab Repairs

NO JOB IS TOO SMALL

Pipe/Leak Locating

ROOTS

Sewer Line Repair Water Heaters

Our team of experts provides professional, prompt and precise service for all your plumbing needs— from replacing that old water heater to clearing out the roots from your clogged drain lines. Don’t wait for an emergency to call, but if you have an emergency call us first at 951-679-0732!

LEAKS

CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR #1 PRIORITY With over 21 years of experience fixing slab leaks, doing gas leak repairs, removing roots and debris from snaking and jetting drain lines, replacing water regulators, repiping and rerouting plumbing lines, and installing water heaters, we have built a solid reputation in the community.

Drain Cleaning Reroutes & MORE WATER HEATERS

Riverside • Murrieta • Temecula & Surrounding Areas

Call us 7 days a week 951-679-0732 (even Weekends & Holidays)

26025 Newport Rd. • Suite A413 • Menifee, CA 92584 • License # 850152 •

www.menifeeplumbing.com


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