Inyo steps into bobcat battle

Transcription

Inyo steps into bobcat battle
today’s weather
Sunny
93° HI | 51° LO
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
94° | 54°
95° | 55°
Fly fishing novice lands lunker in Bishop
Creek Canyon See page 14
Inyo County sheriff’s correctional officers undergo
advanced arrest/control technique training See page 7
The Inyo Register
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢
Destruction
Derby in
jeopardy
Cars and
sponsors needed
for 2015 event
By Darcy Ellis
Managing Editor
Animals and talents on display
Hannah Neer of Bishop Future Farmers of America poses with her
burly bovine Saturday night at the Eastern Sierra Tri-County Fair
Junior Livestock Auction, where she and dozens of other youth
competed for ribbons and/or watched as community members bid
on their animals. Winners from the various FFA and 4-H clubs and
the top prices per pound will be reported later this week. For more
photos, see page 10.
Photo by Hannah and Maya Hart
A call went out across the
Eastern Sierra yesterday in an
effort to spare one of the
region’s most popular annual
events from cancellation.
Businesses willing to pony
up sponsorship money and
local crews interested in retrofitting old beater automobiles are being encouraged to
team up to save the 2015
Destruction Derby.
Eastern Sierra Tri-County
Fair CEO Sally Symons reported Monday that not enough
cars are signed up to participate in the iconic Inyo County
event with less than two
months to go before showtime.
According to the Bishop
Volunteer Fire Department,
which puts on the derby in
Sally Symons,
Tri-County Fair CEO
exchange for a significant
portion of ticket sales, it
takes anywhere from a year
to at least a month to prepare
the cars – big metal land
boats from the ’70s and ’80s
that must be reinforced for
both battle and driver safety,
sometimes from the frame up
with a new engine.
See derby E Page 3
Bishop Tribe’s food
Inyo steps into
program expected to grow bobcat battle
Effort to promote
food sovereignty
through
gardening
receives
$40,000 grant
By Kristina Blüm
Register Correspondent
The Bishop Paiute Tribe
was recently awarded a
$40,000 grand from the First
INDEX
Calendar............ 9
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Editorial.............. 4
Time Warp.......... 5
TV Listings.......... 6
Weather............. 2
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Hard work spotlights
the character of
people: some turn up
their sleeves, some
turn up their noses,
and some don’t turn
up at all.”
– Sam Ewing,
former pro baseball player,
Whitesox/Bluejays
Copyright ©2015
Horizon Publications, Inc.
Vol. 145, Issue 84
Nations Development
Institute of Colorado. The
grant, which is part of the
FNDI’s “Seeds for Native
Health” program, will be used
to enhance the Bishop Paiute
Tribe’s Food Sovereignty
Program.
.The Bishop Tribe was one
of 16 Native American communities chosen to receive
one of the FNDI’s grants. The
“Seeds for Native Health” program was started by the
Shakopee Mdewakanton
Sioux Community to “support
Native tribes and organizations working to eliminate
food insecurity, promote
access to fresh and healthy
foods, and provide increased
access to nutritional programs aimed at improving
the overall nutrition and
health of Native people and
communities.”
“The purpose of the
Bishop Paiute Tribe’s Food
Sovereignty Program is working to address food security
by trying to be more self sufficient rather than relying on
corporate market. It is about
building independence by
building a local food system,”
Jen Schlaich of the Bishop
Paiute Tribe’s Environmental
Management office said.
The Bishop Paiute Tribe’s
Food Sovereignty Program
has been in place for five
months, and is expected to
grow as the funds from the
See grow E Page 3
Supes send letter to Sacramento
opposing trapping ban
By Jon Klusmire
Register Correspondent
Harvesting heirloom red romaine lettuce grown by the Bishop
Paiute Tribe’s Food Sovereignty Program. The half-acre farm also
yields heirloom tomatoes, squash, leeks, carrots and other vegetables
sold at a weekly community market held at the Paiute Shoshone
Cultural Center at 2300 W. Line St.
Photo courtesy Bishop Paiute Tribe
Inyo County is on the record as being against a statewide ban
on bobcat trapping.
.County officials also don’t want to see a partial ban on trapping in Inyo County.
.Instead, the county is urging the Fish and Wildlife
Commission to continue studying all aspects of the state’s bobcat management strategies and related issues, and render a decision based on biological evidence collected in the field instead of
“the legislative process.”
.In a letter to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Inyo
County Board of Supervisors said ongoing studies of bobcat
populations, harvest totals and impacts of a ban or continued
trapping should be completed and “recommendations be made
by the biologists” regarding the fate of bobcat trapping in the
state.
.The Board of Supervisors’ letter echoes the concerns and conclusions reached by the Inyo County Fish and Wildlife Advisory
Commission, which also sent a letter to DFW urging any decision
regarding bobcat trapping locally and statewide be based on the
results of the ongoing studies. “We are very concerned that our
state’s wildlife is being managed through the legislative process
thus tying the hands of DFW’s science-based management strategies,” the citizens’ advisory board’s letter stated.
The supervisors’ letter expressed concern about how any ban
on trapping could also affect predator control and management
in the county, which could also adversely impact agriculture and
other wildlife. Any type of ban that would reduce traditional
hunting and trapping activities in the county could also have a
negative impact on the county’s outdoor, recreation-based economy, the Board noted.
.The DFW is currently taking comments on how it should
implement AB 1213, known as the Bobcat Protection Act. The
legislation banned bobcat trapping in Joshua Tree National
Park and directed DFW to undertake comprehensive studies of
issues related to bobcat populations, trapping, hunting and
See bobcats E Page 5
The Inyo Register
2 TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 Wine, Beer & Food
Fest on tap
Fundraiser for
Wheeler Crest
Fire Department
next Saturday
Register Staff
Eastern Sierra residents
and visitors are invited join
local community members in
a dramatic setting at the base
of Wheeler Crest and overlooking Round Valley, for the
Swall Meadows Wine, Beer, &
Food Fest.
The event, scheduled for
5:30-8:30 p.m. on Saturday,
July 25, is a fundraiser benefitting the Wheeler Crest Fire
Department.
Attendees can expect
unique wines along with
knowledgeable pourers, as
reds and whites from the
best California wineries –
Grgich Hills, Rombauer
Vineyards, and Frog’s Leap,
to name a few – are served.
Glass Onion is catering and
Great Basin Bakery and Pie in
the Sky are providing dessert.
New this year, June Lake
Brewery will be pouring beer.
Live music by Idle Hands and
raffle and silent auction items
will round out the event.
Raffle or auction items
include a Season Pass to
Mammoth Mountain, a 2016
Rock Creek Pack Station Pack
Trip and a two-night stay at
the Beresford Arms Hotel in
San Francisco.
With Swall Meadows still
recovering from the devastat-
ing Round Fire in which 36
home were destroyed, this
event raises money for the
Red Truck Fund which buys
engines and equipment for
the Wheeler Crest Fire
Department, a 23-member
department that responds to
calls throughout the Eastern
Sierra.
Tickets cost $50 each and
raffle tickets are $10 each or
six for $50.
Event tickets can be purchased in advance at Bishop
Art Supply, Crowley Lake
Store and the Booky Joint in
Mammoth.
For tickets or donation
information, contact Donalda
Day at (951) 255-3299 or [email protected] or Gloria
Vaughan at (760) 920-7359
or [email protected].
senior center menu
Following is the menu provided by the kitchens at
senior centers in Bishop and Lone Pine, as well as the
Meals on Wheels program (weekends excluded).
Menus will be the same at both locations and for
Meals on Wheels and are subject to change. All
breads are baked from scratch. Menu subject to
change.
Friday, July 17
Roast turkey, stuffing, gravy, green beans,
cranberry sauce, pumpkin dessert
Monday, July 20
Spaghetti, broccoli, bread, green salad,
tropical fruit
Tuesday, July 21
** Denotes high-sodium entree
•• Denotes high-potassium food
BBQ chicken, french fries, baked beans,
broccoli and cauliflower salad, fruit
Tuesday, July 14
Teriyaki chicken strips, rice, broccoli,
tomato and cucumber salad, pineapple
Wednesday, July 22
Salmon, garlic potatoes, green beans, tropical fruit, ice cream
Wednesday, July 15
Roast beef, mashed potatoes, gravy, peas,
spinach salad, grapes
Thursday, July 23
Hungarian goulash, pasta, cabbage, dinner
roll, cantaloupe
Thursday, July 16
Lasagna, Italian veggies, garlic bread, green
salad, pear crisp
Friday, July 24
Baked ham, au gratin potatoes, succotash,
corn bread, Ambrosia salad
birth
paredes – Daughter, Aubree Ann, born at 6:04 a.m. Thursday, June 4, 2015 at Northern
Inyo Hospital in Bishop to Julie Robbins and Carlos Paredes of Bishop.
Weight: 7 lbs.
Length: 19 inches
Grandparents: Wes and Pat Robbins of Bishop, and Bernice Carrillo of Bremerton, Wash.
Also welcoming baby Aubree home are siblings Alessia, 5, and Adrian, 3.
To submit a birth announcement for publication in The Inyo Register, simply drop by our offices at 1180 N. Main, Ste.
108, Bishop, and pick up one of our mail-in forms, or write a brief announcement similar to the format above. Please
include a telephone number in case a question arises.
www.inyoregister.com
lotto
Daily 3
Friday’s midday picks:
3, 8, 2
Friday’s evening picks:
9, 5, 4
Saturday’s midday picks:
7, 9, 6
Saturday’s evening picks:
5, 7, 2
Sunday’s midday picks:
0, 3, 0
Sunday’s evening picks:
7, 0, 8
Daily 4
Friday’s picks:
5, 7, 9, 7
Saturday’s picks:
4, 9, 3, 0
Sunday’s picks:
7, 1, 7, 3
Fantasy 5
Friday’s picks:
3, 7, 19, 27, 29
Saturday’s picks:
10, 23, 35, 38, 39
Sunday’s picks:
7, 19, 29, 30, 36
Daily Derby
Friday’s picks: First place
No. 5 California Classic; second place No. 3 Hot Shot;
third place No. 7 Eureka.
Winning race time was
1:43.11.
Saturday’s picks: First
place No. 11 Money Bags;
second place No. 6 Whirl
Win; third place No. 5
California Classic. Winning
race time was 1:40.98.
Sunday’s picks: First
place No. 2 Lucky Star; second place No. 10 Solid Gold;
third place No. 4 Big Ben.
Winning race time was
1:48.48.
Mega Millions
Numbers for Friday,
July 10:
24, 27, 45, 51, 54 8
SuperLotto Plus
Numbers for Saturday,
July 10:
18, 23, 33, 34, 39 10
Powerball
Numbers for Saturday,
July 10:
11, 39, 46, 52, 54 3
Wake up to
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For additional updates, call
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The Inyo Register
Rena Mlodecki
Publisher
[email protected]
Ext. 222
Darcy Ellis
Managing Editor
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Ext. 211
Louis Israel
Reporter
[email protected]
Ext. 214
Cynthia Hurdle Sampietro
Classifieds Manager
[email protected]
Ext. 200
The Lawrence brothers, Dawson, 3, Riley, 5 and Archer,
11-months enjoying the shade on their patio.
Photo submitted
Do you have a Smile of the Week photo you want to share
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SMILE of the week is sponsored by:
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Accept most insurances • Dental services now available for Medi-Cal adult patients
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Ext. 206
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Ext. 201
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Sales Representative
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1180 N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514 | Phone: (760) 873-3535 | Fax: (760) 873-3591
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Bishop • 52 Tu Su Lane
Medical: 760.873.8461 • Dental: 760.873-3443
Lone Pine • 1150 Goodwin Rd.
Medical & Dental 760.876.4795
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Medical & Dental & Behavioral • 530.495.2100
The Inyo Register
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 3
AT A
GLANCE
Music fest fundraiser
BISHOP – There will be a
$1-a-Dip Potluck Dinner at 6
p.m. this Friday to benefit
the Eastern Sierra Music
Festival, which itself is a
fundraiser for the National
Wounded Warrior Center.
Attendees are asked to
bring a main dish, salad or
dessert to contribute. The
dinner is being held at the
VFW Hall, 484 Short St.,
Bishop. For more information, call (760) 914-1109.
Salute young ladies
INYO – Congressman Cook
is now accepting nominations for the 2015 “Salute to
Women: Young Leaders and
Mentors” ceremony to be
held in Apple Valley later
this year. Cook’s event will
pay tribute to young women
who have demonstrated
exceptional leadership in
their communities. The ceremony will also recognize
women who provide mentorship through their involvement with youth organizations.
To submit a nomination,
please visit Cook’s website at
the following link and complete the nomination form:
http://cook.house.gov/salutetowomen
The deadline for submitting a nomination to Cook’s
office is Aug. 1, 2015. For
additional information, contact Rep. Cook’s Apple Valley
District Office at (760) 2471815.
Money-makers?
BISHOP – The Eastern
Sierra Tri-County Fair Board
of Directors will be discussing bingo and off-track
wagering as two potential
new revenue opportunities.
The board is scheduled to
meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday,
July 22 in the board room at
the main office of the fairgrounds.
Other agenda items
include updates on the state
budget, upcoming Tri-County
Fair and the American Mule
Museum, as well as financial
reports and wrap-ups of the
Junior Livestock Auction and
California High School Rodeo
Association State Finals.
The meeting is open to
the public.
All aboard
LAWS – Train rides will be
offered this weekend at Laws
Museum northeast of Bishop
off U.S. Highway 6.
The Death Valley RR car
will be operating between
10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. for
rides on the museum grounds.
Tickets are still $3 per person;
children less than 13 years old
ride for free when accompanied by an adult. Take a break,
and experience what it was like
to ride on a train in the 1920s.
Come out and visit all the
exhibits at Laws Railroad
Museum and Historic Site.
Under the stars
BISHOP – Night swimming
is running from 7-9 p.m.
tomorrow, Wednesday, July
15 at Bishop City Park. The
cost for Night Swim is $4 for
adults and $2 for children
4-12 years old. All children
under 12 must be accompanied by an adult. For more
information, call (760) 8727201.
Fresh produce
LONE PINE – The Lone Pine
Farmers Market will take
place this Friday, July 17
from 5-7 p.m. at Spainhower
Park, U.S. Highway 395, next
to Carl’s Jr.
The market will feature
seasonal produce, herbs,
eggs, baked goods and local
art. For more information,
call (760) 915-0185.
Windy Flats walk
MONO – Join the Sierra
Club for an hour’s walk this
Thursday through the meadow which once was the
Arcularius Ranch. See remnants of early-day farming in
Mammoth. Meet at 4:30 p.m. at the
Mammoth Union Bank. For
more information, contact
Mike at marymikeshore@
gmail.com.
Tribal members tend to a crop of Paiute sweet corn at the tribe’s community garden Vegetables grown at the tribe’s garden are sold at the weekly community market,
back in June.
where shoppers can also find live music and art projects for kids.
Photos courtesy Bishop Paiute Tribe
grow
Continued from front page
FNDI grant are used to develop and expand the program.
Right now, the Tribe has its
own half-acre garden plot and
a community market where
individuals can purchase produce and hand crafted items.
According to a press
release
from
the
Environmental Management
Office, “Through funds
received from the Seeds of
Native Health Grant, the Food
Sovereignty Program will
increase its capacity to directly support Native health,
nutrition and food systems.”
There are many different
types of vegetables being
grown on the Tribe’s Food
Sovereignty Farm, such as
heirloom tomatoes, salad
greens, squash, leeks and carrots. The farm is an educational site for the entire Tribe,
unlike most community gardens where individuals have
their own plots. “All the seeds
are sourced from the surrounding area,” Schlaich said.
One major emphasis of the
program is the cultivation
and re-integration of traditional native food sources
into the modern diet. In addi-
derby
Continued from front page
In other words, for anyone who hasn’t started work yet on that
derby car, now is the time.
“It would be a huge economic blow to the Fair if we didn’t get
to put this on,” Symons said. “Not to mention how disappointed
people would be if we didn’t have one.”
Both the Fair and Fire Department agree the Destruction Derby
has reached tradition-like status in the Eastern Sierra, with the
show consistently selling out every year and spectators coming
from Nevada and Southern California to take in the mayhem.
Last year’s ticket sales – each and every one of the 4,400 seats
available in the Mike Boothe Memorial Arena – netted the fire
department $34,000 and the Tri-County Fair was a little less than
$30,000. The fire department uses its annual derby proceeds to
buy equipment.
There is also a trickle-down effect from the derby that benefits
food and product vendors, the carnival and other entities who
stand to gain by having more bodies at the fairgrounds.
The derby usually attracts 20 to 22 cars, according to the fire
department. Symons said at least 10 more are needed for this
year’s derby to avoid cancellation.
It’s possible many teams are already working on their cars but
have simply not signed up yet. If that’s the case, they are urged to
sign up as soon as possible.
Sponsorships are also needed to help defray the costs of entering a derby car, which, if a team already has a vehicle to work on,
can range from $500 to $1,000 for improvements.
Symons encourages local businesses who have never sponsored a derby car before to consider doing so – it’s a fun and
unusual way to get recognized and support the community.
Multiple businesses, or individuals, can support a single car.
Anyone interested in entering the 2015 derby or sponsoring a
car is asked to call Mike Johnston at (760) 937-2065 or the Bishop
Volunteer Fire Department at (760) 873-5485.
Summer
Special
3 months
only $99
(plus initiation fee for new members)
Offer available
July 13 through 19
For more information, stop by
192 E. Pine St. • Bishop, CA 93514
tion to the above mentioned
garden vegetables, the Tribe
is also growing Paiute sweet
corn, a crop traditionally
grown by the Paiute people of
Utah. They are also growing
taboose. The tuber of the
taboose plant is a traditional
food source for the Paiute
people. “We are working to
reintegrate traditional foods
into the modern culture,”
Schlaich said.
.The Tribe is also planning
to do classes about traditional
and modern food preparation
and cultivation. The Tribe has
already offered a seed-saving
workshop, which was well
attended. “We did a seed-saving workshop, and the community involvement was really encouraging,” Schlaich said,
“It was the largest workshop
that
the
Environmental
Management department has
held. It was so popular that
we are planning to have that
speaker back for an extended
workshop in September.”
The seed-saving program
is designed to teach participants about saving seeds
from various crops in order
to have seeds for the next
growing season. Part of the
funds from the FNDI grant
will be used to, “establish a
network of individuals interested in contributing to an
autonomous food system
through the organization of a
seed cooperative pilot project. The seeds they save will
be purchased, packaged and
re-sold to the community at
an affordable price before the
subsequent growing season.”
The Food Sovereignty Farm
currently has two summer
interns, who are working
through the Tribe’s youth
program. These interns are
receiving on-the-job training
while learning about the
plants they are growing. “It is
fun to watch their excitement
as they are learning about the
plants. They are so inspired
by growing plants for their
community. They are even
growing their own plants at
home,” Schlaich said.
In addition to growing its
own produce, the Tribe has
started a community market
where local vendors can sell
their produce, as well as craft
items. As a new venture for
the Tribe, the market is still
growing. Local musicians
have participated, as well as a
Bishop Tribal member who is
selling Indian tacos and fry
bread. Everyone is invited to
visit the market every Friday
afternoon from 4:30-7. The
market will be held through
the end of September at the
Paiute Shoshone Cultural
Center at 2300 W. Line St.
The Inyo Register
OPINION
4
TuESDAy, juLy 14, 2015
Rena Mlodecki Publisher | daRcY elliS Editor
Political cartoons published in this newspaper – as with letters to the editor and op-eds – do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Inyo Register, its employees or its parent company. These cartoons are merely intended to present food-for-thought in a different medium. The Inyo Register (ISSN 1095-5089) Published
tri-weekly by Horizon California Publications Inc., 1180 N. Main Street, Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514. Entered as a Paid Periodical at the office of Bishop, California 93514,
under the Act of March 3, 1876. Combining Inyo Register, founded 1883; Inyo Independent and Owens Valley Progress-Citizen, founded 1870; and the Sierra Daily News.
All contents are the property of Horizon California Publications Inc. and cannot be reproduced in any way without the written consent of publisher. Postmaster: Send
address changes to The Inyo Register, 1180 N. Main Street, Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514. Phone (760) 873-3535. Fax (760) 873-3591
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Civilization
under attack
The same-sex marriage decision,
like the abortion decision on Roe v.
Wade, are examples of progressive
usurpation of power from the people. Californians’ support for Prop
8 was denied.
Progressives usually practice
narcissism, nihilism and totalitarianism because they can’t get a
majority to agree when the people
disagree explicitly.
First, Roe annihilated untold millions and now progressivism is on
attack against civilization.
Jeffrey Greenberg
Bishop
IN APPRECIATION
Thanks for
supporting
scholarship
for Rachael
On behalf of the Bishop
Committee for California High
School Rodeo, I would like to thank
the following organizations, businesses and individuals who participated in our Fifth Annual Outgoing
Queen Scholarship:
Bishop-Sunrise Rotary Club
Bishop Lions Club
Altrusa of the Eastern Sierra
Gabriel L. Overholtzer, DDS
Peter E. Tracy, Attorney at Law
Paul Bedell and Joanne Parsons
Bishop was the first town to
offer this recognition of appreciation for the queen’s year of hard
work: supporting High School
Rodeo; representing our whole
State of California and travelling
throughout (even nationally in
Rock Springs, Wyo.); being someone to look up to and the spokesperson for the sport of rodeo; and
lastly, spreading the word about
Bishop in all her interviews, articles, webpage, appearances, on
Facebook, etc., as the site of the
California State High School Rodeo
Finals.
Again this year, we gave a $1,000
scholarship to our outgoing queen,
Rachael Lee Asbell from Escondido,
Calif., and she was very grateful for
this award.
Thank you all for supporting
California High School Rodeo.
Sincerely,
Chuck Kilpatrick,
Member of the Bishop
Committee for CHSRA
WRITE yOuR REPRESENTATIvES
County of Inyo
168 N. Edwards St., Independence;
(760) 878-0366, (760) 873-8481,
(760) 876-5559, (800) 447-4696;
www.inyocounty.us
Board of Supervisors:
• District 1 Dan Totheroh:
(760) 872-2137
• District 2 Jeff Griffiths:
(760) 937-0072 Office and Cell
[email protected]
• District 3 Richard Pucci:
(760) 878-0373 Office
[email protected]
• District 4 Mark Tillemans:
(760) 938-2024 Office
(760) 878-8506 Cell
[email protected]
• District 5 Matt Kingsley:
(760) 878-8508 Office and Cell
[email protected]
• Address for all:
P.O. Drawer N, Independence,
CA 93526
County Administrator: Kevin
Carunchio, (760) 878-0291,
[email protected]
Regular meetings of Board of
Supervisors: Every Tuesday, 9 a.m.
(some
exceptions),
County
Administrative
Center
in
Independence.
LETTERS AND TOP Of THE mORNINg POLICy
• Limit for letters is 500 words;
for Top of the Morning, 1,000
words.
• Submission must be original and
not published in any other print
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ber will not be published.)
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topics are given priority.
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Editor, The Inyo Register, 1180
N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA
93514
City of Bishop
City Hall: 377 W. Line St., Bishop,
CA 93514; (760) 873-5863;
www.ca-bishop.us
City Council:
• Mayor Patricia Gardner
(760) 873-8579
[email protected]
• Mayor Pro-tem Laura Smith
(760) 872-4034
[email protected]
• Karen Schwartz
(760) 872-1756
[email protected]
• Joe Pecsi
(760) 784-0699
[email protected]
• Jim Ellis
[email protected]
(760) 872-0780
Address for all: 377 W. Line St.,
Bishop, CA 93514
City Administrator/Community
Services Director: Jim Tatum,
(760) 873-5863, [email protected]
Regular meetings of City Council:
second, fourth Mondays, 7 p.m.,
City Hall
CuSTOmER SERvICE
T
he inyo Register would
like to introduce Kristina
Blum as their new Customer
Service Representative.
Kristina will be randomly
calling subscribers to ensure
our delivery is satisfactory.
She values your time and has
only a handful of questions.
Feel free to share comments
about your overall impression
of The inyo Register.
Thank you!
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Drug and Alcohol free event.
57
volumes
I love reading the
paper especially all
the articles on hiking
by your columnist
Craig Jackson. So well
written with such good
detail. His articles are
phenomenal! I cut them
out and save every one
because I love to hike
and his articles make
me want to go on every
hike he writes about. I
also enjoy the Horoscope
section. I don’t normally
like them, but the one
you feature is always
really good! I also really
like that you include
stories and photos of
the Co-Op people down
in Independence. I am
a strong supporter of
them. Thank you Inyo
Register!
”
Philly Brooks,
Bishop, CA
“Strong Editorial Newspapers
Build Strong Communities”
The Inyo Register
1108 N. Main St., Ste. 108
Bishop, CA 93514
760-873-3535
The Inyo Register
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 5
bobcats
Continued from front page
management. Those studies
are underway. The DFW
Commission is also considering a statewide ban on bobcat
trapping, or a partial ban in
some regions, and creating
“buffer zones” around areas
where bobcat trapping is prohibited, and other options to
limit bobcat trapping. In all
proposed scenarios, bobcat
hunting would not be affected.
.The commission is taking
public comment on the proposed revisions and changes
to its bobcat management
plans until July 27. (Check
www.wildlife.ca.gov for information on how to submit comments.)
Proponents of the statewide ban claim the current
trapping seasons and regulations are based on flawed
studies and information gathered decades ago. They also
claim a recent increase in the
price of bobcat pelts is driving
the commercial trapping take
to higher levels. Proponents of
the statewide ban also note
that there are relatively few
bobcat trappers.
The DFW website has statistics on bobcat trapping and
hunting dating to the 1970s.
Those numbers show a dramatic decline in the number of
bobcats trapped in the state.
In 1977-78, trappers and hunters harvested 20,158 bobcats.
From 1983 to 1987, about
10,000 bobcats a year were
harvested by trappers (hunters took about 1,000 a year).
Those totals dropped to about
1,500 a year between 1991
and 1997. From about 2000 to
2009, there were about 1,000
bobcats a year harvested. That
figure increased in the last
several years to about 1,600 a
year, which is about the number taken in 2012-13 and
2013-14, according to DFW.
Time Warp Tuesday
Great author Time Warp
Today, people are drawn to The Inyo Register to see the next Top of The Morning and Geek Girl
– but can you imagine how they flocked to be entertained by the next Jack London serial in the
days before TV? This edition of “Smoke Bellew” by Jack London appeared in the April 15, 1915
edition. In it, characters try to swindle each other over loopholes in the contracts for the purchase of eggs. Not surprisingly, the prose is beautifully written and relevant even to this day.
Think “Celebrity Apprentice” and “Keeping Up With The Kardashians” have 100 years of staying
power as well? We’ll just have to wait and see.
Inyo Register image
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The number of bobcats
taken in Inyo County over the
years has increased, relative to
the rest of the counties in the
state. In 1983, when 8,696
bobcats were taken statewide,
Inyo was not in the 10 top
counties for bobcat trapping.
In 2013-14, a total of 1,639
bobcats were taken statewide.
In Inyo County, 157 bobcats
were taken, which gave Inyo
the third highest county total
for total bobcat harvests. Kern
than $50 a pelt. From 2000 on,
prices have increased steadily.
Inyo County’s letter to
Sonke Mastrup, executive
director of the California Fish
and Wildlife Commission,
noted concerns about both a
total and partial trapping ban
in Inyo County.
The option of a “total closure” to trapping west of U.S.
Highway 395 in Inyo and Mono
counties “would restrict the
Department’s ability to man-
The economic viability of our county
“relies
on a multitude of outdoor
heritage activities and it is incumbent
on the (Fish and Game Commission) to
protect the sustainability of our
outdoor recreational and other
hunting and fishing industries.
”
– Inyo County Board of Supervisors
County was number one, with
268, San Bernardino was number two with 253, next came
Inyo with 157, with Siskiyou
County fourth with 130. Mono
County had 77 bobcats harvested.
The number of licensed
trappers in each county in
2013-14 also mirrors those
totals. Kern had 268, San
Bernardino had 253 and Inyo
had 156. The DFW issued
1,639 licenses to bobcat trappers and hunters in 2013-14.
Higher prices for bobcat
pelts have spurred increased
trapping in recent years. The
average price in 2013-14 was
$390 a pelt, according to DFW.
In the 1980s, the average price
per pelt was around $100. The
average in the 1990s was less
age predator populations” in
the Sierra high country. Such a
ban could also limit trapping
of gray fox, raccoons and coyotes, “which would have an
impact on agriculture and
other wildlife populations,”
the board noted.
The Board asked DFW “to
allow the results of the bobcat
studies to be completed and
recommendations to be made
by the biologists.”
“The economic viability of
our County relies on a multitude of outdoor heritage activities,” the Board’s letter concludes, “and it is incumbent
on the (Fish and Game
Commission) to protect the
sustainability of our outdoor
recreational and other hunting
and fishing industries.”
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The Inyo Register
6 TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 MAN ON THE STREET
Why do you like to come to the
Bishop Farmers Market?
By Seth Conners
“I like to interact with the community and see who’s in town.”
– Jasmine Beaghler,
Bishop
“Because I can buy organic produce from local farmers.”
– Karen Summers,
Bishop
“I like to give back to the community.”
– Sue Chudy,
Chalfant Valley
“Because I like good food … and
this is where the good food is.”
– Melanie Otto,
Bishop
TV TUES./WED.
FOR
Tuesday 14 July 2015
moVies
sporTs
neWs/TalK
Kids
“I believe in supporting and buying community food.”
– Miranda Serene,
Bishop
Wye Road
Feed & Supply
Open 7 Days a Week
Owned and Run By Animal Lovers!!
1260 N. Main Street on Hwy. 6 in Bishop
760-872-8010
B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
5 pm
5:30
6 pm
6:30
7 pm
7:30
8 pm
8:30
9 pm
9:30
10 pm
10:30
11 pm
11:30
CBS 2 News
Evening News The Insider
Entertainment NCIS “Check”
Zoo “The Silence of the Cicadas”
NCIS: New Orleans
CBS 2 News
NCIS: N.O.
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00
NBC 4 News
Nightly News
Extra
Ac. Hollywood America’s Got Talent Guest judges help narrow down the field.
(:01) Hollywood Game Night
NBC 4 News
Tonight Show
4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News at 5pm
KTLA News at 6 KTLA News
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
The Flash “Flash vs. Arrow”
iZombie
KTLA 5 News at 10
KTLA 5 News
Friends
5
5 (KTLA) The Steve Wilkos Show
McLaughlin
PBS NewsHour
Secrets of the Dead
The Abolitionists: American
American Experience “Blackout” Frontline “Escaping ISIS”
Tavis Smiley
Charlie Rose
(KOCE) Wild Kratts
News
World News
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Fresh Off-Boat blackish
Extreme Weight Loss “Jenn” A woman learns healthy habits.
News
Jimmy Kimmel
7
7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM
World News
KOLO 8 6:30
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Fresh Off-Boat blackish
Extreme Weight Loss “Jenn” A woman learns healthy habits.
KOLO 8 at 11
Jimmy Kimmel
19
(KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30
Family Feud
Family Feud
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Entertainment The Insider
9
9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court
TMZ
Dish Nation
Modern Family Modern Family Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
TMZ
Dish Nation
11
11 (KTTV) 2015 MLB All-Star Game From Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.
Business Rpt. World News
Kabuki Kool
Huell Howser
Steves’ Europe Artbound “Monomaniacs”
Studio A “Daniel Lanois”
City Walk
Earth Focus
Special
10
28 28 (KCET) World News
The List
Fresh Off-Boat blackish
Extreme Weight Loss “Jenn” A woman learns healthy habits.
7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Nightline Inside Edition RightThisMinute
2
(KMGH) 7News Right
(:01) Hollywood Game Night
9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon
(:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly
4
(KUSA) 9News at 6pm Entertainment America’s Got Talent Guest judges help narrow down the field.
NCIS “Check”
Zoo “The Silence of the Cicadas”
NCIS: New Orleans
News
(:35) NCIS: New Orleans
Late Late Show/James Corden
News Repeat
7
(KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News
1 of 1: Genesis
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) 1 of 1: Genesis
NFL Live
Baseball Ton. World/Poker
2014 World Series of Poker
2014 World Series of Poker
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) 2015 Pan American Games From Toronto.
UFC Insider
UFC Unleashed
World Poker Tour
PowerShares Champions Series Tennis
Bull Riding Championship.
World Poker Tour
25 27
(FXSP) Golf Life
Castle “The Blue Butterfly”
Castle “Pandora”
Rizzoli & Isles “Imitation Game”
Rizzoli & Isles
Proof “Memento Vivere”
Rizzoli & Isles
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Castle
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Clipped
Big Bang
Conan
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) Seinfeld
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
WWE Tough Enough
Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows (:01) Royal Pains “Lama Trauma” (:02) WWE Tough Enough
28 34
105 242 (USA) WWE Tough Enough
Dance Moms
Dance Moms “Abby vs. Kira”
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
(:02) Dance Moms
(:02) Dance Moms
29
108 252 (LIFE) Wife Swap “Lawrence/Caddel”
Escaping Polygamy “Melanie”
Intervention “Mike; Lauren”
Escaping Polygamy Escaping from polygamous cults.
Escaping Polygamy “Melanie”
30
109 253 (LMN) Escaping Polygamy Escaping from polygamous cults.
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch: The Bait
Deadliest Catch
(:03) Land Rush
(:03) Deadliest Catch
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Deadliest Catch “Lunatic Fringe”
Little People, Big World
My Giant Life
Little People, Big World
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Love; Lust; Run Love; Lust; Run Little People, Big World Jeremy and Audrey’s relationship.
River Monsters “Body Snatcher”
River Monsters
Devoured: Super Snake
(:02) Man-Eating Zombie Cats
(:03) River Monsters
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced
Counting Cars Counting Cars
34 36
120 269 (HIST) Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars (:03) Leepu & Pitbull
Big Smo
Big Smo
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Wahlburgers
Donnie-Jenny
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48
››› The Green Mile (1999, Drama) Tom Hanks, David Morse. A guard thinks an inmate has a supernatural power to heal.
››› The Fugitive (1993)
36
254 (AMC) (4:00) ››› The Rookie (2002) Dennis Quaid, Rachel Griffiths.
› The Purchase Price (1932)
(:45) ››› The Harvey Girls (1946) Judy Garland, John Hodiak.
(:45) ››› Westward the Women (1951, Western) Robert Taylor, Denise Darcel.
37
132 256 (TCM) ›› Mail Order Bride (1964) Buddy Ebsen.
››› 13 Going on 30 (2004) Jennifer Garner, Mark Ruffalo.
Pretty Little Liars
(:01) Stitchers
(:02) Pretty Little Liars
The 700 Club
38 19
180 311 (FAM) Buffy the Vampire Slayer
K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover Liv & Maddie
Austin & Ally
Austin & Ally
Dog With a Blog Girl Meets
Best Friends
Austin & Ally
K.C. Undercover Liv & Maddie
I Didn’t Do It
Austin & Ally
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Liv & Maddie
SpongeBob
Henry Danger Thundermans Every Witch
Talia, Kitchen Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince
Fresh Prince
Friends
(:36) Friends
40 66
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
Family Guy
41 16
176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Steven Universe Wrld, Gumball Teen Titans Go! Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
House Hunters H Hunt. Int’l
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) Flip or Flop
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped “Peri Peri Determined”
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped “Peri Peri Determined”
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) Chopped “Mix and Mache”
›› A Good Day to Die Hard (2013) Bruce Willis, Jai Courtney.
›› Iron Man 2 (2010, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle.
Tyrant “A Viper in the Palace”
Tyrant “A Viper in the Palace”
44 40
137 248 (FX) Mike & Molly
(7:58) Tosh.0
The Comedy Central Roast Various celebrities roast Justin Bieber.
Another Period The Comedy Central Roast
45 37
107 249 (COM) (4:46) Futurama (:18) Futurama Drunk History Drunk History Another Period (:26) Tosh.0
Ink Master “Meet Your Maker”
Ink Master “Fight or Flight”
Ink Master “Sink or Swim”
Ink Master “Tut for Tat”
Tattoo Night.
Tattoo Night.
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Ink Master “The Epic Finale” The Ink Master is crowned.
›› Phenomenon (1996, Drama) John Travolta, Kyra Sedgwick, Forest Whitaker.
››› Déjà Vu (2006) Val Kilmer
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) ››› Starship Troopers (1997, Science Fiction) Casper Van Dien, Dina Meyer, Denise Richards.
Gilligan’s Island Gilligan’s Island Gilligan’s Island Gilligan’s Island (:12) Everybody Loves Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens
63
106 (TVL) (4:36) Bonanza
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Secrets and Wives
What Happens Housewives
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) Housewives/NYC
Total Divas “Diva Divide”
E! News
Total Divas “Diva Divide”
Total Divas “She Said, She Said” Hollywood Cycle
E! News
65
114 236 (E!) Total Divas
truTV Top Funniest
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
A Grown Up
A Grown Up
A Grown Up
A Grown Up
66
204 246 (TRUTV) truTV Top Funniest
Man v. Food
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
No Reservations
An Idiot Abroad
Watt’s World
Watt’s World
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Man v. Food
Joseph Prince Steven Furtick Praise the Lord
I Will Bless the Lord at All Times ACLJ
Creflo Dollar
Acts of God
Bless the Lord
69 99
260 372 (TBN) Trinity Family Joyce Meyer
American Ride The Story Trek Turning Point Turning Point Granite Flats “Bonds”
American Ride The Story Trek
70
374 (BYU) American Ride The Story Trek Turning Point Turning Point Granite Flats “Bonds”
NCIS: Los Angeles “Tuhon”
NCIS: Los Angeles
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Rumbling Dice.
Knife Fight “Final: Alligator”
Running Bulls-Highlights
76
115 235 (ESQTV) NCIS: Los Angeles “War Cries”
The Waltons “The Heartbreaker”
The Waltons “The Long Night”
The Waltons “The Hiding Place”
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
79 35
185 312 (HALL) The Waltons “The Inferno”
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Wednesday 15 July 2015
moVies
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B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
5 pm
5:30
6 pm
6:30
7 pm
7:30
8 pm
8:30
9 pm
9:30
10 pm
10:30
11 pm
11:30
CBS 2 News
Evening News The Insider
Entertainment Big Brother
Criminal Minds “Breath Play”
Extant “Empathy for the Devil”
CBS 2 News
NCIS: N.O.
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00
NBC 4 News
Nightly News
Extra
Ac. Hollywood America’s Got Talent
American Ninja Warrior Members of the military compete.
NBC 4 News
Tonight Show
4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News at 5pm
KTLA News at 6 KTLA News
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Arrow “The Brave and the Bold”
Supernatural “Hibbing 911”
KTLA 5 News at 10
KTLA 5 News
Friends
5
5 (KTLA) The Steve Wilkos Show
Studio SoCaL PBS NewsHour
My Wild Affair
Operation Wild
NOVA Detailed images of Pluto.
To Catch a Comet
Tavis Smiley
Charlie Rose
(KOCE) Wild Kratts
News
World News
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune The 2015 ESPYs Celebrating the best moments of the year in sports; host Joel McHale.
News
Jimmy Kimmel
7
7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM
World News
KOLO 8 6:30
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune The 2015 ESPYs Celebrating the best moments of the year in sports; host Joel McHale.
KOLO 8 at 11
Jimmy Kimmel
19
(KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30
Family Feud
Family Feud
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Entertainment The Insider
9
9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court
TMZ
Dish Nation
Modern Family Modern Family MasterChef “Rice Rice Baby”
(:01) Bullseye “Zip Timeline”
Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
TMZ
Dish Nation
11
11 (KTTV) Studio 11 LA News
Business Rpt. World News
Tokyo Eye 2020 California Gold Steves’ Europe SoCal
Earth Focus
The Pink Room (2011)
Tibet Diary: Beauty and Mystery Special
10
28 28 (KCET) World News
The List
The 2015 ESPYs Celebrating the best moments of the year in sports; host Joel McHale.
7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Nightline Inside Edition RightThisMinute
2
(KMGH) 7News Right
American Ninja Warrior Members of the military compete.
9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon
(:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly
4
(KUSA) 9News at 6pm Entertainment America’s Got Talent
Big Brother
Criminal Minds “Breath Play”
Extant “Empathy for the Devil”
News
(:35) NCIS: New Orleans “Carrier” Late Late Show/James Corden
News Repeat
7
(KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
The 2015 ESPYs
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) 2015 Home Run Derby From Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.
NFL Live
SportsNation
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) 2015 Pan American Games From Toronto.
Halls of Fame Golf
College Baseball California Collegiate League All-Star Game.
World Poker Tour
World Poker Tour
25 27
(FXSP) World Poker Tour
Castle Fairytale-themed murders. Castle “A Dance With Death”
Castle “47 Seconds”
Castle “The Limey”
Castle “Headhunters”
CSI: NY A sniper prowls the city.
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Castle “Linchpin”
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) Seinfeld
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Suits A special tie to the firm.
(:01) Mr. Robot
(:06) Complications “Outbreak”
28 34
105 242 (USA) Law & Order: SVU
Whitney (2015, Docudrama) Yaya DaCosta, Arlen Escarpeta.
›› Aaliyah: The Princess of R&B (2014) Alexandra Shipp, Rachael Crawford.
Beyond the Headlines: Aaliyah
TBA
29
108 252 (LIFE) Fantasia Barrino Story
Monster in My Family
Escaping Polygamy “Melanie”
To Be Announced
Monster in My Family
Monster in My Family
Escaping Polygamy “Melanie”
30
109 253 (LMN) Monster in My Family
Airplane Repo
Airplane Repo “Blood & Mud”
To Be Announced
Airplane Repo “Episode 9”
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Airplane Repo “Repo Rat Race”
Leah Remini:
Leah Remini:
Leah Remini:
Leah Remini:
Leah Remini:
Leah Remini: It’s All Relative
Leah Remini: It’s All Relative
I Am Jazz
Leah Remini: It’s All Relative
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Leah Remini:
To Be Announced
(:01) The Last Alaskans
(:02) The Last Alaskans
To Be Announced
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
(:03) Alone “Stalked”
(:03) American Pickers
34 36
120 269 (HIST) American Pickers
Wahlburgers
Donnie-Jenny Donnie-Jenny Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Wahlburgers
Donnie-Jenny Lachey’s Bar
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) Wahlburgers
›› The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Connelly.
›› Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer
36
254 (AMC) ››› The Fugitive (1993, Suspense) Harrison Ford, Tommy Lee Jones, Sela Ward.
(:45) ›› Turnabout (1940) Adolphe Menjou.
(:15) UCLA Shorts and Newsreels
››› The Night of the Hunter (1955)
(:15) Wanda
37
132 256 (TCM) ›› Her Sister’s Secret (1946) Philip Reed
›› Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey, Morgan Freeman.
Melissa & Joey Baby Daddy
(:02) ››› Casper (1995, Fantasy) Christina Ricci, Bill Pullman.
The 700 Club
38 19
180 311 (FAM) Buffy the Vampire Slayer
I Didn’t Do It
K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover ››› Enchanted (2007, Fantasy) Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey.
Dog With a Blog Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It
Austin & Ally
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Dog With a Blog Dog With a Blog I Didn’t Do It
SpongeBob
Henry Danger Thundermans Every Witch
Talia, Kitchen Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Jim Gaffigan
Impastor
Friends
(:36) Friends
40 66
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
Family Guy
41 16
176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Steven Universe Wrld, Gumball Teen Titans Go! Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Property Brothers: Buying
Property Brothers: Buying
Most Desperate Most Desperate Property Brothers: Buying
House Hunters H Hunt. Int’l
Property Brothers
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) Property Brothers: Buying
Diners, Drive
Mystery Diners Mystery Diners 5 Restaurants 5 Restaurants Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) Mystery Diners Mystery Diners Mystery Diners Mystery Diners 5 Restaurants 5 Restaurants Diners, Drive
›› Iron Man 2 (2010, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle.
› Identity Thief (2013) Jason Bateman. A victim of identity theft fights back.
›› This Is 40 (2012) Paul Rudd, Leslie Mann.
44 40
137 248 (FX) Mike & Molly
Key & Peele
South Park
(:25) South Park South Park
(:27) South Park South Park
(:29) South Park Key & Peele
Why? With
The Comedy Central Roast
45 37
107 249 (COM) (4:46) Futurama (:18) Futurama Why? With
››› The Mummy (1999) Brendan Fraser. A mummy seeks revenge for a 3,000-year-old curse.
Egyptian Vice “Part 1”
Egyptian Vice “Part 2”
›› The Mummy Returns
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) (3:00) The Day After Tomorrow
Lake Placid vs. Anaconda (2015) Robert Englund, Yancy Butler.
›› Deep Blue Sea (1999) Thomas Jane, Saffron Burrows.
Dominion “Heirs of Salvation”
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) Lake Placid 3 (2010, Horror) Colin Ferguson, Yancy Butler.
Gilligan’s Island Gilligan’s Island Gilligan’s Island Gilligan’s Island Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Jim Gaffigan
Impastor
(:02) The Exes King of Queens
63
106 (TVL) Bonanza
Flipping Out “What the Flip!”
Flipping Out
Housewives/OC
Flipping Out “Womb for Rent”
Million Dollar Listing San
What Happens Flipping Out
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) Million Dollar Listing San
E! News
Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News
65
114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Botched “The Serial Filler”
truTV Top Funniest
Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff.
66
204 246 (TRUTV) truTV Top Funniest
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Trip Flip
Food Paradise Food Paradise International
Man Finds Food Man Finds Food BBQ Crawl
BBQ Crawl
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
BillyGraham.TV Jesse Duplantis Harvest
Creflo Dollar
Main Stage
Praise The Lord
69 99
260 372 (TBN) Trinity Family Turning Point Joseph Prince Living By Faith Praise the Lord
Belle and the Beast (2007) Stephanie Wood, Matthew Reese.
Granite Flats “Bonds”
Belle and the Beast (2007) Stephanie Wood, Matthew Reese.
Granite Flats “Bonds”
70
374 (BYU) Granite Flats “Bonds”
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Rumbling Dice.
Car Match.
Car Match.
Car Match.
Car Match.
Running Bulls Running Bulls
76
115 235 (ESQTV) American Ninja Warrior Members of the military compete.
The Waltons “The Achievement”
The Waltons “The Hawk”
The Waltons “The Stray”
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
79 35
185 312 (HALL) The Waltons “The Go-Getter”
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
L
2
4
5
The Inyo Register
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 7
MAN ON THE STREET
Why do you like to come to the
Bishop Farmers Market?
By Seth Conners
“To meet the community and sell
my veggies.”
– Tom Wise,
Big Pine
“To hang with friends and let the
wife and daughter shop for fresh
veggies.”
– Fred Rowe,
Bishop
“Because the farmers give us lots
of free food.”
– Sage Conners,
Bishop
“I like to meet the locals and make
friends.”
– Gina Jourdan,
Wilkerson
“I love fresh organic produce.
Bishop is one of our favorite
places.”
– Twila Wenger,
Oak Hills
Uncommon Sense
A stranger’s look at Utah
My wife and I recently
took a camping vacation to
southern Utah. We often go
to Utah because it is as
grand, empty and free as
the Eastern Sierra. Other
non-flat places have mountains and valleys, but the
Colorado Plateau region of
southern and central Utah
has vividly colorful sculptures instead, making it one
of the world’s most exotic
landscapes. It is different
enough to give us the requisite feeling of having gone
somewhere else.
Utah is definitely different, and it is not just the
landscape that distinguishes it. Perhaps more than
any other state Utah is the
result of the vision of a single individual: it is the state
Brigham Young built. Unlike
the other western states,
Utah was colonized by a
large-scale and intensively
organized effort by a specific group of people: the
Mormons. It is the closest
to being a theocratic state
of any in the U.S. – in most
of Utah the Mormon church
is not only the only church
in town it is the axis upon
which all civic and social
life revolves. It is a social
system as much as a religion, and this has had a
profound and visible effect
on the nature of the place
in ways that one might not
even suspect.
Utah looks neat, clean
and prosperous – and the
generally tidy aspect of the
state is not limited to the
larger and more prosperous
urban areas. Even remote
rural backwaters that would
be run down and decidedly
funky in other western
states look nice and kept up
in Utah. Throughout Utah
the streets are wide and
Carne Lowgren
Columnist
numbered rather than
named: a Mormon convention that makes it easy to
find an address and turn a
team or horses drawing a
wagon around. The houses
are usually made of brick,
rather than wood, stucco or
adobe typical of the nonMormon west, and are generally nice, if somewhat
generically plain for the
most part.
The same goes for the
ubiquitous Mormon churches, which is the most prominent building in most Utah
towns. There are three or
four church designs based
on the size of the town or
ward the local church
serves. They are tastefully
low-key largely dark red
brick buildings with a simple white steeple, and you
cannot drive through any
Utah town without seeing
one or more of them.
Utah is overwhelmingly
white. The server at your
local fast food restaurant
and the motel maid at your
hotel are most likely white
because the Mormons are
arguably the last remaining
First World white folk who
strongly prioritize having
big families. One of the
results is that entry-level
jobs that would go to poor
mostly Hispanic immigrants
in other southwestern
states go to the local white
kids in Utah.
All of this makes Utah
feel safe, pleasant and
familiar to most people of
my general demographic.
The state appears to be a
slice of 50s Americana – a
mythic place where everything worked well for everyone, and there was a broad
consensus about the social
order and where everyone
fit within it. Utah is in this
sense the opposite of the
urban California I grew up
in – a multi-cultural grab
bag of peoples and cultures
with little in common
beyond an abiding faith in
the idea that an individual
is free to invent his or herself within whatever context
they can imagine here.
As beautiful and nice as
Utah is, I wouldn’t want to
live there, and it’s not just
because I am not a Mormon,
even if it is. As a gentile I
wouldn’t fit in, and the
more homogenous a community is the more consequential fitting in, or not,
becomes. While I am usually
more comfortable on the
outside looking in, part of
that comfort is derived
from the knowledge that I
am not alone out there.
This is difficult to pull off
when you can plainly see
that you are, and that the
choice to be wasn’t yours
alone.
(In Carne’s travels in the
American West he has been
struck by both the similarities and differences between
the individual states, and
surprised at times for what
they are.)
Inyo County Sheriff’s Office Correctional Officer Phil West (l) goes up against CO Trainer John Bartlett
during Advanced Arrest and Control Technique Training on Friday.
Photo courtesy Inyo County Sheriff’s Office
Correctional officers
beef up their skillsets
Sheriff’s Office
COs undergo
advanced
training for arrest
and control
techniques
Register Staff
On Friday, a handful of
Inyo County Sheriff’s
Office Correctional Officers
attended and participated
in an eight-hour Advanced
Arrest
and
Control
Technique training.
According
to
the
Sheriff’s Office, the training started out with classroom-based review and
updates in case law, department policies, as well as a
safety briefing. The handson portion of the training
followed, and included:
warm-up, weapon reten-
tion, weapon take-away
and ground control.
Inyo County Sheriff’s
Office certified trainers for
this class are Correctional
Officer Adam Emley and
Correctional Officer John
Bartlett. Attending the
Advanced Arrest and
Control Training were
Correctional Officers Nate
Girardin, Phil West, Vicki
Michener and Dennis
Saulque.
Barrett named to Dean’s List
Bishop native
excelling at
Pepperdine
Register Staff
Pepperdine
University
announced that lifelong
Bishop resident Lauren
Barrett has been named to
the Seaver College Dean’s
List for the Spring 2015
semester.
In order to earn Dean’s
List honors, students must
be in the upper 10 percent of
their class and maintain a
3.5 or better grade point
average. This year Barrett is
one of only 279 students to
receive the honor.
Barrett is the daughter of
Bettyjoy and Don Barrett of
Bishop. She was homeschooled from kindergarten
through her senior year in
high school, graduating in
2010.
According to a Pepperdine
press release, the purpose of
the Dean’s List is to provide
recognition for the positive
academic achievements of
students at the Seaver College
of Letters, Arts, and Sciences
and to serve as an additional
incentive for academic excellence to all students.
Seaver College, located in
Malibu, is the undergraduate
school
for
Pepperdine
University, “a Christian institution committed to the
highest standards of academic
excellence
and
Christian values, where students are strengthened for
lives of purpose, service and
leadership,” the press release
states.
CO Phil West and CO Vicki Michener (front) and CO Nate Girardin and CO Dennis Saulque (back) work
in pairs during Friday’s training.
Photo courtesy Inyo County Sheriff’s Office
The Inyo Register
8 TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 © 2015 by Vicki Whiting, Editor
ugs have it rough!
Insects are, for the
most part, tiny and
defenseless. Insects are
a major food source for
millions of different
kinds of animals.
Imagine being in
danger of being eaten
every day of your life!
Luckily, we bugs
have come up with
some clever ways to
protect ourselves
from being eaten by
predators.
Jeff Schinkel, Graphics
Vol. 31, No. 31
If a bug can’t be seen, it won’t get eaten. Cicadas
sing loudly, but they are very hard to see
because their bodies match the tree trunks
on which they sit.
Beauregard loves bugs. He
sits quietly and watches
carefully to see how many
bugs he can spot in a day.
On Monday he spotted two
bugs. Each day since then
he has doubled the number
of bugs spotted.
Record in his notebook
how many bugs he spotted
each day for two weeks.
What day did he first spot
more than 100 bugs?
Rain forest treehoppers
or thornbugs look
like thorns on a twig.
These bugs feed
together and face
the same
direction to look
even more like
real thorns.
Phasmids or stick insects resemble
leaves or sticks. They can grow
up to 20 inches long and are the
longest insects in the world.
The planthopper looks
more like a leaf than a bug.
How many planthoppers
can you find hiding in
the leaves at left?
Standards Link: Life Science:
Understand insect relationships
with their physical environment.
Have you ever heard of a stinkbug? There are many
kinds of bugs called stinkbugs. They all have a special
scent gland in the thorax that produces fluids that smell
disgusting.
How many
cicadas do
you see?
Some bugs can squirt this smelly fluid at attackers. If
enough fluid lands on an attacker, it may kill it. Usually,
it only creates a burning feeling or temporary blindness.
Fluid
Meanings
Some bugs avoid being
eaten by tasting terrible.
The monarch butterfly
lays its eggs on
milkweed plants. Its
caterpillars grow up
eating milkweed, which
makes them taste bad.
Lots of animals can’t eat
milkweed, because it
tastes awful and even
makes some animals sick.
Look through the
newspaper and find
synonyms for the
word fluid. Try
replacing the word
fluid on today’s
Kid Scoop page
with each of the
synonyms you
found. Does the
synonym change
the meaning of any
of the sentences?
When the
caterpillar
becomes a butterfly,
the bitter-tasting
chemicals from the
milkweed are still in its
body. Birds and other
predators learn that the
orange and black beauty
is a snack to avoid.
Standards Link: Life Science: Students know that organisms have distinct structures and body systems that serve specific functions in growth,
survival and reproduction.
regory wakes up to discover
that he has become a giant
beetle! Surprisingly, no one
notices him one bit. Not even
when his slippery beetle self falls
down the stairs and he lies there
wriggling, all six legs in the air.
Unscramble the title of this book.
Then, check it out at your library
this summer!
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Read age-appropriate text in a variety of genres.
CAMOUFLAGE Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week’s Kid Scoop
SQUIRT
stories and activities.
CICADAS
H O T W T N E C S N
MILKWEED
D E E W K L I M D A
FLUID
S M I M I C S I I T
PHASMIDS
GLAND
G O K S A G U T M T
SCENT
G L C D Q L B T S A
ATTACKER
E G A L F U O M A C
TWIG
O S N N G B I E H K
MIMICS
MONARCH
E A S S D T E R P E
SNACK
N H C R A N O M T R
EGGS
Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical
BUGS
words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
FLUID
The noun fluid means a
liquid or something that
flows easily.
Water is a fluid.
Milk is a fluid, too.
Try to use the word fluid
in a sentence today when
talking with your friends
and family members.
Wacky Bug
ANSWER: A chocolatecovered elephant.
Standards Link: Grammar: Identify and use adjectives in
reading and writing.
Complete the grid by using all the
letters in the word HIDE in each
vertical and horizontal row. Each letter
should only be used once in each row.
Some spaces have been filled in for you.
Standards Link:
Vocabulary: Identify and use
synonyms and antonyms.
Buggy Adjectives
Look through the newspaper and find 10
adjectives that describe one or more of the
bugs on today’s Kid Scoop page. Use these
adjectives to write a paragraph about the
lives of bugs.
Standards Link: Number Sense: Calculate
sums to 20,000.
Make up a weird
and wacky bug
and describe
what it looks
like, where it
lives and what
it eats.
Thank you to these sponsors for bringing Kid Scoop to Inyo Register readers!
The Inyo Register
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 9
Late husband may have fathered child by another woman
Dear Annie: My husband
has been dead for years. He
was strong, handsome and
successful, but not faithful.
Women shamelessly threw
themselves at him and he
took advantage. He once had
to send me to a doctor to be
tested for STDs, and I was so
angry and embarrassed that
I decided the only way to
keep the marriage intact for
the children’s sake would be
to forget about romance and
approach it like a business.
The problem is, one of his
affairs may have produced a
child. The woman was mar-
ried at the time and still is.
Her husband is considered
the legal father, and for all I
know, he may be the biological father. My husband and I
never spoke about this baby
boy, but everyone else did
because we lived in a small
town. I always told myself I
would speak to the woman if
I ran into her, but I have not,
mainly to protect my children’s inheritance.
But I worry that someday
this information may have to
be dealt with. Should I put a
letter in with our family
records to be discovered
after my death? Or is this
something I should take to
my grave?
– The Wife
Dear Wife: If there is a
likelihood that your husband
fathered a child by someone
else, you should keep medical information available in
case the child decides to
search for his father. But it is
unlikely that he would be
entitled to an inheritance,
especially if many years have
passed and the money is
gone.
Dear Annie: I’d like to
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Private businesses or groups holding events for profit are not eligible to
use this section. Due to space limitations, we can only guarantee one run
per item. All submissions are subject to
editing.
Tuesday, July 14
birds and brews
On the second Tuesday of each month
at 5 p.m., meet other birders to talk birds
and enjoy the delicious food and drink at
the Mountain Rambler Brewery in Bishop,
located at 186 S. Main St. in downtown
Bishop.
Rotary club of Bishop
intermediate-level. The purpose of these
free weekly sessions is to help the residents of Bishop become more acquainted
with computer and Internet skills needed
in today’s online environment. If you are
scared of using technology, this class is for
you. It is a hands-on, interactive learning
experience (iPads provided) that requires
no previous knowledge. Any and all questions are welcome! The training is provided by the ESCRBC through a Pillsbury
Foundation Grant. For more information,
contact all the instructor at (760) 2639687.
Thursday, July 16
UNITED we ride meeting
The Rotary Club of Bishop will meet at
noon at Astorga’s Restaurant, 2206 N.
Sierra Hwy., Bishop. Rotary is a global
network of community volunteers. Call Ed
Nahin at (760) 872-2022 for more information.
United We Ride will meet for its
monthly meeting at 6 p.m. in the conference room at the Pizza Factory in Bishop.
All riders are welcome. For more information, call Dale Renfro at (760) 873-7632.
Bingo at Senior Center
A Weight Watchers group meets from
5:30-6 p.m. Thursdays, with weigh-in
from 5-5:30 p.m., at St. Timothy’s Church,
700 Hobson St. in Bishop. Visitors are
welcome to attend.
AARP is offering bingo at 1 p.m. at the
Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park.
Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to
attend. Callers and cashiers are needed.
For more information, call (760) 8735839.
Wednesday, July 15
hospital auxiliary
The Northern Inyo Hospital Auxiliary
will hold a workshop at 10 a.m. at the
hospital annex, corner of Birch and
Grandview in Bishop. Members will be
working on unique and unusual items to
be sold at the Christmas boutique in
November. This is a volunteer organization
welcoming anyone interested in helping
raise funds used for life-saving equipment
for the hospital. For more information, call
Shirley Stone at (760) 872-1914.
night swimming
Night swimming is running from 7-9
p.m. at Bishop City Park. The cost for Night
Swim is $4 for adults and $2 for children
4-12 years old. All children under 12 must
be accompanied by an adult. For more
information, call (760) 872-7201.
sunrise rotary
Bishop Sunrise Rotary will meet at
7:11 a.m. at the Northern Inyo Hospital
Conference Annex at 2957 Birch St.,
Bishop. For more information, contact
Tom Hardy at (760) 920-0109 or [email protected] or visit: www.bishopsunriserotary.org.
bridge in bishop
The Bishop Bridge Club will meet at
12:15 p.m. at St. Timothy’s Church Hall,
700 Hobson St., Bishop. For more information, call (760) 873-4325.
free computer classes
Free weekly computer and Internet
classes are held at the Bishop Senior
Center at 506 Park St., on Wednesdays.
Beginner-level classes are from 3-4:30
p.m. and 5-6:30 p.m. for users at the
Weight Watchers meeting
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering bingo at 1 p.m. at the
Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park.
Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to
attend. Callers and cashiers are needed.
For more information, call (760) 8735839.
Take off pounds sensibly
The local Take Off Pounds Sensibly
group, which promotes weight management with a philosophy that combines
healthy eating, exercise, wellness, education and peer support, will meet at 6 p.m.
at the Highlands Mobile Home Park Senior
Club House. The TOPS group is open to
men, women and teens. For more information, call Teresa at (760) 872-6729.
Friday, July 17
Music fest fundraiser
There will be a $1-a-Dip Potluck
Dinner at 6 p.m. to benefit the Eastern
Sierra Music Festival, which itself is a fundraiser for the National Wounded Warrior
Center. Attendees are asked to bring a
main dish, salad or dessert to contribute.
The dinner is being held at the VFW Hall,
484 Short St., Bishop. For more information, call (760) 914-1109.
LP FARMers market
The Lone Pine Farmers Market will
take place this from 5-7 p.m. at
Spainhower Park, U.S. Highway 395, next
to Carl’s Jr. The market will feature seasonal produce, herbs, eggs, baked goods
and local art. For more information, call
(760) 915-0185.
Saturday, July 18
golf fun day
The Bishop Chamber of Commerce and
Bishop County Club will be running a day of
golf games and food. The golf will not be
played as a typical tournament. Instead,
each hole will feature a different game with
prizes for each two-person team. All players
will also be entered in a raffle which
includes prizes such as cash and a La-Z-Boy.
A barbecue dinner is also included. Cost is
$35 per person which includes cart, raffle,
entry and the dinner. Check in begins at 3
p.m., the golf games start at 4 p.m. This
tournament is open to members and nonmembers, and all skill levels are welcome as
well. For registration or to sponsor a hole,
call April (760) 873-8405 or Bishop Country
Club (760) 873-5828.
Ride the brill car
Train rides will be offered at the Laws
Museum. The Death Valley RR car will be
operating between 10:30 a.m. and 2:30
p.m. for rides on the museum grounds.
Tickets are still $3 per person; children less
than 13 years old ride for free when accompanied by an adult. Take a break, and experience what it was like to ride on a train in
the 1920s. Come out and visit all the exhibits at Laws Railroad Museum and Historic
Site.
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering bingo at 6 p.m. at
the Bishop Senior Center behind the City
Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. Callers and cashiers are
needed. For more information, call (760)
873-5839.
Sunday, July 19
saddle club gymkhana
The Bishop Saddle Club will be holding a Gymkhana starting at 8 a.m. at the
Tri-County Fairgrounds. Hi-Point awards
will be presented at the end of the day.
Class lists and entry forms are available at
Wye Road Feed or online at bishopsaddleclub.org or you can email bscshows@
yahoo.com for more information.
Monday, July 20
Hula girls
The Hula Halau O Koru meets every
Monday at 5:45 p.m. at the Jill Kinmont
Boothe School on Grandview Drive. New
dancers are always welcome. For more
information, call Kymberlee Nalumaluhia
at (760) 873-9818 or email at [email protected].
bishop community band
The Bishop Community Band will
continue their weekly performances on
Mondays throughout the summer until
their last concert on Monday, Aug. 3. The
performances feature local musicians
playing a wide variety of music, from classical to jazz at the Band Gazebo at the
southwest corner of the Bishop Park from
8-9 p.m. There is no charge for the performance and lawn chairs and blankets
are recommended. Prior to the band
performance, prepare to be entertained
by Kymberlee’s Hawaiian Dance group or
a string duet called the Sierra Sirens.
Come on down to the cool of the evening park to hear great music.
HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY
The events of life likely would
seem too chaotic to bear were we
not inclined to make sense of them
by turning them into a story. The
meanings we assign to events may or
may not be true, but they help us
move through the randomness, for
better or worse. On this new moon
eve, practice assigning lighter, less
burdensome meanings.
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
Superstitions may not be scientific,
but they are an integral part of your
experience, and something about
them fits the way your mind works.
Connections can be precarious. If you
believe it, you’ll see it. If you don’t,
you won’t.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). A
lot of serious developments come
out of silly things. So don’t be afraid
to be a bit silly. Also, anyone who
brings out this side of you is bringing
out something essential and good.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
Some say there is no cure for curiosity. You almost wish there were some
kind of exciting distraction to divert
your attention from the thing that
captivates you against your will.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
You were at least partially formed in
the small struggles of youth. They
prepared you for the bigger challenges. Alas, it’s not time for that. This is
the period of smooth sailing.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ve
already chosen the task. Now all you
want are powers that are equal to or
greater than it. You will get what you
want in time. Today’s exercise will
help.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Untrustworthy people will say whatever they think will get them out of a
bad situation or into a desired one.
Trustworthy people will say what is,
and they also will live it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
Maybe you’re emotionally fragile now,
so it’s good to have people around
you who agree with you. Otherwise,
you prefer opposition. It is, after all,
much more useful. It’s how you
become great at what you do.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Relationships are important. Material
Holiday Mathis
possessions remind you of relationships, and that’s why you find them
so important. Without meaning, this
property has no value to you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Every day you wake up to a new
day. But you’re not always as excited
about the possibilities as you are on
this day. You are practically vibrating
with potential.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Lately you’ve been questioning your
lifestyle. Do the things around you
really add value to your life, or are
they just taking up space? It turns out
you need a lot less than you think you
do.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Some of your favorite people are
those who know how to temper your
dreams with a healthy dose of reality.
It’s the earth signs who help you keep
realistic expectations when your eyes
are bigger than your budget.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).
Sometimes the bad ideas go undetected for a while, and you wind up
putting a fair amount of work into
them before you realize the problem.
Once you realize it, though, stop
immediately. Don’t throw good efforts
after a bad idea.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (July 14).
You are beautiful, not because of one
isolated feature or fact, but because
everything about you is working
together to make a joyful impact on
the world. Your environment will
reflect new values and aesthetics. The
person you used to worry about and
help will grow strong and help you
back. New business comes in
October. Pisces and Virgo people
adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 1,
34, 3, 22 and 38.
FORECAST FOR THE WEEK
AHEAD: Though no one has ever
been to the center of the Earth, scientists believe its shape and constitution
to be a sphere of mainly iron. Most of
us have never seen our own heart,
and yet the astral events of the week
suggest that the experiments of living
will teach us what it’s made of. It may
feel as though the very people who
are supposed to be nurturing us are
in fact doing the opposite as a square
involving the sun in Cancer and
Uranus in Aries firms up. This is tough
love in action. Keep in mind that
adversarial circumstances often teach
and grow us the most.
The planet that astrologically represents the most awesome and misunderstood forces of the universe
was downgraded to a “dwarf planet”
in 2006, the same year NASA
launched the space probe New
Horizons. Talk about your mixed messages. This week, Pluto gets hit by the
interplanetary paparazzi as New
Horizons goes in for a close-up. Will
this underworld leader like the attention, or will it be considered “too little,
too late”? Perhaps you can extract a
metaphor from this journey. Is there a
neglected area of your own life that
might fuel you were you to give it
more attention?
CELEBRITY PROFILES: True to
the helping, nurturing nature of his
Cancer sun sign, weight-loss guru
Richard Simmons has helped thousands of people lose large amounts
of weight. Simmons has been keeping a low profile lately, claiming to
need a break after being in the public
eye for 30 years. With his social Libra
moon and outgoing Leo planets, this
introverted period is not likely to last
long.
To find out more about Holiday
Mathis and read her past columns,
visit the Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
vent about people who plan
things at the last minute. My
sister-in-law has the rude
habit of “planning” parties
on a minute’s notice. She has
five children, and I’d love to
attend their birthday parties
if I had more than four hours’
notice. Her excuse is that
they are so active in sports
and can’t plan ahead because
games run over or they didn’t
expect to “still be in the playoffs.” She has even scheduled parties on short notice
and then texted to cancel
them.
The most absurd example
was her husband’s 40th
birthday, again planned with
a few hours’ notice. And all
of these invitations come via
text message. If my phone is
charging, or I left it in my
car, I will never see the invitation until the party is
over.
I have become so fatigued
at her last-minute invites
that I have stopped making
any effort to attend. Why
should my children and I be
expected to drop our plans
children in sporting activities is difficult. She could
plan for overtime games by
scheduling the party later in
the day, but she seems too
frazzled to think that far
ahead. Nonetheless, you are
not obligated to attend any
party planned on such short
notice and subject to cancellation. If you want to let the
kids know that you care, we
recommend getting them a
birthday gift and dropping it
off at another time.
Kathy & Marcy
to appease her? I don’t know
what to say to her kids when
they ask why I wasn’t at their
party. Any suggestions?
– Any Minute Auntie
Dear Auntie: Your sisterin-law is either disorganized
or enjoying a power trip.
We’d give her the benefit of
the doubt. Trying to arrange
parties when you have five
Annie’s Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy
Sugar, longtime editors of the
Ann Landers column. Please
email your questions to
anniesmailbox@creators.
com, or write to: Annie’s
Mailbox,
c/o
Creators
Syndicate, 737 3rd Street,
Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
To find out more about
Annie’s Mailbox and read
features by other Creators
Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at www.
creators.com.
Today’s Crossword Puzzle
Previous Puzzle Solved
The Inyo Register
FACES&places
10
tuesday, july 14, 2015
Junior Livestock Auction
FFA and 4-H kids bring animals to market for sale to the highest bidders
FFA and 4-H youngsters had fun into the night at the Jr. Livestock Auction on Saturday. Talking turkey
under the lights are (clockwise, starting at bottom left) Avery Wilson, Manny Alvarez, Austin Van Nest
and Aubrey Wilson.
Photos by Havana and Maya Hart
Liz Bingham of FFA looks ready for the auction.
Angela Greer holds her lamb steady and takes a
moment for the camera.
Kiara Delgado in the pen with “Roxxie.”
With lambs ready for auction are 4-Hers, (l-r) Jacee Carpenter, McKenna McMurtrie, Paige Radel,
Averly Haye.
A confident Garrett Tremayne gives the camera a winning smile on
auction day.
Emma Howe leads a black beauty with a blue ribbon.
Josie Dillard can’t suppress her smile as she
heads to the auction.
Hanging out with the birds are (l-r) Justin Acevedo, Lena Cariou,
Sean Kandler, Michael Ditmar, Doug Moore, Coltan Martin, Ryan
Bishop FFA Vice President Kristy Dohnel confidently leads her steer.
FFA members Abigail Southy and Waylon Brown AJ Wilder waits to see how high a price his bird
with lambs ready to sell.
fetches.
Cappello and Kyler Francone.
Jordan Lopez gets his pig moving as the auctioneer encourages the bids.
Coltan Martin is ready to see how his animal does
at market.
Alyssa Switzer brought enough to share.
Michael Boothe shows a fine looking swine.
The Inyo Register
eASTeRN SIeRRA CLASSIFIeDS
tuesday, july 14, 2015
010 PERSONALS
040 BARGAIN CORRAL
045 HELP WANTED
CONNECT INSTANTLY WITH sexy local singles! No paid operators, just real
people like you. Try it FREE. 18+ Only.
Call now: 1-800-821-9638
CHIMNEY PIPE, DOUBLE wall, 3 sections of 6Ó pipe with rain cap. Comes
with ceiling and roof mounting components. $75 for all. 760-873-5164
CASHIER AND MANAGEMENT
POSITIONS! Flyers Energy is looking
to fill positions at our store in Bishop,
CA.
Apply
online.
http://flyersenergy.com/company/careers.shtm
020 HAPPINESS IS ...
HAPPINESS IS ÉA
LANON
Help and Hope for Families and Friends
of Alcoholics
MONDAY NIGHT GROUP meets at the
Methodist Church in Bishop (corner
Fowler & Church Streets) every Monday from 7:00PM - 8:30PM.
RARE RUSSIAN TORTOISE Female,
approx. 20 yrs. old, in good health.
Good home essential with responsible
person who has knowledge of tortoise
care. $100. Call 760-873-8643
045 HELP WANTED
WEDNESDAY NIGHT GROUP meets
at Northern Inyo Hospital Administration
Building in Bishop, every Wed. from
6:00PM - 7:30PM. For more information call 760-873-8225
HAPPINESS IS É
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
Help and Hope for People Who have
Problems with Food
Overeaters Anonymous members meet
to share their experience, strength,
hope and the OA program of recovery
every Saturday from 10:00AM-11:00AM
in the library of the Calvary Baptist
Church, 1100 W. Line St., Bishop. For
more information, call Marilyn at (760)
872-3757 or (760) 920-8013. Hope to
see you next Saturday!
HAPPINESS IS...
SIERRA GRACE SAA
New, local meeting for Sex Addicts
Anonymous. SAA is a fellowship of men
and women, who share their experience, strength and hope with each
other so they may overcome their sexual addiction. For more information,
visit www.saa-recovery.org
or call
800-477-8198.
Look
for
"Meetings...USA...Bishop"
HAPPINESS IS....
NAMI - EASTERN SIERRA
(National Alliance on Mental Illness)
FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP
Join our local Inyo-Mono Group on the
FIRST Wednesday of EVERY month.
(APRIL 1 • MAY 6 • JUNE 3, and so on)
First United Methodist Church, 205 N.
Fowler, Bishop. In the “Adult Lounge”.
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
IS food a problem for you? Do you eat
when you!re not hungry? Go on eating
binges for no apparent reason? Is
weight affecting the way you live?
Bishop Overeaters Anonymous
welcomes you Ð no dues, fees, or
weigh-ins. For more info, call Marilyn at
760-872-3757 or 760-920-8013.
Bishop Overeaters Anonymous
Saturdays 10:00 a.m. -11:00 a.m.
Calvary Baptist Church Library
1100 W. Line St., Bishop
037 FINANCIAL SERVICES
DELETE BAD CREDIT In Just
30-Days! Legally remove judgments,
collections, charge offs, medical bills,
etc. Free to start! A+ Rated W/BBB Call
Now! 866-838-5065
040 BARGAIN CORRAL
2 MAPLE COLONIAL style single
drawer end tables. Selling as a set
$100. 760-873-5164
2 METAL BED rails for full size bed, clip
in type, not bolt type $10. 760-873-5164
ANTIQUE CEILING LIGHT with shade.
Gold & ivory with scalloped edges. 18Ó
circ. with bronze type fittings. $50.
760-873-8643
EVEN FLO WOOD expansion swing
gate, never used $10. 760-873-5164
KIDDY BRAND CHILD!S folding table
with 2 folding chairs. $20 for the set.
Table measures 25Ó x25Ó . 760-873-5164
EMPLOYMENT STANDARDS
A high school graduate or equivalent
with one year of public contact experience. Applications must be received in
the Personnel Office, P.O. Box 249, Independence, CA 93526. Application
deadline: 5:00 p.m., August 3, 2015
(postmarks not accepted). Must apply
on Inyo County application form.
EOE/ADA.
Know someone who would
like to earn ticketsÉ
or some extra cash?
IT!S ALMOST HERE Ð the 20th
Annual Mammoth Festival of Beers
and Bluesapalooza and once again
we are looking for folks to join our
team.
The 20th Annual Mammoth Festival
of Beers and Bluesapalooza is one
of the best beer and blues festivals in
the West! The four-day festival takes
place July 30 Ð August 2, 2015 and
showcases over 80 of the country!s
best craft breweries and top blues
performers.
We are paying from $10 to $18 per
hour, depending on the job. Shifts begin as early as Monday, July 27th and
run through August 7th.
OR
Work in trade for an event ticket; 8
hours of work = a 2-day pass, 12
hours of work = a 4-day pass. Hours
must be completed prior to receiving
your event ticket.
This amazing Mammoth Event needs
to fill over 200 shifts in order to showcase one of Mammoth Lakes' premier
events to its roughly 6000 attendees.
Anyone interested can apply on line
at:
http://www.emailmeform.com/builder/
form/S9fIc3qa0OJ2
Or email us at:
BluesaVolunteers@mammoth
brewingco.com
BEHAVIORAL
INSTRUCTORS & B.R.I.A.
STAFF
CALIFORNIA PSYCH CARE Bishop
is hiring for Behavorial Instructors for
Bishop, Mammoth, Crowley Lake areas. We are looking for people who
are enthusiastic and have an interest
in providing behavorial therapy for
children & adults with developmental
disabilities. Bachelor!s degree or
bilingual a plus but not required.
Please bring resume to 192-A
E. Line, Bishop or email to Katherine
Nauman:
[email protected] .
760-475-9770
FORT INDEPENDENCE TRAVEL
PLAZA AND WINNEDUMAH WINNS
CASINO has Immediate openings for
the following positions:
COOK
Fort Independence Travel Plaza-!!!!
Experienced cook in the Tunapi Grill
$12-$14 per Hr depending on exp.
Pre-employment drug test, must be
able to multitask and have leadership
qualities.
CASINO CAGE/FLOOR
Winnedumah
Winns
Casino
-!!!!!!Cage/Floor person. Pre-employment drug test and background test,
must be at least 18 years of age,
cash handling and customer service
experience a plus. Flexible schedule
to accommodate varying work shifts
including weekends, graveyard, and
holidays!shifts.
KITCHEN ISLAND
Stand alone solid wood butcher block
kitchen island on wheels with storage
cabinets and drawer. $125.
575-973-8852
For Full position descriptions and employment applications please visit the
Fort Independence Travel Plaza from
7am-11am, Mon-Fri., ask for Thomas.
Indian Preference: Native American
Indian preference shall apply
KNOTTY PINE GUN cabinet, locking
glass doors, 2 drawers. Cabinet can
also be used as bookcase of hutch type
cabinet. Measures 35Ó x70Ó x19. $75.
Call 760-873-5164
Get One!
In the
EastErn
siErra
ClassifiEds
873-3535
DELIVERY DRIVER LEADING Janitorial Supply Company has immediate
opening for delivery driver. Class B
driver!s license with hazmat endorsement preferred. Class C ok with delivery experience. Clean driving record
required. Apply in person with three
year DMV report. Mission Janitorial
Supplies, 177-C Short St., Bishop.
DENTAL HYGIENIST
Position available for part time Hygienist in a high paced, quality care dental
family practice. This new team member
must be warm, friendly & efficient.
Experience with Eagle-soft a plus.
Opportunity to develop into a full-time
position. Vacation time, continuing
education opportunities. Send resume
to: Skyline Family Dentistry, 325 Grove
Street, Bishop, CA 93514 OR email
[email protected]
skylinefamilydental.com
DRIVER/ YARDMAN
Full to part time seasonally, valid
driver!s license req!d. DMV print out
and references before hire. Pre-employment drug test, random testing,
benefits for full time. Apply in person at
Home Lumber Co., 1130 N. Main,
Bishop. EOE
EXP. SERVER WANTED - 30 Hrs. per
week, weekends req!d. Alabama Hills
Cafe 760-876-4675 or email:
[email protected]
045 HELP WANTED
LOOKING FOR DEPENDABLE and
responsible driver to commute three
times per week from Carson City to
Mammoth and Bishop. Early morning
hours. Must have a back up driver to
take over in the event of illness or
emergencies. Call Eva or Rena at:
760-873-3535
NOW HIRING!
GIGGLE SPRINGS &
GIGGLE
SPRINGS TOO now hiring for full time
positions. Pick up application at either
of our locations. No phone calls please.
HELP WANTED FULL AND PART
TIME We are looking or energetic, fun
and friendly people to fill positions as:
Prep Cooks , Waitstaff, Hostesses,
Cooks and Bussers for expanding
and fun restaurant. Experience is
great, but we will train the right
person. Apply in person at 871 N.
Main in Bishop. EOE
BISHOP UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
is accepting applications for the
following Classified Positions:
(1) Yard Aide position
30 minutes per day: 7:45 Ð 8:45,
Elementary 1-Position is 180 days per
year. Start Date: August 20, 2015
Starting Salary $10.09 per hour
(3) Instructional Aide II positions
(2) 2.0 Hours per day: 8:30-10:30,
Elementary***
(1) 3.0 Hours per day: Mon. 10:00 Ð
12:00 and 1:30 Ð 2:30, BUHS Girls
Locker Room**
Tues.-Fri. 10:10 Ð 12:10 and 2:20 Ð 3:20
**Based on required duties, only female
applicants will be considered
2-Positions are 170 days per year, Start
date: August 20, 2015***
1-Position is 180 days per year, Start
date: August 20, 2015**
Starting Salary $12.38 per hour
(4) Instructional Aide III positions
(Requires A.A. Degree or above)
(1) 6.0 Hours per day 8:15 Ð 3:05,
Middle School CDS
(1) 6.0 Hours per day 8:15 Ð 3:15, High
School CDS
(1) 6.0 Hours per day 8:15 Ð 3:00,
Elementary Resource
(1) 1.0 Hour per day 9:05 Ð 10:05, Middle School Spanish Aide (must be
Spanish fluent written & speaking)
4-Positions are 180 days per year, Start
date: August 20, 2015
Starting Salary $13.44 per hour
Contact Kim Tiner at the Business Office, 656 West Pine St, Bishop or call
(760) 872-3680
or
[email protected]. For
applications see our District Website:
http://bishop-ca.schoolloop.com/HR .
Applications must be received in the
District Office no later than 4:00pm,
Monday, July 20, 2015
The Bishop Unified School District is an
Equal Opportunity Employer
FRONT DESK AGENTS
Bishop Creekside Inn
MECHANICS WANTED
We are now hiring Front Desk agents
to continue our tradition of personalized, attentive service. Previous hotel
experience preferred but not necessary. Must be professional, enthusiastic with flexibility to work varying
shifts. $12.00 - $13.00 per hour.
Email resumes to:
[email protected]
www.bishopcreeksideinn.com
7/11 materials is hiring a qualified
diesel mechanic for the Bishop area.
• Top pay for experience
• 3 weeks paid vacation
• Health benefits
• 401K and Pension
• Full time work
To apply please visit our web site at
7/11materials.com, complete an
application and email it to:
[email protected]
045 HELP WANTED
CARPENTER WANTED CARPEN TER wanted for remodels. Pay to skill
level. Call Mike / Kadja Construction
760-468-3860
OVGC STORE MANAGER
The Owens Valley Growers Cooperative's mission is to build a local, sustainable food system. Through community education, support of local agriculture, and the development of local market outlets, we aim to increase
access to healthy food choices, while
developing enterprise for our local
economy.
OVGC is seeking applicants for a
Store Manager. Salary $40,000.
Required qualifications: established
leadership in retail operations,
excellent communication skills, ability
to lift 50 pounds, commitment to local
foods access, sustainable food
systems and economy. Preferred
Qualifications: Experience in
marketing, food preparation,
volunteer management, quickbooks.
Applications in the form of cover letter
and resume must be submitted
by
July
27,
2015
to
[email protected]
ROUND VALLEY JOINT
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Notice of Classified Vacancy
RECEPTIONIST
BISHOP CARE
CENTER is now taking applications for a part time receptionist. Must have great phone skills
and computer skills including Excel and
Word. Needed for Mondays, Tuesdays,
and Wednesdays 9am -6pm. Pay DOE
Come in and fill out an application
today!
090 FURNITURE
1960!S ERA SOLID maple colonial
style folding leaf dining room table + 4
matching chairs. Oval shaped when expanded. To save space both leaves fold
down measures 27Ó x40Ó , both leaves
extended 70Ó x40Ó , fully extended
80Ó x40Ó . Offered in good condition.
$300. 760-873-5164
KIMBALL OFFICE
FURNITURE SET
Excellent condition. Dimensions 8! ft.
6Ó wide x 66Ó high x 24Ó deep, with a
4! ft. return. Locking cabinets and file
drawers. Orig. cost $3,850. Asking
$850. Also has a light and 2 large filling drawers. [email protected]
760-924-3875
LATE 1970!S FABRIC sofa with 2
matching rocker swivel chairs. The sofa
measures 86Ó long. Bought at Fendon!s. $250 for all. 760-873-5164
105 MISCELLANEOUS
The Superintendent of the Round Valley Joint Elementary School District is
currently seeking a
part-time
Classified Instructional Aide.
Salary: $13.24 to $14.38 per hour
dependent upon education and experience
Schedule: 5.0 hours per day/5days a
week
Starting Date: August 20, 2015, half
day training on August 18
Qualifications: AA degree or equivalent
applicable units. Baccalaureate Degree
from an accredited University preferred.
Fingerprint and TB clearance will be required of selected candidate.
To Apply: For application contact
Cathy Molina
Round Valley School
300 N. Round Valley Road
Bishop, CA 93514
[email protected]
Phone: 760-387-2525
Deadline to Apply:
2015 @ 2:00PM
Friday, July 24,
CELESTRON NEXSTAR
90SLT Mak Computerized Telescope (Black)
High
quality
90mm
(3.5")
Maksutov-Cassegrain, Quick-release
fork arm mount, optical tube and accessory tray for quick tool no set up,
StarPointer finderscope to help with
alignment and accurately locating
objects, good for terrestrial and celestial observing. Includes "The SkyX"
Planetarium software, lenses &
accessories included. New, never
used. Asking $280.
575-973-8852
045 HELP WANTED
FRONT DESK CLERK wanted. Computer experience required. Please apply at Super 8 Motel, 535 S. Main,
Bishop (760)872-1386
- COUNTY OF INYO GROUP COUNSELOR I (MALE)
Department - Probation
Location - Countywide, Inyo County
Juvenile Center is located in Independence, CA)
Salary - $3495 - $4249
The above monthly salary is paid over
26 pay periods annually.
EMPLOYMENT STANDARDS
A high school graduate or equivalent
with one year of experience involving
the supervision, care, and leadership of
juvenile groups; an associate degree in
the social or behavioral sciences or a
related field is preferred. Must be at
least 20 years of age. Applications
must be received in the Personnel Office, P.O. Box 249, Independence, CA
93526. Application deadline: 5:00
p.m., August 3, 2015 (postmarks not
accepted). Must apply on Inyo County
application form. EOE/ADA.
WE ARE NOW HIRING FOR THE
FOLLOWING POSITIONS:
FOOD PRODUCTION
HOUSEKEEPING DIRECTOR - F/T
TACO Bell is now hiring Team Members for Food
Production for its location in Bishop, CA.
HOUSEKEEPING/DIETARY AIDE P/T WITH VARIED SHIFTS
Sterling Heights is a Residential Care
Community for the Elderly. We are
looking for reliable, trustworthy, caring,
and compassionate team players.
Experienced preferred but willing to
train the right candidates. Please pick
up an application at 369 E. Pine St.,
Bishop or email resume to:
[email protected]
Must successfully pass criminal
background check and drug screen
EOE/RCFE#147203373
We offer: Great Benefits, Reward & Recognition Culture,
Opportunities for Advancement, On the Job Training, A
Great Future, Flexible Schedules
If you are interested in a career with Taco Bell, We Want
To Speak With You!
Please submit an application directly to the restaurant to
be considered.
Positions
AvAilAble
LATE 1950!S RETRO Folding leaf
yellow cracked ice & chrome kitchen table + 3 matching chairs. Oval shaped
when expanded. Table measures
35Ó x14Ó , expanded 60Ó x35Ó . $50.
760-873-5164
Need a
new
BOSS?
- COUNTY OF INYO CORRECTIONAL OFFICER
(FEMALE)
Department - Sheriff
Location - Countywide, Inyo County
Jail is located in Independence, CA)
Salary - $3725 - $4539
The above monthly salary is paid over
26 pay periods annually.
045 HELP WANTED
DRIVER WANTED
New PositioNs
House Keeper
Dealer – Part-Time
HR Manager
Must be 21 or older to work at The Paiute Palace Casino.
Full-Time Employee Benefits:
FMedical
FDental/Vision
FVacation
11
FSick Leave
FPaid Holidays
F401K
Applicants must meet requirements to qualify for a Paiute
Palace Gaming License. Applications are available at the
Casino Cashier’s Cage 2742 N. Sierra Hwy., Bishop, CA 93514.
Phone: 760-873-4150 ext. 214 & 220.
Applicants should be aware that the Paiute Palace Casino is not
a smoke free environment.
www.paiutepalace.com
Paiute Palace Casino is an Equal Opportunity Employer
within the confines of the Indian Preference Act.
Answers will
appear in
Thursday’s
classified section of
The Inyo Register
PHONE (760) 873-3535 | FAX (760) 873-3591 | 1180 N. MAIN ST., STE. 108, BISHOP, CA 93514 | E-MAIL [email protected]
The Inyo Register
12 TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 105 MISCELLANEOUS
105 MISCELLANEOUS
120 SPORTING GOODS
140 PETS
155 APTS. UNFURNISHED
1-575-973-8852
165 HOUSES FURNISHED
140 PETS
NEW BOOK
AVAILABLE NOW!
COCKER - MALTESE
MIX PUPPIES
BOUNCY HOUSE
“THE TRIP”
BY JOE BURGESS
Super fun for the kids! Asking $200
Paddling the Sea of Cortez; 800 miles
of mind, body, and spirit. Available at
Spellbinder Books, 124 S. Main St.,
Bishop. Get your copy today!
Males & females. Will have appropriate shots. $350 ea. Need good, loving
760-937-5455
760-377-7373
[email protected]
SIBERIAN HUSKY
SLED DOGS
Does Harriet
need a new
chariot?
760-937-4502
760-377-7373
760-377-7372
NORDIC TRACK SUMMIT
4500x Treadmill. Computerized. Paid
$2,300, rarely used. Offers? (ifit.com)
170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED
2BED/1BATH
The Inyo Register
For Home Delivery call
575-973-8852
873-3535
✄ CLIP HERE & TAKE WITH YOU ✄
1 ACRE HORSE
PROPERTY
2 BED / 2 BATH plus office.
$2600/mo. Fully landscaped with
spectacular views. In Bishop. No
indoor pets. Preview this property at:
www.SierraResortRealEstate.com
Maggie Larson, Broker
155 APTS. UNFURNISHED
AKC full registration, all shots,
excellent bloodlines. Males
and
females avail. All colors. For more
info., prices and more photos call:
Find a new or
used auto in the
Eastern
Sierra
Classifieds
873-3535
2BED/1BATH
EDWARDS ST., Bishop. Upstairs,
carport, laundry faciities. $850/mo. +
$850 deposit. Avail. now.
760-872-3746
homes.
120 SPORTING GOODS
160 CONDOS FOR RENT
4BED/3BATH CONDO - MAMMOTH
New paint & carpet. Washer/dryer,
dishwasher, fireplace, balcony. Near
Village. $2000/mo. 760-873-5452
FLUIDITY EXERCISE SYSTEM
$100. Paid $500. Brand New.
TOTAL GYM SYSTEM.
Brand new. $150.
1BED/1BATH
1BED/1BATH BISHOP $650/mo.
Available immediately. Near schools,
hospital & downtown. No smoking, no
pets.
SMALL FENCED yard, laundry,
parking for 2 cars. Water/trash paid.
369-B Short St. No smoking. No
pets. $775/mo.
[email protected]
Chip 760-914-2076
160 CONDOS FOR RENT
760- 937-2347
2BED/2BA -PARADISE
$1,800/MO. Beautiful home, amazing
views, washer/dryer, woodstove, pets
ok, fenced, garage, solar H2O heater,
avail. mid July. Call or text:
760-920-0518
PLACE YOUR GARAGE/YARD SALE AD HERE!
indpendence
1BED/1BATH
3 BED/2.5 BATH
NEWLY REMODELED 1 BED/1BATH
Washer/dryer, refrigerator included.
No smoking, no pets. $675/mo. +
deposit. Please call starting July 6 .
Spacious living & remodeled kitchen
$1950/mo.
Sierra Resort Property Mgmt
Maggie Larson, Broker
www.SierraResortRealEstate.com
760-937-5920
760-937-4502
! - INDEPENDENCE - GREEN HOUSE NEXT TO SIERRA BAPTIST CHURCH, HWY 395
(FOLLOW SIGNS), THURS., FRI. SAT., JULY 16, 17 & 18, 8:00AM-1:00PM MOVING SALE!
Furniture, kitchen items, camping gear and much more!
760-914-0632
CODES FOR BISHOP AREA
DT: Downtown Area
WB: W. Bishop
BH: Highland
MC: Meadowcreek
BA: Barlow Area
RK: Rocking K Area
BG: Glenwood MH Pk
DL: Dixon Ln Area
3 BED / 2 BATH
MEADOWCREEK, BISHOP - Bright,
well maintained home with great yard
& trees, 2 car garage. Fresh paint
and super clean, $1,700/mo. with
year lease.
MM: Manor Mkt. Area
WK: Wilkerson
LA: Lazy A Area
463 W. Pine, Bishop. Large QUIET
1st floor, patio. Newly redone, all appliances. Non-smoking bldg, carport
w/ storage, on-site laundry. $910/Mo.
[email protected]
562-433-5335
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Presenting some of the best kept secrets in town.
IMPORTANT PUBLIC NOTICE
California Business and Professions Code Section 7027, et sec. requires that any advertisement by a licensed contractor include the
contractor's license number. Section 7027.2 says that unlicensed persons whose work qualifies under the minor work exemption, less
than $500 including material and labor, may advertise, provided that he or she shall state in the advertisement that they are not licensed.
The California Contractors State License Board publishes a free booklet, 'What You Should Know Before You Hire A Contractor.' For free
information call, 1-800-321-CSLB.
graphic
design
The Inyo Register
2BED/1.5BATH
For Home Delivery call
SIERRA RESORT PROPERTY MGMT
Maggie Larson, Owner Broker
(760)937-4502
www.SierraResortRealEstate.com
873-3535
Press Releases
Made Easy
1) Save Your Press Release as a “txt” Document. This is the lowest
common denominator and ensures that whomever you send it to will be able to open it.
(They’re not likely to go out of their way to try to open something they didn’t request.)
2) Send Your Photos or other images as “jpg” files with a resolution of 300 dpi
or greater. A 4-inch by 5-inch image gives the editor something to work with whereas
anything smaller will likely be thrown away.
3) Send Your Release (with Photo Attachments) by Email, if possible … Anything
you can do to save the editor/reporter work increases the likelihood it will be used. If
you can’t email it, please hand-deliver it on a CD. You can also use snail mail or deliver
it personally, but remember, the less work you make for the editor, the greater your
chances he or she will use it.
4) Identify Your Photos. Make sure any photos you submit have identification of
the people pictured and tell what is happening as well. Identify photos from left to right.
Check spelling of names as well as tell us where the people are from.
5) Make Personal Contacts. Whenever possible, make personal contact with
the people to whom you will be sending your release. You appreciate having a face or
voice to associate with a name. So do editors. People are more inclined to help people
they know (even slightly) than a complete stranger.
6) When Submitting Information About Events, be sure to give the editor
a week of lead time. Unless your information is “breaking news,” such as the announcement of a new plant, etc., don’t expect the editor to rush to get your information into the
paper.
7) Send To: Darcy Ellis [email protected], mail to 1180 N. Main St., Ste. 108,
Bishop, CA 93514 or fax to (760) 873-3591.
Questions? Call Us!
760-873-3535
Thewww.inyoregiser.com
Inyo Register
1. SIERRA WAVE MEDIA
2. KSRW RADIO & TELEVISION
1280 N. Main St., Ste #J
Bishop, CA 93514
The Inyo Register
170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED
220 HOUSES FOR SALE
CROWLEY LAKE
ESTATES! $539,000
1BED/1BATH
FOR RENT 1 bdrm home. Lone pine.
$500 mo.
909-816-6290
This Crowley Lake custom home has
3 bedrooms plus loft, open kitchen
with granite counter tops and vaulted
ceilings, with an attached extra large
garage on one of the biggest lots in
the subdivision. Incredible views of
the mountains and Crowley Lake.
Owners must sell.All offers considered.
220 HOUSES FOR SALE
AN OASIS IN PARADISE
2400 sq.ft. home w/ attached garage +
1200 sq. ft. wrap-around deck. Spectacular views of mtns, canyon, valleys,
desert. 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths; remodeled
kitchen; fireplace; large family room/office; fully landscaped lot. By owner,
$650,000. 5068 Westridge Road
(760)387-2264. OPEN HOUSE, Sunday, July 12th, 10 to 2
!""#$%&'&%($)&*(+($)*,
SIERRA BROADCASTERS, LLC
PUBLIC
NOTICES
1280 320
N. Main
St., Ste
#J
Bishop, CA 93514
This Business is conducted by:
LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY.
Registrant commenced to transact
business under the fictitious business name or names listed
02-03-2004. This statement was
filed with the County Clerk of Inyo
County on JUNE 30, 2015. File
#15-00106
(IR 7/7, 7/14, 7/21, 7/28/15,
#11749)
Red convertible, gray interior, great
condition, 75k miles. $11,500 Call
Mike
HILL BURTON
UNCOMPENSATED SERVICES
275 AUTOS
#-"./0#.!-"/
760-937-5455
3BED/2BATH
ELM ST., BISHOP Wood stove, solar
water, dishwasher, washer/ dryer,
garage, swamp cooler, large .25 acre
lot. No smoking. Dogs considered,
cats ok. Avail. now. $1500/mo. 1 yr.
lease spcarroll@ yahoo.com. Call
Shannon:
PRICE REDUCED!
DYER, NEVADA
2.5 ACRES
562-682-3831
3BED/3.5BATH
INDEPEDENCE - 2 BED $1100/mo.
Fenced yard, stove, fridge, w/d hookups. Very clean. Call for appt.
760-878-8978
175 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
REMODELED 3,587 SQ. FT. 3 bedroom home situated on .81 acre, 3
car garage, pool and barn.
Broker, Maggie Larson
EasternSierraHomesforSale.com
760-937-4502
ELM TREE TRAILER PARK
Large and small trailers with patios &
storage units starting at $475/mo.
Judy 760-914-2834
FISH LAKE VALLEY, WHITE MT.
ESTATES 52x24 Double wide, completely furnished, new large permanent garage/workshop, on 2.5 acres.
Good, deep well, great location,
mature trees/rose garden, Price
reduced from $68,000 to $61,000 for
quick sale. Call Marcel:
775-224-7249
265 MOTORCYCLES
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
STORAGE UNITS
5x10 $50 • 10x15 $95
K & L Storage, Collins Rd., Bishop
760-872-2910
COMMERCIAL SPACE
Commercial Space for rent, 1300 sq.
ft. Please call John Slee. Please do
not bother the tenant.$1000/mo.
760-937-2534
760-709-1614
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
180 SPACE FOR RENT
185 BUS. PROPERTY FOR RENT
SUBARU WRX-04
MANUAL AWD, GPS/NAV, Cobb
Tuning, lots of engine / racing upgrades, suspension, 3” pipe w/ cat.
converter, 300+HPWR & upgraded
turbo. Only 84k miles, 2 sets tires
(new winter/summer), must see to
appreciate!
WINNEDUMA HOTEL
211 N. Edwards St.
Independence, CA 93526
4BED/3BATH
DESIRABLE ROCKING K
2,153 Sq. ft. on 1⁄2 acre zoned for
horses.!Across from open land.
Room!for all of your toys and RV. Enjoy evenings on the back patio with
views of Mt Tom. Keep cool during
the hot summer months in the refreshing pool with surrounding deck
and secured gate. Outdoor shed for
extra storage. A gardeners dream
with multiple flower beds,large vegetable garden area, mature fruit trees,
grapes and berries all on!automatic
sprinkler system.Freshly remodeled
kitchen with granite countertops,
recently painted interior, spacious
Master bedroom with walk out deck.
Vaulted ceilings. Attached 2-car
garage, central HVAC, pellet stove,
well and septic system.!$549,000.
Contact Joe:!
HARLEY-DAVIDSON
1974 SPORTSTER
Recently refurbished, comes with
2,000 lb capacity trailer and some
rare vintage Sportster parts. $6,500.
Call Katy:
760-876-4321
SOLD
LESS THAN 1
WEEK
FRANK MONTOYA
CELIA MONTOYA
281 Home St.
211 N. Edwards St.
Independence, CA 93526
This Business is conducted by:
MARRIED COUPLE. Registrant
commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name
or names listed JULY 4, 2015.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk of Inyo County on
MAY 26, 2015. File #15-00082
(IR 7/7, 7/14, 7/21, 7/28/15,
#11748)
(801) 891-9067
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
2009
HARLEY DAVIDSON
MAMMOTH OFFICE
SPACE
Sunny & quiet with adjacent storage/
garage space available. Rent negotiable/combo discount. Great for local
business. Approx. 750 sq. ft.
760-920-3969
205 ACREAGE & LOTS
700 ORINDA DRIVE
5 BED/3 BATH Spectacular 3655 sq.
ft. home with pool game room &
family room, .32 acre corner lot with
RV/boat parking. Contact Maggie
Larson, Broker
760-937-4502
ELECTRA Glide Ultra Classic. Black,
21,600 miles, Screaming Eagle
pipes, luggage rack, hwy pegs. Need
to sell can't ride anymore. Asking
$11,250 OBO.
1. SIERRA WAVE MEDIA
2. KSRW RADIO & TELEVISION
1280 N. Main St., Ste #J
Bishop, CA 93514
SIERRA BROADCASTERS, LLC
1280 N. Main St., Ste #J
Bishop, CA 93514
This Business is conducted by:
LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY.
Registrant commenced to transact
business under the fictitious business name or names listed
02-03-2004. This statement was
filed with the County Clerk of Inyo
County on JUNE 30, 2015. File
320 PUBLIC #15-00106
NOTICES
(IR 7/7, 7/14, 7/21, 7/28/15,
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE TS No.
CA-15-663515-BFOrder No.:
#11749)
WE MOVE ITEMS FAST
The Eastern Sierra Classifieds 873-3535
5.83 ACRE PARCEL
Unobstructed views! Underground
utilities adjacent to BLM. Owner
financing. Only $84,000. Contact
Broker, Maggie Larson
EXQUISITE
4BED/2BATH
760-937-4502
MCLAREN
ESTATE IN BISHOP
WITH 10,900 LOT $499,900 [email protected] 760-544-3192
TEXT TO 949-275-3192 #01344068
760-544-3192
Do you have
baby furniture
to sell?
Advertise in the
ASPENDELL
CREEK LOT
0.21 Acre lot along Bishop Creek with
unobstructed view of Table Mountain;
easy access in winter. Financing
possible.For more information Inquire:
[email protected]
Eastern Sierra
Classifieds
873-3535
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE BISHOP TOIYABE
HEALTHCARE FACILITY PROJECT
NOTICE OF TRIBAL (PUBLIC) HEARING AND REQUEST
FOR COMMENT
The Bishop Paiute Development Corporation and the Toiyabe Indian
Health Project are proposing the development of a new healthcare facility on the Bishop Paiute Reservation that would improve health services
in the community by replacing the existing health care facility. The Environmental Assessment (EA) has been completed pursuant to the
United States Department of Agriculture's Rural Utility Services Environmental Policies and Procedures and the Tribal Environmental Policy Ordinance. The EA is now available for a 30-day public review and comment period.
Copies of the EA can be reviewed at the Bishop Paiute Development
Corporation office (270 See Vee lane, Bishop), the Bishop Paiute
Tribe's office (50 Tu Su Lane, Bishop) or on the Bishop Paiute Development
Corporation's
website
at
http://www.bpdcorp.org/news-updates.html
There will also be a public meeting held on Thursday, July 30th from
6:00pm - 8:00pm at the Tribal Community Center (405 North Barlow
Lane, Bishop).
The comment period ends on August 12, 2015. Comments must be
submitted in writing or via email to:
Dave Moose, Asset Manager
Bishop Paiute Development Corporation
270 See Vee Lane, Box 1
Bishop, CA 93514
[email protected]
For more information, please contact Dave Moose at 760-872-4172
(IR 7/14, 7/18, 7/25, 7/28/15, #11759)
150068911-CA-VOO YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 8/13/2003. 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 Section 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 pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges
thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of
Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total
amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale.
BENEFICIARY MAY ELECT TO BID LESS THAN THE TOTAL AMOUNT DUE.
Trustor(s): CHRISTOPHER A. DITTY AND TERRI L. DITTY, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
Recorded: 8/27/2003as Instrument No.
2003-0003995 of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of INYO County,
California; Date of Sale: 8/4/2015 at 2:00 PM Place of Sale: In the upstairs lobby
of Inyo-Mono Title Company, located at 873 N. Main Street, Bishop, CA
93514 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $271,481.13 The purported
property address is: 858 SOUTH BARLOW LANE, BISHOP, CA 93514 Assessor's Parcel No.: 11-470-24 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 916.939.0772 for information regarding the
trustee's sale or visit this Internet Web site http://www.qualityloan.com, using
the file number assigned to this foreclosure by the Trustee: CA-15-663515-BF .
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. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or other common
designation, if any, shown herein. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return
of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. 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. The Purchaser
shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the
Mortgagee's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case
this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property
only. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail
to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A
DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Date: Quality Loan
Service Corporation 411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 For
NON SALE information only Sale Line: 916.939.0772 Or Login to:
http://www.qualityloan.com Reinstatement Line: (866) 645-7711 Ext 5318
Quality Loan Service Corp. TS No.: CA-15-663515-BFIDSPub #0086011
7/14/2015 7/21/2015 7/28/2015
(IR 7/14, 7/21, 7/28/15, #11757)
Southern Inyo Hospital Local
Healthcare District of Lone Pine,
CA will provide from 7/1/2015 to
6/30/2016 uncompensated services to all eligible persons unable
to pay who request services.
All services of the facility will be
available as uncompensated services persons whose family income
is not more than twice the Poverty
Income Guidelines (known as
Category B) for hospital services:
and three times the Poverty
Income Guidelines (known as
Category C) for nursing home
services . The Poverty Guidelines
are established by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services.
This notice is published in accordance with 42 CFR 124.504
Notice of Availability of Uncompensated Services. We invite
interested parties to comment on
the allocation plan.
(IR 7/9, 7/11, 7/14/15, #11750)
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 13
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
Inyo County Recycling and Waste
Management will receive sealed
bids until 3:00 P.M. (PDT) on July
30, 2015 at 163 May St, Bishop,
CA 93514.
REQUEST FOR BIDS
SUPPLY AND SERVICE OF
THREE (3) CHEMICAL TOILETS
FOR THREE INYO COUNTY
LANDFILLS
Complete specifications, proposal
instructions, conditions and proposal (bid) forms can be obtained
at the Inyo County Recycling and
Waste Management, 163 May St,
Bishop, CA or by calling (760)
873-5577.
(IR 7/14, 7/16, 7/18/15, #11756)
REQUEST FOR QUOTATION
Mammoth Lakes Recreation has
crafted a Request for Quotation
(RFQ) for Professional Graphic
Design Services. The RFQ is
posted on mammothlakesrecreation.org web site for review and
processing. The deadline for the
submission of the RFQ is July 20,
2015 at 4pm.
(IR 7/2, 7/4, 7/7, 7/9, 7/11,
7/16/15, #11746)
WE MOVE ITEMS FAST
The Eastern Sierra Classifieds 873-3535
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
T. S. NO: V546374 CA Unit Code: V Loan No: 187557-91/MAMMOTH
SP/HERTZOG AP #1: 010-301-15 1331 ROCKING W DRIVE,
BISHOP, CA 93514 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE T.D. SERVICE
COMPANY, as duly appointed Trustee under the following described
Deed of Trust WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH (in the forms which are lawful tender in the United
States) and/or the cashier's, certified or other checks specified in Civil
Code Section 2924h (payable in full at the time of sale to T.D. Service
Company) all right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property hereinafter described: Trustor:
MAMMOTH SPORTING GOODS, INC Recorded June 10, 2009 as
Instr. No. 2009-0001554-00 in Book --- Page --- of Official Records
in the office of the Recorder of INYO County; CALIFORNIA , pursuant
to the Notice of Default and Election to Sell thereunder recorded April
6, 2015 as Instr. No. 20150000785 in Book --- Page --- of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of INYO County CALIFORNIA. Said
Deed of Trust describes the following property: SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT “A” Parcel 1: Lots 8 and 9 of Lazy A Estates Subdivision in the
County of Inyo, State of California, as per map recorded April 13, 1965
in Book 2, Page 33 of Subdivision Maps, in the Office of the County Recorder of said County. Parcel 2: All that portion of the Southwest quarter
of Section 36, Township 6 South, Range 32 East, M.D.B. & M., in the
County of Inyo, State of California, according to the Official Plat thereof,
described as follows: Beginning at the point of intersection of the North
line of the California State Highway 395 with the West line of Section
36, said point being distant North 40 feet from the Southwest corner of
said Section 36; thence Easterly along the North line of said State Highway, 208.70 feet to a point, said point begin the true point of beginning;
thence North parallel with the West line of said Section 36. 235.80 feet,
more or less, to the Southwest corner of Lot 7 of Lazy A Estates Subdivision in the County of Inyo, Stale of California, as per Map recorded
April 13, 1965 in Book 2, Page 33 of Subdivision Maps; thence North
89° 44' East along the Southerly boundary line of said Lot 7,235.30 feet
to the Northeast corner of the land conveyed to Arthur A. Brockman et
ux, by Deed recorded in Book 58, Page 372 of Official Records; thence
South 0° 13' East 67.40 feet, more or less, to the North line of the land
conveyed to Mabel M. Rowan, in Deed recorded November 2, 1951 in
Book 94, Page 221, Official Records; thence South 89° 44' West 10.30
feet to the Northwest corner of the land conveyed to Mabel M. Rowan in
Deed Recorded in Book 94, Page 221. Official Records; thence South
0° 13' East 168.70 feet, more or less, to a point in the North line of said
California State Highway 395; thence West along the North line of said
California State Highway, 225 feet, more or less, to the true point of beginning. Personal Property All Equipment, Fixtures And Other Articles
Of Personal Property Now Or Hereafter Owned By The Trustor, And
Now Or Hereafter Attached Or Affixed To The Real Property; Together
With All Accessions, Parts, And Additions To, All Replacements Of, And
All Substitutions For, Any Such Property; And Together With All Proceeds (Including Without Limitation All Insurance Proceeds And Refunds Of Premiums) From Any Sale Or Other Disposition Of The Property. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED
JUNE 3, 2009. 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. 1331 ROCKING W DRIVE, BISHOP, CA 93514 “(If a street address or common
designation of property is shown above, no warranty is given as to its
completeness or correctness)." Said Sale of property will be made in
"as is" condition without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust, with interest as in
said note provided, advances, if any, under the terms of said Deed of
Trust, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. Said sale will be held on: AUGUST 3,
2015, AT 10:00 A.M. *IN THE UPSTAIRS LOBBY OF THE INYO
MONO TITLE COMPANY 873 N. MAIN STREET BISHOP, CA 93514
At the time of the initial publication of this notice, the total amount of the
unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the above described Deed
of Trust and estimated costs, expenses, and advances is $94,978.38. It
is possible that at the time of sale the opening bid may be less than the
total indebtedness due. 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 (888) 988-6736 or visit this Internet
Web site: salestrack.tdsf.com, the file number assigned to this case
V546374 V. 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. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason,
the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of
monies paid to the Trustee and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at
the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee's attorney. Date: July 9, 2015 T.D. SERVICE
COMPANY as said Trustee SUSAN EARNEST, ASSISTANT SECRETARY T.D. SERVICE COMPANY 4000 W. Metropolitan Drive, Suite
400 Orange, CA 92868-0000 The Beneficiary may be attempting to
collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for that purpose. If available , the expected opening bid and/or postponement information may be obtained by calling the following telephone
number(s) on the day before the sale: (888) 988-6736 or you may access sales information at salestrack.tdsf.com , TAC# 974635 PUB:
07/14/15, 07/21/15, 07/28/15
(IR 7/14, 7/21, 7/28/15, #11758)
The Inyo Register
sports
14
TUESDAY, july 14, 2015
sport shorts
Golf fun day at Bishop Country Club
The Bishop Chamber of Commerce and Bishop County Club
will run a day of golf games and food on Saturday, July 18.
The golf will not be played as a typical tournament. Instead,
each hole will feature a different game with prizes for each twoperson team. All players will also be entered in a raffle and be
included in the barbecue dinner.
Cost is $35 per person which includes cart, raffle, entry and
the dinner. Check in begins at 3 p.m., the golf games start at 4
p.m. This tournament is open to members and non-members,
and all skill levels are welcome as well.
For registration or to sponsor a hole, call April (760) 8738405 or Bishop Country Club (760) 873-5828.
Bishop Saddle Club Gymkhana
The team mobs Jake Frigerio in celebration of his home run
Thursday, July 2 against Tehachapi, which some say is still going.
Photo submitted by Seth Conners
Bishop Little League All-Stars play on
All-Stars sweep
the North, but
winning ride
comes to an end
Youth and high school officials needed
The Owens Valley Youth and High School Football Officials
are looking for new members to join for the upcoming football
season. All those who have an interest in officiating youth and/
or high school football games, possess some basic knowledge
of football rules and are willing to attend meetings and training
are wanted.
If interested, contact Andrew Marsh at (760) 920-1750 or
email [email protected]
Eastern Sierra Bowmen shoot
The Eastern Sierra Bowmen will hold their annual shoot on
July 25-26 at the Big Springs site, north of Crestview Rest Area.
Families and kids are encouraged to attend. The weekend price
for families is $30, for individuals, $20.
Sign-ups start at 8 a.m. Saturday, course pick-up will be on 2
p.m. on Sunday. For more information call (760) 937-7030.
By Louis Israel
Register Staff
After demolishing the competition and winning the
Northern League crown, the
Bishop Little League 9-10 AllStars ran into the baseball juggernaut of Quartz Hill and
were defeated in games on
Friday and Saturday. The
scores for the games were
12-10 on Friday night, and 6-0
on Saturday.
Quartz Hill moves on with
games in Lancaster against
South El Monte tonight. This is
the farthest this age bracket of
competition goes.
The Bishop Saddle Club will be holding a Gymkhana starting
at 8 a.m. on Sunday, July 19 at the Tri-County Fairgrounds.
Hi-Point awards will be presented at the end of the day. Class
lists and entry forms are available at Wye Road Feed or online
at bishopsaddleclub.org. Email [email protected] for more
information.
The Bishop Little League All-Stars take a moment on the grass to listen to Coach Frigerio after winning
the Northern League tournament.
Photo by Louis Israel
Catch of the Week!
Working out in Big Pine
Carlos Paz makes waves with the heavy ropes in the main room of the Big Pine Wellness Center where he is a volunteer and
member. The Wellness Center is a full-service gym, open to the public Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. and Saturday 8:30
a.m.-2 p.m. For more on the Wellness Center, check out the article in Thursday’s Register.
Photo by Louis Israel
Get the
news.
Get the
story.
The Inyo Register
www.inyoregister.com
McGovern
and Borin
Dental
Gentle
Family
& Cosmetic
Dentistry
760-873-3208
our
hygiene
team
Lori Plakos, RDH
Margie Hooker, RDH
Jan Hornby, RDH
Cara Borin, RDH
Jim Lamb caught this 6-lber. in North Lake. This is his first fish
on a fly rod … jealous? Could yours be the next catch of the
week?
Photo submitted by Pat Rake
Do you have a Catch of the Week photo you want to share
with us? Simply email [email protected]
Catch of the week is sponsored by:
• Auto Body & Collision Repair
• Auto Body Painting
• Spray-in Bed Liners
• Frame Straightening
Inyo Mono
Body Shop
Since 1956
387 N. Warren St.
Bishop, CA
(760) 873-4271

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