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Claremont
claremont-courier.com
Making a SPLASH
COURIER photos/StevenFelschundneff
The unusual September rain brought some minor flooding to Mills Avenue at Alamosa Drive early
Tuesday. The first wave of storms brought over an inch of rain to the inland Valley, with more in the
evening.
Oakmont
welcomes
its new
principal
PAGE
LShanah Tovah!
Visit claremont-courier.com.
BLOTTER/ PAGE 4
LETTERS/ PAGE 2, 7
PIXLEY/ PAGE 6
CALENDAR/ PAGE 16
READERS COMMENTS
Newsroom
City Reporter
Matthew Bramlett
news@claremont-courier.com
Education Reporter/Obituaries
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storribio@claremont-courier.com
Sports Reporter
Steven Felschundneff
steven@claremont-courier.com
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Steven Felschundneff
steven@claremont-courier.com
Calendar Editor
Jenelle Rensch
calendar@claremont-courier.com
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Jenelle Rensch
Page Layout
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Website
Peter Weinberger
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The Claremont Courier (United States Postal Service 115-180) is published once weekly by the
Courier Graphics Corporation at 1420 N. Claremont
Blvd., Suite 205B, Claremont, California 917115003. The Courier is a newspaper of general circulation as defined by the political code of the state of
California, entered as periodicals matter September
17, 1908 at the post office at Claremont, California
under the act of March 3, 1879. Periodicals postage
is paid at Claremont, California 91711-5003. Single
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undelivered copies and changes of address to the
Courier, 1420 N. Claremont Blvd., Suite 205B,
Claremont, California 91711-5003. Telephone: 909621-4761. Copyright 2015 Claremont Courier
Dear Editor:
I have a 16-year-old daughter who is a
junior at Claremont High School where,
last Wednesday, I had the pleasure of attending the open house. It was a nice
event and I was really impressed with
the professionalism and enthusiasm of
my daughters teachers. They seemed
kind and genuinely interested in their
subjects and invested in the success of
the children under their tutelage. I was
also really impressed with the amount of
homework being assigned, but not in a
good way.
Of her six classes, five teachers said
she should expect no more than one
hour of homework per night.
I knownot only from past experience but also from work already assigned this semesterthat, depending on
the subject, for my daughter one hour
can easily turn into 90 minutes. It is also
true that at other times it can be less. So
lets say it still amounts to five hours of
homework a night.
The many people who know my
daughter would agree that she is a very
hard worker who takes her academics seriously. But she is also a social kid, with
many great friends, a very serious athlete
and member of both the CHS cross
country and track and field teams, requiring about two hours of practice, six
days per week.
This is why we decided she would enroll in AP classes rather than the more
strenuous IB, so she could have some
kind of balance in her life, which as a father and teacher I know to be critical in
the development of a whole person.
On the way home from school Thurs-
ADVENTURES
IN HAIKU
GOVERNING
OURSELVES
Agendas for city meetings are available at www.ci.claremont.ca.us
Tuesday, September 22
City Council
Council Chamber, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, September 23
Architectural Commission
Cancelled
Thursday, September 24
Traffic & Transportation Commission
Council Chamber, 7 p.m.
grees, humidity was greater than 40 percent, and snow was falling on the summit of Mt. Baldy!
I ventured outside to have a look at a
band of dark clouds approaching from
the east and happened to look north towards the mountains. There was snow
clearly visible above 8500 ft., which
goes to prove that climate change is
nothing but a hoax!
Mark Merritt
Claremont
CITY NEWS
A couple shares an umbrella while crossing College Avenue during the rain storm that swept through the
area on Tuesday. At right, even though it is only September, the unusual rainstorm made Indian Hill Boulevard look like fall.
A welcome
sight
COURIER photos by
Steven Felschundneff
Tuesday mornings
rain created a striped
pattern on the large
trees that line Indian
Hill Boulevard in Memorial Park. The September rain should
be a big benefit to
Claremonts droughtstressed trees.
At far right, a student
checks her phone as
she makes her way to
classes near Bridges
Auditorium at
Pomona College.
uring a special
Wednesday evening
meeting, the Claremont Planning Commission
unanimously elected K.M.
Williamson as its new chair
and approved two future businesses.
CITY NEWS
laremont Police
Department detectives are
searching for a suspectseen in the photo
at rightwho recently
burglarized two Claremont business.
The suspect entered the
Employees Only rooms of
both AM/PM on east Foothill
Boulevard and A La Minute on
west First Street during regular
business hours and stole employees belongings on August
1 and again on September 3.
The wallets contained credit
and debit cards, which were
used by the suspect for multiple purchases in the cities of
Pomona and Diamond Bar.
Five Claremont
businesses robbed
late Saturday night
POLICE BLOTTER
Friday, September 11
At approximately 1:07 a.m., a resident
on the 600 block of south Indian Hill
Boulevard called police on four peopletwo men and two womenwho
were enjoying a community pool after
hours and causing a ruckus. When the
resident told the revelers they had run dry
of their pool party privileges, the group
became enraged, throwing potted plants
and lawn chairs into the pool, physically
threatening to hit the victim, chasing the
victim into a residence and trying to
force their way inside, according to Detective Lieutenant Mike Ciszek. The suspects ran off before police arrived and
damage was estimated to be about $40.
Sunday, September 13
Brett Kaplan offered a particularly
stimulating parmesan alternative to a
number of customers at Pizza N Such
during a crowded dinner hour. The 23year-old Chino Hills resident asked diners if anyone wanted to buy some
cocaine before making a quick exit. The
police were called and Mr. Kaplan was
pulled over at approximately 9 p.m., and
was arrested on an outstanding warrant.
No drugs were found in his car.
****
chase the other car, described as an earlymodel burgundy Toyota Camry, but it
sped off into the night. No suspects have
been apprehended.
Matthew Bramlett
news@claremont-courier.com
EDUCATION
COURIERphotos/Steven Felschundneff
Oakmont Outdoor School has hired Jenny Adams to be the schools new principal. Ms. Adams worked for
15 years in Hesperia, first as a teacher, then as an assistant principal and finally as principal of Maple Elementary School.
CHS, El Roble
musicians to
turn up the lights
about it.
observer
ence, coming to 10 minutes per month, is actually a disappointment. The last time I told people in LA they
werent No. 1, they got upset, said Jim Bak, an Inrix
traffic analyst who characterized the reaction as If we
have to suffer, we at least want to know that we suffer
the most.
Okay, so we come in second, but being stuck in traffic for 80 hours in a year is pretty bad, pretty terrible.
And although we come in second, the severity of rushhour delays here is worse than in any other area, according to the study. Trips during peak commuting periods
here took 43 percent longer than during non-peak hours,
meaning that an hour-long drive at noon takes roughly
an hour and a half at 6 p.m.
Whats more, Mr. Bak said, all this traffic costs us an
average of $1,711 a year in lost wages and productivity.
Eighty hours and $1,711. Thats an awful lot of waste in
a year and big-time proof that traffic is horrible here, not
just something we imaginesecond place or not.
Good thing, then, that were in Claremont. Indeed, all
this traffic gives us all the more reason to enjoy Claremont. These days, there is more and more reason to
stick around Claremont and avoid the freeway traffic, at
least when we dont have to take the freeway to work.
This alone is something to enjoy.
Theres much more, though, to enjoy than avoiding
traffic. Claremont is no longer a sleepy little town where
the sidewalks roll up at 6, where things go dead once
the colleges let out for the summer. It is no longer necessary to go somewhere else for something to do.
Not with the numerous restaurants and cafes that are
in the Village, at least, especially since the expansion.
There are many evenings when I pass through the Village and hear live music and groups of people talking
and laughing The Laemmle Cinema has been a big part
of this.
But it isnt just all the restaurants and unique shops
that, more than ever, we now have. There is also the live
music on Friday evenings, the Art Walk now on Saturday evenings once a month and the Farmers Market on
Sundays, as well as the special events like the Wine
Walk and the Village Venture, which is coming up soon.
I thought it was too bad that the Wednesday evening
Street Fair was discontinued, but Claremont and its
merchants have taken some good steps in making this a
place to be.
In fact, in recent years, it not only looks like more and
more people are staying close to home and avoiding
traffic, it looks like more and more people are braving
traffic to be here.
It is not just the Village that has picked up the pace,
but summer in Claremont is quite different. The July
Fourth festivities arent the only game in town during
the hot, quiet months. With the weekly and monthly
events in the Village, like the live music on Friday
evenings (not to mention all the live music at restaurants), added into the mix of concerts and movies in the
parks, there is a tidy schedule of goings-on. Dont forgettheres also the Shakespeare plays now put on in
July by the Ophelias Jump theater company at the
lovely outdoor Greek Theatre on the Pomona College
campus.
And then, speaking of campuses, there are the colleges. With the students back and classes well underway
now that September is half over, there now is a whole
smorgasbord of activities and presentations.
There are now concerts, like the tribute to Ruth
Crawford Seeger, the American modernist composer
and advocate for folk music, next Saturday and the
Chamber Music Extraganza next Sunday, both presented by the Pomona College Music Department at
Little Bridges. This evening, the Mariachi Divas are
playing on the Bowling Green at Scripps College, part
of the Levitt on the Lawn series. There is also a steady
line-up of lectures, including but certainly not only at
the Athenaeum at CMC. Films are also being shown
and discussed, and, later, there will be plays and dance
concerts.
There was a time, at least for me, when this collegiate
activity, like the gradually cooling weather, was a relief
after the boring, long, hot Claremont summer. Now, it
is one more thing going on here, yet another reason to
stick around and not have to get stuck in traffic. Its nice
being in a place to go to and not having to get there.
Civilized discourse
Dear Editor:
Last week, I wrote a response to Jeffrey
Auerbachs editorial about Dollar Tree
coming to Peppertree Square. What I
failed to mention is that Jeff and I have
been longtime friends (despite having
very different views of the world).
After Jeff read my editorial, he contacted me to apologize and to discuss our
differences of opinion. We then talked (we
actually spokewe did not use email)
and I apologized for any of my comments
that may have been derogatory to him.
When the conversation was complete,
we both had a better understanding of
each others opinions and we certainly
will remain friends. In a world where so
many show such partisanship and dislike
towards each other, I am very proud to
have been able to engage in such civilized
discourse regarding a community concern.
Brad Umansky
Claremont
READERS COMMENTS
Claremont cannot afford to do both at the
same time.
Our total debt, which is currently
among the lowest in the region, would almost quadruple in size to $248 million. To
put that number in perspective, on a per
capita basis Claremonts new debt load
would be twice the size of Uplands, and
three times larger than that of Pomona or
La Verne.
It is foolish to imagine that there will be
no consequences to borrowing so much
money all at once. Our city leadership
should have foreseen this problem and
dealt with it themselves, but it has now
been dropped squarely in our laps.
Here are the choices we are left with:
we can approve the parcel tax and run the
risk of assuming the massive combined
debt of both projects; or we can disapprove the tax and wait and see what happens with the water system acquisition,
which may take years to resolve.
We deserve a third option. While there
are some legitimate questions as to the
size and cost of the proposed new police
station, most of us would agree that the
department faces real infrastructure problems that need to be dealt with one way
or another.
On the other hand, there is no urgency
whatsoever to acquire the water system.
It can be stopped right now without any
negative consequences at all, and revived
in the future if and when the citys financial posture allows us to do so in a responsible way.
In fact, Claremont can more than cover
the cost of a brand-new police station with
the money we would save by foregoing
the water system acquisition.
Under the circumstances, this is the
only course of action which ensures that
our public safety needs can be met in a
timely and affordable manner.
Jim Belna
Claremont
Tree details
Dear Editor:
Thanks so much to the COURIER for
the spread on keeping our trees alive! And
thanks for reporting on my comments to
the city council about water bags. Id like
to be clear that I have concerns about
them being used on trees over about five
inches or so in trunk diameter.
Bags are very helpful for newly-planted
or small trees, or ones whose roots are
covered with hardscape except near the
trunk, but not for larger trees.
The water from bags only moves outward a short distance from the actual bag,
missing much of the root area of a larger
tree, which extends from the trunk to beyond the canopy edge and down to about
two feet.
Another difficulty is that an established
tree with a 12-inch trunk would need
about 120 gallons distributed over the
whole of its root area to deep water it to 12
to 18 inches, and a bag only delivers 20
gallons in a limited spot.
Trees over about a five-inch trunk diameter do best with a soaker hose, one
with inline emitters or hand watering,
arranged to distribute the needed amount
of water over the whole root area.
Bags on larger trees are better than no
water at all of course, but they can provide
a sense that water needs are being fully
addressed when in fact they are not. For
more information, visit www.sustainableclaremont.org.
Sue Schenk
Claremont
VIEWPOINT
claremont-courier.com
Courier
Claremont
claremont-courier.com
BOOKMARK
Sarah Torribio
storribio@claremont-courier.com
architect
attorney
WOOTTON
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attorney
WILKINSON &
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Client-conscience, Design-conscience,
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attorney
Kendall &Gkikas LLP
Attorneys at Law
134 Harvard Avenue, 2nd Floor
Claremont, CA 91711
(909) 482-1555
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chiropractor
DR.MARTINS. McLEOD
411 N. Indian Hill Blvd.
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(909) 621-1208
Joint &Muscle Pain Headache
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Most Insurance accepted
Personal injury
dentist
COX and PATEL, DDS
Wayne Cox, DDS
Krutav Patel, DDS
c.p.a.
attorney
MIKE F. OBRIEN
Christine D. Thielo
Attorney at Law
212 Yale Avenue
Claremont, CA 91711
Attorney at Law
480 N. Indian Hill, Suite 1A
Claremont, CA 91711
(909) 626-9999
(909) 624-0733
www.mikefobrien.com
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Specialist in personal injury and wrongful
death cases. Se habla espaol.
design/build
design/build
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Since 1984
Residential Remodel
Restoration of Unique & Vintage
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dentist
financial consultants
(909) 626-2623
SUZANNE H. CHRISTIAN
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LPL Financial
Member of FINRA/SIPC
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Your financial security is my priority
snoring/sleep apnea
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financial consultants
PAMELA J. ZEDICK
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Securities and advisory services offered
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Member of FINRA/SIPC, a registered
investment advisor
(909) 626-1947
Intelligent solutions, Exceptional service
tax preparation/EA
D. PROFFITT, EA
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(909) 625-7861
Geoff@GeoffHamill.com
#1 in Claremont sales &listings since 1988
(909) 367-4554
HARTMANBALDWIN
attorney
www.claremontoptometry.com
909-621-1559
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OPTOMETRY
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SRS GENERAL
CONTRACTOR, INC.
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architect
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Burwellcenterforbettersleep.com
11
CHS principal reminds
Wolfpack fans to keep
it clean at Damien
match-up tonight
Claremont COURIER/Friday, September 18, 2015
Celebrate Women on
the Forefront at Pilgrim
Place
The Celebrating Women on the Forefront event aims to recognize the accomplishments of a number of female
residents of Pilgrim Place in religious
or humanitarian organizations.
Honorees include Dar Nicgorski,
who was named a Woman of the Year
in 1987 by Ms. Magazine for her work
with Central American refugees in the
Sanctuary movement, an endeavor the
resulted in her being charged and convicted in federal court.
In 1958, Barbara Troxell was the first
woman to be ordained as a deacon and
minister on trial in the New York East
Methodist Conference.
Rosemary Radford Ruether, a Roman Catholic theologian who advocates ordination of women in the
church, is a former board member of
the pro-choice group, Catholics for
Choice. Ms. Ruether is the author of 36
books and over 600 articles on feminism,eco-feminismthe Bible and
OUR TOWN
Christianity.
The event will be held Wednesday,
September 23 at 10:30 a.m. in Decker
Hall at Pilgrim Place. For information,
contact Viki Battaglia at Pilgrim Place at
(909) 399-5573 or email her at
vbattaglia@pilgrimplace.org. This is a
free community event. All are welcome.
Collaboration is music
to the ears of Camp
Broadway participants
The Claremont Educational Foundation (CEF) has announced the availability of community partnership grants.
CEF will fund programs or initiatives
that enhance learning through community partnerships and targeted funding
opportunities that extend CEFs efforts
in art, music, technology and other vital
areas to bolster educational support
services and enrich educational programming.
CEF is interested in funding programs and projects that develop and
sustain valuable links with nonprofit organizations that share CEFs commitment to support Claremont Unified
School District students and families.
Qualified applicants must have a
presence in southern California and
should demonstrate service to members
of the Claremont community. Proposals
should be well articulated with identifiable goals and a clear vision for collaborative education partnerships between
nonprofit organizations and teachers,
school sites, district-sponsored programs or the general Claremont community.
The CEF board expects to award
$10,000 in this grant cycle with CEF
Community Partnership Grants not exceeding $2,000 each.
The funding of community partnership grants is a new CEF initiative.
Robert Fass, CEF vice president and
chair of the strategic planning committee explained, it grew from a desire for
CEF to serve as a hub for community
engagement, which includes the work
Through the Camp Broadway summer workshop program, students recently convened at the Claremont
Community School of Music where
they were taught skills in acting,
singing and dancing. They then joined
seasoned adult actors in performances
of The Music Man, held this August at
the Grove Theatre in Upland.
The program, now in its sixth year,
represents a fruitful collaboration between the Inland Valley Repertory Theatre, the CCSM and the Grove, which
donated a percentage of ticket sales to
the local music school. The money will
be used for scholarships awarded to
students wanting to take music classes.
According to Matthew Keating, executive director of the Claremont Community School of Music, the program
was a win-win for all involved, so
much so that a second session was
added.
The students described the experience as exciting, fun, cool and awesome, he shared. One child said, It
was really neat to see how everything
works behind the scenes.
The Claremont Community School
of Music has opened enrollment for the
fall of 2015. Classes include private vocal and music lessons, with instruments
ranging from piano to oboe. There are
also group classes like Lil Singers, Musical Theatre and Mommy and Me as
well as ensembles with names like I
Love Chorus and the Village Pipers.
For information, call (909) 624-3012
or visit www.claremontmusic.org.
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Develop speaking,
leadership skills with
Foothills Toastmasters
Interested in improving your public
speaking and leadership skills? Claremont Foothills Toastmasters welcomes
the public to their fall open house on
Wednesday, September 23 from 7:10 to
8:20 a.m.
The club meets every Wednesday
morning atClaremont Graduate Universitys Drucker Business School, Room
22 at 1021 N. Dartmouth Ave. Toastmasters is the worlds leading organization dedicated to developing vital skills
in speaking, listening and leadership.
For more information visit
http://1475.toast mastersclubs.org or
call Connie Pheiff at (909) 758-1120.
OUR TOWN
12
LA District attorney
Jackie Lacey to give
University Club talk
Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey will speak to the University Club of Claremont on Tuesday,
September 22.
Ms. Lacey will discuss the Criminal
Justice Mental Health Project, which
evaluates people with mental illnesses
who are at risk of entering the criminal
justice system. When she was sworn in
on December 3, 2012, Ms. Lacey became the first woman and the first
African-American to serve as LA
County District Attorney. Ms. Laceys
office prosecuted more than 71,000
felonies in 2014.
Admission to the luncheon is $13,
which includes a buffet lunch served at
11:30 a.m. For luncheon reservations,
call (909) 625-4344.
SPORTS
13
CHS ROUNDUP
CROSS COUNTRY
FOOTBALL
WATER POLO
COURIER photo/Steven
Felschundneff
CALENDAR
YOUR WEEK IN 9 DAYS
September
Friday
18
Crossword puzzle
Claremont Kids
Page 17
Page 19
September
Saturday
19
September
Sunday
20
14
sored by the Claremont Interfaith Working Group for Mid-East Peace, will proceed from City of Knowledge to Temple
Beth Israel and conclude in Claremont
at St. Ambrose Episcopal, where participants may enjoy a light communal meal
and extended fellowship. No charge for
participation. Commemorative T-shirts
will be available for purchase and financial contributions to help support further
events are always appreciated. Those
unable to walk may also drive between
locations. Further information is available at facebook.com/ClaremontInterfaithWG or by calling the CIWG hotline
at (909) 542-8150.
HERB WALK Herbalist William Broen
presents a garden walk and presentation
featuring medicinal and edible plants native to California. Participants will learn
both traditional and modern plant uses of
approximately 30 species. 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. $25. For ages 15 and up. Rancho
Santa Ana Botanic Garden, 1500 N. College Ave., Claremont. (909) 625-8767.
September
Monday
21
9-DAY CALENDAR
continued from the previous page
September
Tuesday
22
September
Wednesday
23
September
Thursday
24
September
Friday
25
OLDENBORG LUNCHEON COLLOQUIUM Barrio Rising: Urban Popular Politics and Making of Modern
September
Saturday
26
15
Valerie Martinez of VMA Communications will share her work with the
California High Speed Rail Authority
since 2003. She provides strategic public affairs and community outreach expertise for a variety of public agencies
and private corporations. For ages 12
and up. Free to the public. 10 a.m. to
noon. Alexander Hughes Center Padua
Room, 1700 N. Danbury Rd., Claremont. (909) 624-9457.
MUSIC OF RUTH CRAWFORD
SEEGER Modern music and transcribed
folk music by this American modernist
composer who was also a tireless advocate for folk music in the 20th century. 8
p.m. Bridges Hall of Music, 150 E. Fourth
St., Claremont. (909) 607-2671.
FALL ART GALA Claremont Museum of Art hosts its fourth Fall Gala
at the historic Claremont Depot. Sample hors doeuvres and wine, accompanied by music from the Jazz Doctors
and a sumptuous dinner from Spaggis
on the lawn, followed by a silent and
live auction of unique art objects and
art-related activities. For ages 18 and
up. For information, contact Marilyn
Ray at marilynray348@gmail.com or
(909) 917-6511 and visit claremontmuseum.org. 5:30 p.m. Claremont
Depot, 200 W. First St., Claremont.
16
RESTAURANT ROW
NIGHTLIFE
THE FOLK MUSIC CENTER: 220 Yale Ave.,
Claremont Village.
Open mic night, the last Sunday of every month.
Sign-up begins at 6 p.m.; performances run from
6:30 to 9 p.m. Admission is $2. (909) 624-2928 or
folkmusiccenter.com.
FLAPPERS COMEDY: 540 W. First St., Claremont Packing House. 18 and over. Show times: Friday at 8 and 10 p.m., Saturday at 7 and 9:30 p.m.
and Sunday at 7 p.m. Tickets can be purchased online or at the door.
Friday, September 18: Alycia Cooper from Last
Comic Standing. 8 and 10 p.m.
Saturday, September 19: Alycia Cooper from
Last Comic Standing. 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Sunday, September 20: Little Black Dress with
Helen Hong at 7 p.m.
Thursday, September 24: Thirsty Thursday with
Jann Karam from Seinfeld at 8 p.m. and Open Mic
Audition Show at 10 p.m.
Friday, September 25: Cash Levy from Comedy
Central. 8 and 10 p.m.
Saturday, September 26: Cash Levy from Comedy Central. 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Sunday, September 27: Claremont Comedy
Contest with Erik Myers at 7 p.m.
THE PRESS RESTAURANT: 129 Harvard Ave.,
Claremont Village. Thursday through Saturday
until 2 a.m. Live DJ every Thursday at 11 p.m. 21
and over after 9 p.m. Standing room only after 9:30
p.m. (909) 625-4808.
Friday, September 18: Sons of Icebag (soul/jazz).
10 p.m.
Saturday, September 19: Gypsies and Judges
(modern gypsy swing). 10 p.m.
Sunday, September 20: Sunday piano at 6 p.m.
followed by Soul Time (soul/DJ) at 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday, September 22: King Trivia Night. 9
p.m.
Wednesday, September 23: Ambient DJ and Pianist Patrick Vargas. 9:30 p.m.
Thursday, September 24: Vintage music with
Mark and Patrick (jazz) at 8:30 p.m. and Barkelly
with DJ LisBomb (90s R&B/electro pop/hip hop)
at 11 p.m.
Friday, September 25: New Manners, Their Wedding, and Lost Frontiers (indie/rock). 10 p.m.
Saturday, September 26: Solid Ray Woods (soul).
10 p.m.
PIANO PIANO: 555 W. Foothill Blvd., Claremont. Live dueling piano show times: Wednesday
and Thursday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. 21 and over. $5 cover charge
on Fridays and Saturdays after 8 p.m. (no cover
charge with student ID). (909) 547-4266.
Tuesdays: Taco Tuesday with $1 tacos, $2 Coronas and $3 margaritas. Rock the mic or jam with
the band.
Wednesdays: Rockstar Karaoke. Rock the mic
or jam with the band. $2 Bud Lights and $4 Vodka
Rockstars. 9 p.m.
COURIER CROSSWORD
Across
1. 1976 Kiss song
5. Knack
9. Local Claremont
racing driver talent,
___ Schlick
14. Floor space
15. Small bovid
16. Mindless
17. Three-sided
hard-shelled seed
19. Chronic nag
20. Inquired
21. Plumbing problems
23. Flower garland
25. Floor coverings
26. Built
31. Fellow
32. Claremont _____
Bicycle Club
33. "Before," when
placed before
36. Research facility,
abbr.
37. Make a play!
2. Goofs
3. Furniture wood
4. Filbert
5. "For Me and My ___"
6. Lodging house
7. Malodorous
8. Network of four
British galleries
9. More hazardous
10. Under control
11. Freight
12. They're covered with caps
13. Evergreens
18. 15-Mar
22. Choir voice
24. "___ time"
26. Paltry payment
27. Hops dryer
28. Strike back, say
29. Cry of surrender
30. Quoter
31. Life story
33. Fantasy draft choice
34. Lightly cooked
35. Ostrich relative
38. Finding out
new things
40. Mischievous or
improper
41. Pakistani language
42. Philosophy
44. Ill-___ gains
45. Fasten
46. Bell's invention
47. Fire up
49. Censor's target
50. Fire starter
51. Emissions result
53. It may be raw
54. Liking
55. Resting on
58. "Days of ___ Lives"
59. Bruce of dragon fame
17
19
:Ancient Egypt
The ancient Egyptian afterlife: from mummy to paradise
Book Nook
Children of the Lamp:
The Akhenaten Adventure
Two genius children, John and Philippa
Gaunt, are living their normal lives in New
York until their Uncle Nimrod asks them to
visit him in London through a dream.
Meanwhile, the twins go through many
strange changes, like growing wisdom teeth
at a young age and having an abnormal attraction to the smell of smoke. Uncle Nimrod tells them that they are actually djinns,
or genies. As the twins get trained by their
uncle, they discover that an evil man called
Iblis is hunting down Nimrod to find the location of the ancient tomb of Akhenaten.
Read about their adventures around Egypt
as they try to evade Iblis and his evil spies!
Recommended for grades 5-8.
Review by Claremont Kids correspondent Eden Yu, an eighth grader at El Roble
Intermediate School.
Hieroglyphics
This is Egyptian writing,
It's called a hieroglyphic.
We write with pretty pictures,
Isn't that terrific?
Paul Perro
CLAREMONTKIDS/continues on the next page
Kin
g Tu
Na
vig
ate
thr
ou
gh
...
ts T
omb
Notable Quotables:
Fun Fact:
Ancient Egypt
Word search
ancient
ankh
Egypt
hieroglyphics
sarcophagus
kingdom
mummy
Nile
papyrus
pharaoh
pyramids
scarab
sphinx
temple
tomb
20
21
new exhibit opens today at the National History Museum in Los Angeles, called Mummies: New Secrets from the Tomb. Visitors can get a
close-up look at 20 mummies from ancient Egypt and Peru.
The show, which uses the modern technology of CT scanning, gives new details about these peoples
lives. Also on display will be richly decorated coffins, sarcophaguses, mummification tools and mummies
of birds, cats and crocodiles. At interactive touch-tables, you can unwrap layers of mummies to see the
precious objects the bodies were buried with, as well as learning vivid details about the individual children, teens and adults who lived out their lives in ancient times.
Tickets for the Mummies exhibit are $10 for kids under 12, $19 for students over 12 and $22 for adults.
They include admission to the entire Natural History Museum. For tickets and information, visit nhm.org.
Say what?
lephant and Piggie is a series by
childrens author and illustrator
Mo Willems. Mr. Willems has
written 24 books about the adventures
of an elephant named Gerald and a pig
called Piggie. Its funny stuff, with
popular titles including There is a
Bird on Your Head! and Im a Frog!
Theyre written in a comic book style,
with the two animal friends conversations printed in word bubbles.
Ask Ady:
by Ady Bolinger
The kid with the most fun and creative entry will
win a family four-pack of tickets to see Elephant
and Piggies: We Are in a Play. In the show, Gerald, Piggie and their friends take to the stage in a
rollicking adventure where they learn what it's like
to be in a play. It will be performed at the Lewis
Family Playhouse at Victoria Gardens in Rancho
Cucamonga, starting on October 10.
Sarah Torribio
storribio@claremont-courier.com
909.621.4761
Friday 09-18-15
CLASSIFIEDS
rentals........22
legals...........23
services......25
real estate....27
CONTACT US
1420 N Claremont Blvd. Suite 205B Claremont, CA 91711
Ph: 909.621.4761 Fax: 909.621.4072
classified@claremont-courier.com
Business Hours: Monday-Friday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Rentals
Rentals
EMPLOYMENT
Help wanted
Gallery space
CALLING all artists! Wish you
could have your own art gallery,
but dont have the time or
money? Claremont gallery
space available starting at
$100 monthly (three months
minimum). Student discount
available. Call 626-388-6248.
Real Estate
House for sale
NORTH Claremont pool
home. Three bedrooms, two
bathrooms. $579,900. Tarbell
Realtors, Antoinette Gower
626-893-2378.
22
Internship
MARKETINGintern needed
for edgy Claremont art
gallery/store. Must be familiar with social media and advertising. Position will help
with press releases and
event planningplenty of
great opportunities for rsum. Perfect for students
looking for college credit.
Call 626-388-6248.
Marketplace
Antiques
A barn and house full of antiques, furniture and smalls.
Refinishing too! 909-5931846. Kensoldenoddities.com.
La Verne.
CAL-SCAN
Announcements
PREGNANT? Considering
adoption? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical and
continued support afterward.
Choose the adoptive family of
your choice. Call 24/7. 1-877879-4709. (Cal-SCAN)
DID you know information is
power and content is king? Do
you need timely access to public notices and remain relevant
in todays highly competitive
market? Gain the edge with
California Newspaper Publishers Association new innovative
website capublicnotice.com and
check out the free one-month
trial smart search feature. For
more information call Cecelia at
916-288-6011 or www.capublicnotice.com. (Cal-SCAN)
DID you know information is
power and content is king?
Your doorway to statewide
public notices, California
Newspaper Publishers Association smart search feature.
Sign-up, enter keywords and
sit back and let public notices
come to you on your mobile,
desktop and tablet. For more
information call Cecelia at
916-288-6011 or www.capublicnotice.com. (Cal-SCAN)
Donations
DONATE your car to veterans
today! help and support our veterans in need. Fast, free pickup. 100 percent deductible. Call
1-888-830-6173. (Cal-SCAN)
Business
Education
Financial
Health
Help wanted
SEEKING Area Coordinator.
Manage a successful tutoring
program in your area. We will
provide all back room expenses/payroll. Great business
opportunity for dedicated entrepreneur. 1-800-293-3091.
academictutoringservice@gma
il.com. (Cal-SCAN)
Personals
FIND the love you deserve! Discover the path to happiness. New
members receive a free threeminute love reading! Entertainment purposes only. 18 and over.
800-639-2705. (Cal-SCAN)
LEGAL TENDER
T.S. No.: 2014-04739-CA A.P.N.:8315-015-005
Property Address: 150 Buena Vista Drive, Claremont,
CA 91711
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE 2923.3(a), THE
SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED
TO BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT
BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO
THE TRUSTOR.
NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE
INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER:
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF
TRUST DATED 08/16/2007. 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.
Trustor: LILLIAN ARELLANO, A MARRIED
WOMAN AS HER SOLE AND SEPARATE
PROPERTY
Duly Appointed Trustee: Western Progressive, LLC
Recorded 08/24/2007 as Instrument No. 20071986960
in book ---, page--- and of Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of Los Angeles County, California,
Date of Sale: 10/01/2015 at 11:00 AM
Place of Sale: BEHIND THE FOUNTAIN LOCATED IN CIVIC CENTER PLAZA, 400 CIVIC
CENTER PLAZA, POMONA, CA
Estimated amount of unpaid balance and other charges:
$ 784,563.55
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIERS CHECK
DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A
STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF
THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO
DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
All right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by
the trustee in the hereinafter described property under
and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described as:
More fully described in said Deed of Trust.
Street Address or other common designation of real
property: 150 Buena Vista Drive, Claremont, CA
91711
A.P.N.: 8315-015-005
The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above.
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. The total
amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured
by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial
publication of the Notice of Sale is:
$ 784,563.55.
If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason,
the successful bidders sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and
the successful bidder shall have no further recourse.
The beneficiary of the Deed of Trust has executed and
delivered to the undersigned a written request to commence foreclosure, and the undersigned caused a Notice
of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the
county where the real property is located.
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
recorders 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 this property.
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid
less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the
time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the
total debt
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 (866)-9608299 or visit this Internet Web site http://www.altisource.com/MortgageServices/DefaultManagement/Tr
usteeServices.aspx using the file number assigned to
this case 2014-04739-CA. 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.
Western Progressive, LLC, as Trustee for beneficiary
C/o 30 Corporate Park, Suite 450
Irvine, CA 92606
Automated Sale Information Line: (866) 960-8299
http://www.altisource.com/MortgageServices/DefaultManagement/TrusteeServices.aspx
For Non-Automated Sale Information, call: (866)
240-3530
______________________________
Trustee Sale Assistant
Date: August 14, 2015
WESTERN PROGRESSIVE, LLC MAY BE
ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR
THAT PURPOSE.
Publish: September 4, 11 and 18, 2015
legalads@claremont-courier.com 909.621.4761
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
File No. 2015206659
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as
CLAREMONT MARKET PLACE, NITROS
GALLERY, CLAREMONT MARKETING
GROUP, 206 West Bonita Ave., Claremont, CA
91711. Mailing address: 140 N. Harvard, #1781,
Claremont, CA 91711. Registrant(s): Katherine A.
Hatcher, 1273 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA 91711.
This business is conducted by an Individual.
Registrant has not yet commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name or names listed herein.
I declare that all information in this statement is true
and correct.
/s/ Katherine A. Hatcher Title: Owner
This statement was filed with the RegistrarRecorder/County Clerk of Los Angeles County on
08/07/15.
NOTICE- In Accordance with subdivision (a) of section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five (5) years from the date on which
it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except,
as provided in subdivision (b) of section 17920, where
it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth
in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than
a change in the residence address of a registered
owner. A new Fictitious Business Name Statement
must be filed before the expiration. Effective January
1, 2014, the Fictitious Business Name Statement must
be accompanied by the Affidavit Of Identity Form.
The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize
the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or
common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and
Professions Code).
PUBLISH: September 4, 11, 18 and 25, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
File No. 2015220133
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as
STRATEGIC SOLUTIONS CONSULTING,
532 West First Street, #213, Claremont, CA 91711.
Registrants: 1.) Eloisa Perard, 532 West First Street,
#213, Claremont, CA 91711. 2.) David Scott Perard, 532 West First Street, #213, Claremont, CA
91711.
This business is conducted by Copartners.
Registrant has not yet commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names
listed herein.
I declare that all information in this statement is true
and correct.
/s/ Eloisa Perard Title: Partner
This statement was filed with the RegistrarRecorder/County Clerk of Los Angeles County on
08/25/15.
NOTICE- In Accordance with subdivision (a) of
section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five (5) years from the date
on which it was filed in the office of the County
Clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the
residence address of a registered owner. A new Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. Effective January 1, 2014, the
Fictitious Business Name Statement must be accompanied by the Affidavit Of Identity Form.
The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business
Name in violation of the rights of another under
federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411
et seq., Business and Professions Code).
PUBLISH: September 4, 11, 18 and 25, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
File No. 2015220114
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as
BOULDERHAUS ATHLETICS, 532 West First
Street, #213, Claremont, CA 91711. Registrants: 1.)
Eloisa Perard, 532 West First Street, #213, Claremont, CA 91711. 2.) David Scott Perard, 532 West
First Street, #213, Claremont, CA 91711.
This business is conducted by a Married Couple.
Registrant has not yet commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names
listed herein.
I declare that all information in this statement is true
and correct.
/s/ Eloisa Perard Title: Wife
This statement was filed with the RegistrarRecorder/County Clerk of Los Angeles County on
08/25/15.
NOTICE- In Accordance with subdivision (a) of
section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five (5) years from the date
on which it was filed in the office of the County
Clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the
residence address of a registered owner. A new Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. Effective January 1, 2014, the
Fictitious Business Name Statement must be accompanied by the Affidavit Of Identity Form.
The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business
Name in violation of the rights of another under
federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411
et seq., Business and Professions Code).
PUBLISH: September 4, 11, 18 and 25, 2015
ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
ORIGINAL FILE NO: 2013225011
Current file no.: 2015226389
The following person has/have abandoned the use of
the fictitious business name: LA BELLA SPA, located at 410 Auto Center Dr., Claremont, CA 91711.
The fictitious business name referred to above was filed
on 10/30/2013 in the County of Los Angeles.
Registrant Name: Liu Xiuzhen, 1539 S. Abbot Ave.,
Apt. C, San Gabriel, CA 91776.
The business is conducted by an Individual.
This statement was filed with the RegistrarRecorder/County Clerk of Los Angeles County on
09/01/15.
I declare that all information in this statement is true
and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of
a crime.)
/s/ Liu Xiuzhen Title: Owner
Publish: September 11, 18, 25 and October 2, 2015
23
Let us
know
when
you
move.
Call the
COURIER at
621-4761
to update your
mailing info.
Dont leave us
in the dark!
LEGAL TENDER
DEPARTMENT OF THE
TREASURER AND TAX
COLLECTOR
Notice of Divided Publication
NOTICE OF DIVIDED
PUBLICATION OF THE PROPERTY
TAX-DEFAULT LIST
(DELINQUENT LIST)
Made pursuant to Section 3371, Revenue and
Taxation Code
Pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code Sections
3381 through 3385, the Notice of Power to Sell
Tax-Defaulted Property in and for Los Angeles
County, State of California, has been divided and
distributed to various newspapers of general circulation published in the County. A portion of the
list appears in each of such newspapers.
I, Joseph Kelly, County of Los Angeles Tax Collector, State of California, certify that:
Notice is hereby given that the real properties
listed below were declared to be in tax default at
12:01 a.m. on July 1, 2013, by operation of law.
The declaration of default was due to non-payment of the total amount due for the taxes, assessments, and other charges levied in the
2012-13 Tax Year that were a lien on the listed
real property. Non-residential commercial property and property upon which there is a recorded
nuisance abatement lien shall be subject to the
Tax Collector's power to sell after three years of
defaulted taxes. Therefore, if the 2012-13 taxes
remain defaulted after June 30, 2016, the property will become subject to the Tax Collector's
power to sell and eligible for sale at the County's
public auction in 2017. All other property that
has defaulted taxes after June 30, 2018, will become subject to the Tax Collector's power to sell
and eligible for sale at the County's public auction in 2019. The name of the assessee and the
total tax, which was due on June 30, 2013, for the
2012-13 Tax Year, is shown opposite the parcel
number. Tax-defaulted real property may be redeemed by payment of all unpaid taxes and assessments, together with the additional penalties
and fees as prescribed by law, or it may be paid
under an installment plan of redemption if initiated prior to the property becoming subject to the
Tax Collector's power to sell.
All information concerning redemption of taxdefaulted property will be furnished, upon request, by Joseph Kelly, Treasurer and Tax
Collector at 225 North Hill Street, Los Angeles,
California 90012,
1 (888) 807-2111 or 1 (213) 974-2111.
I certify under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct. Executed at Los Angeles,
California, on August 24, 2015.
JOSEPH KELLY
TREASURER AND TAX COLLECTOR
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
Assessees/taxpayers, who have disposed of real
property since January 1, 2009, may find their
names listed for the reason that a change in ownership has not been reflected on the assessment
roll.
ASSESSOR'S IDENTIFICATION
NUMBERING SYSTEM EXPLANATION
The Assessor's Parcel Number (APN), when used
to describe property in this list, refers to the Assessor's map book, the map page, the block on the
map (if applicable), and the individual parcel on
the map page or in the block. The Assessor's
maps and further explanation of the parcel numbering system are available at the Office of the
Assessor.
The following property tax defaulted on July 1,
2013, for the taxes, assessments, and other
charges for the fiscal year 2012-13:
LISTED BELOW ARE PROPERTIES THAT
DEFAULTED IN 2013 FOR TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND 0THER CHARGES FOR THE
FISCAL YEAR 2012-2013.
AMOUNT OF DELINQUENCY AS OF THIS
PUBLICATION IS LISTED BELOW.
AMATO,LINDA SITUS 5116 PALMER
CANYON RD CLAREMONT CA 91711-1481
8673-009-012 $869.90
CERVANTES,SEVERA S TR SEVERA S CER-
legalads@claremont-courier.com 909.621.4761
VANTES TRUST SITUS 1078 LAKE FOREST
DR CLAREMONT CA 91711-2529 8303-003022 $4,576.50
DETERS LLC 8678-066-019 $12,312.56
FIGUEROA,HECTOR T AND CHELSEA L
SITUS 1422 ASHLAND AVE CLAREMONT
CA 91711-3307 8303-022-013 $2,212.16
GORENSTEIN,WILLIAM M CO TR GORENSTEIN FAMILY TRUST SITUS 2507 N MOUNTAIN AVE CLAREMONT CA 91711-1545
8669-003-042 $535.98
GUTIERREZ,ARTHUR P TR SYLVIA A
GUTIERREZ TRUST SITUS 605 BLANCHARD PL CLAREMONT CA 91711-4023
8314-010-008 $450.53
HEMLER,EDWARD A AND MAUREEN A
SITUS 1760 GENESEE DR LA VERNE CA
91750-2035 8664-035-006 $27,612.53
HILL,ZSA ZSA M SITUS 463 NOTRE DAME
RD CLAREMONT CA 91711-5139 8316-004022/S2012-010 $630.30
INGRAM,MARK A AND ANN M SITUS 2223
GOLDEN HILLS RD LA VERNE CA 917501129 8678-060-015/S2011-010 $173.89
MAROSTE,STEVEN AND MILLY 8669-028014 $1,372.55
MCCOY,SAUL ET AL BOWENS,HOWARD III
SITUS 2350 CANYON CREST DR LA VERNE
CA 91750-1742 8678-067-049 $28,555.01
OCHOA,ANA J AND MORENO,JOSE A SITUS
4734 CATALINA AVE LA VERNE CA 917501945
8664-003-019/S2011-030/S2012-010
$870.68
REYNOLDS,RONALD D SITUS 1971 VIA ARROYO LA VERNE CA 91750-1422 8664-020041 $21,035.92
SCATES,MANUEL M AND JUDITH M TRS M
AND J SCATES FAMILY TRUST SITUS 4506
LIVEOAK DR CLAREMONT CA 91711-2103
8669-021-018/S2012-010 $7,257.39
SMITH,GREGORY D AND KIM S SITUS 1132
COOKE AVE CLAREMONT CA 91711-1499
8673-030-053 $43,500.71
TORRES,JOHN AND GLORIA 8664-010-030
$3,439.90
VAUX,ROBERT M SITUS 660 SYCAMORE
AVE CLAREMONT CA 91711-5564 8315-029034 $11,922.87
WARD,STEPHEN W SITUS 1990 7TH ST LA
VERNE CA 91750-4447 8375-012-001
$3,846.24
YOHO,LOUISE M SITUS 432 CARLETON
AVE CLAREMONT CA 91711-5108 8316-006013/S2012-010 $1,000.00
CN915628
Publish: September 11 and 18, 2015
Legal ease
Keep it
local
24
Courier
Claremont
claremont-courier.com
Friday 09-18-15
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MC/Visa. 100 percent
financing. Senior discounts.
Lic.744873
909-985-5254
Complete fireplace,
woodstove installation,
service and repair.
Spark arrestor supply
and installation.
Call 909-920-6600
392 N. 2nd Ave., Upland
Concrete
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
Veteran, Mt. Sac, Cal Poly
Stamped, broom,
color finishes.
Slate, flagstone, planters,
walls and walkways.
Art Lessons
Contractor
THE Wood Dr. Specializing in termite and dry-rot
repairs. Fascia boards,
eves, patios, decks. 909262-8649.
WENGER Construction. 25
years experience. Handyman
Services. Cabinetry, doors,
electrical, drywall, crown
molding. Lic.707381. 951640-6616.
Bathroom Remodeling
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
A Bath-Brite
authorized dealer.
Bathtubs and sinks.
Showers, tile, countertops.
Refinish - Reglaze - Restore
Porcelain, ceramic,
fiberglass.
Quick and affordable.
Please call 909-945-7775.
www.bath-brite.com
Veteran
New and repairs.
Carpentry
SEMI-RETIRED rough to
finish remodeler. Kitchens,
porches, doors, decks, fences,
painting. Lots more! Paul,
909-919-3315.
Carpet Service
ANDERSON Carpet Service.
Claremont resident serving
Claremont since 1985. Powerful truck-mounted cleaning
units. Expert carpet repairs
and stretching. Senior discounts. 24-hour emergency
water damage service.
Please call 909-621-1182.
CONTACT US
Drywall
THOR McAndrew Construction. Drywall repair and installation. Interior plaster repair. Free estimates. CA
Lic.742776. Please call 909816-8467. ThorDrywall.com.
Electrician
MOR ELECTRIC &
HANDYMAN SERVICES
Free estimates
and senior discounts.
909-989-3454
909-767-0062
Residential * Industrial *
Commercial. We do it all.
No job too big or small!
24/7 emergency services.
Reasonable and reliable.
Lic.400-990
30 years experience.
Haydens Services Inc.
Since 1978
Bonded * Insured
No job too big or small!
Old home rewiring specialist.
24-hour emergency service.
909-982-8910
909-767-0062
SPARKS ELECTRIC
Local electrician for all your
electrician needs!
909-946-8887
Lic.922000
909-599-9530
Serving Claremont
for 30 years!
Lic.323243
REX ROMANO
BUILDERS
Excellence in building
and customer satisfaction.
Kitchen and bath.
Remodel.
Best of Houzz 2015.
Lic.763385
909-626-3019
KOGEMAN
CONSTRUCTION
Room additions.
Kitchen/bath remodeling.
Custom cabinets.
Residential/commercial.
909-946-8664
Lic.B710309
Visit us on Facebook!
PPS General Contractor.
Kitchen and bathroom remodeling. Flooring, windows, electrical and plumbing. Serving Claremont for
25 years. Lic.846995. 951237-1547.
Fictitious Name
Handyman
Ironing
A FICTITIOUS Business
Name Statement (D.B.A.) is
required if you're in business.
You are required to file and
publish a DBA in the local
newspaper. You must renew
your FBNS every five (5)
years. You must file and republish if any changes have
been made to your business.
If your business is located in
LA COUNTY, The COURIER
will help you file your FBNS
with L.A. County Clerk, publish the statement and provide you with proof of publication. Fees start at $26 to
the County and $95 to the
Courier. Notary Public available to help notarize your Affidavit Of Identity for your
FBNS for an additional fee.
Claremont COURIER: 1420
N. Claremont Blvd., Suite
205B, Claremont. Call Vickie,
909-621-4761.
Furniture Restoration
KEN'S Olden Oddities.com.
Taking the time to care for
Courier readers complete
restoration needs since 1965.
La Verne. Call 909-593-1846.
Gardening
* Senior Discount *
Lic.359145
CALL Lou. Flush lights, service
changes, repairs, service calls,
outdoor lighting and room additions. Lic.258436. Call 909241-7671, 909-949-8230.
Serving Claremont
Since 1995. Residential,
Commercial.
Recessed lighting and
design, breaker replacement,
service panel upgrades,
ceiling fans, troubleshooting,
landscape lighting, rewires
and LED lighting. Free
estimates. 24-hours emergency service. References.
909-900-8930
909-626-2242
Lic.806149
Eco-friendly landscaping.
We will get you a $3000
grant to remove your lawn!
Why mow when you can
grow? From the creators of
The Pomona College
Organic Farm.
Specializing in native
and edible landscapes.
909-398-1235
www.naturalearthla.com
Lic.919825
*$2 sq. ft. rebate*
Garden Maintenance
Hand-pull weeding, mowing,
trimming, sprinkler work,
monthly service, cleanups
and junk removal.
Free estimates.
David, 909-374-1583
Girl Friday
I'M here to help! Housekeeping, shopping, errands.
Senior, pet, house sitting.
Jenny Jones, 909-6260027, anytime!
Handyman
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
Claremont
Handyman Service
Veteran
New, repairs.
ONE CALL DOES IT ALL!
Carpentry, repairs,
gates, lighting,
small painting projects.
Odd jobs welcome!
Free consultations.
909-921-6334
909-599-9530
Cell: 626-428-1691
Lic.323243
25
A-HANDYMAN
New and Repairs
Inside, outside, small,
large, home, garage, yard.
ONE CALL DOES IT ALL!
909-599-9530
Cell: 626-428-1691
Lic.323243
30 years experience!
Claremont area.
Hauling
SAMEDAY-HAULAWAY
Free estimates.
Senior discount!
WE HAUL IT ALL CHARLIE!
909-382-1210
626-383-1442
sameday-haulaway.com
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
Same Day
One call does it all!
Garage, yard, home,
moving!
909-599-9530
House Cleaning
20 YEARS experience. Free
estimates. Excellent references. Tailored to your individual needs. Senior care,
day or night. Call Lupe, 909236-2236.
TERESA'S House Cleaning.
Honest, reliable, experienced,
deep cleaning. References
available. Free estimates. 909621-0896 or 909-762-3198.
ROSIE'S Spic Span Cleaning
Service. Residential, commercial, vacant homes,
apartments, offices. Free estimate. Licensed. 909-2774215.
Shirley's Cleaning Service
28 years in business.
Office/residential.
No job too small.
Free estimates.
We do spring cleaning!
909-803-0074
CAROUSEL Quality Cleaning.
Family owned for 26 years. Licensed, insured. Senior rates.
Professional services including: cleaning, windows, senior care, fire damage, move
in/out, closet organization. 10
percent discount to Claremont College faculty. Check
us out on Angies List. Robyn,
909-621-3929.
Established, upbeat,
licensed house cleaning
service. Organic
cleaning supplies used.
26 years of experience.
Jeanette 909-224-1180,
909-803-0074.
Irrigation
SPRINKLER SYSTEMS
INSTALLATIONS
EXPERT REPAIRS
DRIP SYSTEM
SPECIALISTS
C.F.PRIVETT, LIC.557151
909-621-5388
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
Veteran, Mt. Sac, Cal Poly
New, repairs. Professional.
All sprinkler repairs.
Call 909-599-9530 Now
Cell: 626-428-1691
24-hour emergency
service.
909-982-8910
* Senior discount *
Lic.359145
Expert Repairs
Retrofit Experts
Ask us how to save water.
Allen Cantrall Landscape
909-224-3327
Lic.861685
Serving the area
since 1983.
Landscaping
GREENWOOD
LANDSCAPING CO.
Landscaping contractor for
complete landscaping,
irrigation, drainage,
designing and gardening.
Lic.520496
909-621-7770
DLS Landscaping and Design.
Claremont native specializing
in drought tolerant landscaping, drip systems and lighting.
Artistic solutions for the future.
Over 35 years experience.
Call: 909-225-8855, 909-9825965. Lic.585007.
DANS GARDENING
SERVICE
Sprinklers/drip installed, repaired.
Lawn removal. Cleanup,
hauling. Drought landscapes,
planting, sod, lighting,
drainage. Insured.
References. Since 1977.
Lic.508671.
Landscaping
Eco-friendly landscaping.
We will get you a $3000
grant to remove your lawn!
Why mow when you can
grow? From the creators of
The Pomona College
Organic Farm.
Specializing in native
and edible landscapes.
909-398-1235
www.naturalearthla.com
Lic.919825
*$2 sq. ft. rebate*
Put the wow back in your
yard and meet water
restrictions. Call now!
Taylor Landscape
909-519-4027
Lic#541078
Painting
ACE SEVIER PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
BONDED and INSURED
Many references.
Claremont resident.
35 years experience.
Lic.315050
Please call: 909-624-5080,
909-596-4095.
COLLINS Painting &
Construction
Company, LLC. Interior, exterior. Residential and
commercial. Contractors Lic.384597. 909-985-8484.
STEVE LOPEZ
PAINTING
Extensive preparation.
Indoor, outdoor, cabinets.
Offering odorless green
solution. 33-year master.
Lic.542552
Please call
909-989-9786
C-27Lic.#373833.
John Cook- Specializing in
Desert Landscaping.
Designed
Installed
Maintained
909-231-8305
Drought tolerant and
California native design.
Water conserving irrigation.
Lighting and maintenance.
Allen Cantrall Landscape
909-224-3327
Lic.861685
Serving the area
since 1983.
ADVANCED DON DAVIES
Mt. Sac, Cal Poly
New, refurbish or repair.
Design, drainage, concrete,
slate, flagstone, lighting, irrigation, decomposed granite.
909-599-9530
Cell: 626-428-1691
Claremont area 30 years!
Lic.323243
Learn Japanese
RESIDENTIAL/Commercial.
Quality work at reasonable
prices. Free estimates.
Lic.541469. 909-622-7994.
AFFORDABLE. Traditional or
green options. Custom work.
No job too big or too small.
20 years of Claremont resident referrals. Free estimates.
Lic.721041. 909-228-4256.
www.vjpaint.com.
909-599-9530
Cell: 626-428-1691
Claremont area 30 years!
Lic.323243
Painting
KPW PAINTING
Older couple painting,
40 years experience!
Competitive rates.
Small repairs.
No job too small.
References available.
We work our own jobs.
Carrie or Ron
909-615-4858
Lic.778506
D&D Custom Painting.
Bonded. Lic.423346. Residential, commercial. Interior
or exterior. Free estimates.
909-982-8024.
Plumbing
909-982-8910
* Senior discount *
Lic.359145
STEVES PLUMBING
24-hour service* Low cost!
Free estimates. All plumbing
repairs. Complete drain cleaning, leak detection,
water heaters.Your local
plumber for over 25 years.
Senior discounts. Insured,
Lic.744873.
* 909-985-5254 *
Roofing
Custom Construction
Reroof Specialist
All types of roofing.
Dry rot, flat roof,
tile repairs.
Insured and bonded.
Lic.630203.
Mark 909-996-2981
GORDON Perry Roofing.
Reroofing, repairs of all
types. Free estimates. Quality work. Lic.C39588976.
909-944-3884.
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
Veteran,
Mt. Sac, Cal Poly
Tree Care
Johnny's Tree Service
Tree trimming
and demolition.
Certified arborist.
Lic.270275, insured.
Please call:
909-946-1123
951-522-0992
MANUELS Garden Service.
General cleanup. Lawn maintenance, bush trimming,
general maintenance, tree
trimming and removal. Low
prices and free estimates.
Please call 909-391-3495 or
909-239-3979.
Dale's Tree Service
Certified arborist.
Pruning and removals.
Drought tolerant planting
and design. Maintenance
specials. Over 30 years
experience.
909-982-5794
Lic#753381
TOM Day Tree Service. Fine
pruning of all trees since 1974.
Free estimate. 909-629-6960.
MGT Professional Tree Care.
Providing prompt, dependable service for all your tree
care needs. Certified arborist.
Lic.836027. Matt Gray-Trask.
Call 909-946-7444.
Wallpaper
WALLPAPER
hanging and
removal by
Andrea. Environmentally
friendly.
30
years local experience. Free
estimates. Lic.844375. 951990-1053.
Weed Abatement
JOHNNY'S Tree Service.
Weed abatement/land clearing. Disking and mowing.
Please call 909-946-1123,
951-522-0992. Lic.270275.
TIRED of dealing with weed
problems on your lot or field?
Help control the problem in an
environmentally safe manner.
To receive loads of quality wood
chips. Please call 909-2146773. Tom Day Tree Service.
PLASTERING by Thomas.
Stucco and drywall repair
specialist. Licensed home
improvement. Contractor
Lic.614648. 909-984-6161.
www.wall-doctor.com.
New, repairs.
Professional.
All sprinkler repairs.
Plumbing
Veteran
Weed eating, mowing,
tractor fields,
manual slopes, hauling.
Window Washing
EXCEL PLUMBING
Family owned and operated.
30 plus years experience.
Expert plumbing repairs and
drain cleaning. Water
heaters, faucets, sinks,
toilets, disposals,
under slab lead detection,
sewer video inspection.
Licensed, bonded and
insured. Lic.917874.
909-945-1995
RENES Plumbing and AC. All
types residential repairs,
HVAC, new installation, repairs. Prices to fit the working
familys budget. Lic.454443.
Insured professional service.
909-593-1175.
Tile
ADVANCED
DON DAVIES
Options In-Home Care is built on integrity and compassion. Our friendly and professional staff provides affordable non-medical home care
service, tailored care for our elderly clients, including personal
hygiene, Alzheimer & dementia care, meal prep, bathing and light house
keeping. For your convenience our Operators and Case Managers are
available 24/7! Now offering VA benefit support assistance.
Office #: 909-621- CARE(2273) Fax #: 909-621-1114
Website: www.optionsinhomecare.com
909-599-9530
Cell: 626-428-1691
PROFESSIONAL window
cleaning. Serving Claremont/Upland since 1989.
Over 4,000 repeat customers.
100 percent guaranteed.
Dave, 909-920-0606. Empire
Window Cleaning.
and clean. Stone and granite work. Residential, commercial. Lic.830249. Ray,
909-731-3511.
26
909-621-5626
909.621.4761
27
CONTACT US
1420 N Claremont Blvd. Suite 205B Claremont, CA 91711
Ph: 909.621.4761 Fax: 909.621.4072
classified@claremont-courier.com
Business Hours: Monday-Friday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Friday 09-18-15
REAL ESTATE
Sunday, September 20
1-3 p.m. 573 Wayland Ct., Claremont.
Curtis Real Estate.
1-4 p.m. 1415 Guadalajara Pl., Claremont.
Arabella Perez, Tarbell Realtors.
1-5 p.m. 936 Peninsula Ave., Claremont.
Lynn Gianakos, Century 21.
2-4 p.m. 1527 Bates Pl., Claremont.
Wheeler Steffen Sothebys International Realty.
2-5 p.m. 2117 Kemper Ave., Claremont.
Antoinette Gower, Tarbell Realtors.
Nancy Telford
DRE #01191038
1527 BATES PLACE, CLAREMONT Light, bright and airy, this lovely home sits
on a quiet cul-de-sac in Claremonts Chaparral Elementary School district. Close to the
Claremont Colleges and Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden. New carpet and paint. Very
unusual floor plan with two bedrooms and one bathroom in the front and three bedrooms and one bathroom in the back. One back bedroom has a separate entrance making it ideal for an office. Other amenities include a fireplace in the large living room,
ceiling fans, vaulted ceilings, concrete patio and a two-car garage. Mature citrus trees.
M
ADHU SENGUPTA
500 W. Foothill Blvd., Claremont
www.callMadhu.com
(909) 260-5560
Eighty-five percent of Nancys business has been referrals from past satisfied clients due to her
OUTSTANDING QUALITY SERVICE based on a sincere interest in helping people with all
their real estate needs. Consistently the recipient of the #1 Top Quality Service Award, Top Referral Agent Award, Top Investment Award, Esteemed C-21 Preferred Agent Club Award, GRI
Certification, Certified Green Real Estate Professional (CG-REP) and "Grand Centurion Honor
Society Award" which is a symbol of excellence and is the highest professional ranking that a
Realtor can receive in the Century 21 system!
Nancy ranked as one of the most productive agents amongst the best of the best in the entire
Century 21 system.
#1 Top Producer in the Inland Empire/San Gabriel Valley, Top 12 in the world with more than
102,000 sales professionals in 75 countries and #7 in the entire United States for 2014.
BRE#00979814
Call today (909) 575-8411 or email telford@telford.com for the Best Professional Quality
Service with all your real estate needs and please visit See 5-Star outstanding reviews - Buyer's
and Seller's Testimonials at www.zillow.com/profile/Nancy-Telford/Reviews and her website
www.nancytelford.com. (BRE #01191038)
SELLING, BUYING OR RENTING? Advertise in the Claremont COURIER! Call Jessica at 621-4761.
28
909-524-9252
gail.sparks@camoves.com
BRE 00963648
909.447.7708 Mason@MasonProphet.com
(909) 636-2744
BRE#01899295
29
2015
2014
45
6
39
1
$2,092,000
$298,000
$659,545
$647,502
83
36
7
29
1
$1,815,000
$265,000
$668,556
$661,599
54
+25 percent
-14 percent
34 percent
0 percent
+15 percent
+12 percent
-1 percent
-2 percent
+54 percent
After a relatively slower month of July, August picked up again with a large number of sales. It is still a
market predominantly under the $750,000 price range, with the upper end only consisting of about 13
percent of the sales last month (and most months this year). The average days on market for the homes
sold where considerably higher in August. This can be explained by several high dollar listings that took
many months before selling, thus skewing the averages upward. With the FED just announcing they will
not raise interest rates quite yet, it seems that the market will continue on the current path without any
major changes. This is good news for the housing market as a rise in rates will likely slow the market and
have some downward pressure on prices. That being said, the FED is set to meet again in October and
December, and it is likely that a rate hike may be announced at either of those meetings.
Information provided by Ryan Zimmerman, Wheeler Steffen Sotheby's International Realty.
Contact Ryan at ryan@rrzimmerman.com or call 909.447.7707.
REAL ESTATE
(909) 626-1261
www.curtisrealestate.com
OPENHOUSE SUN 1 - 3 PM
CARLOS, 909-964-7631
PAT, 909-214-1002
FOR LEASE:
C LUB T ERRACE C ONDO - 3 B EDROOMS - $2,400
V ILLAGE W EST C ONDO - 3 B EDROOMS - $2,495
WALK TO V ILLAGE - 2 B EDROOM H OUSE - $1,500
EXPERIENCE MATTERS...
Celebrating Over 25 Years
Selling Real Estate in the Area
MALKA RINDE
Broker - Owner
BRE# 00545647
Bus: 909-625-2407
Fax: 909-621-2842
www.malkarinde.com
GEOFF T. HAMILL
Tell a Friend...
"Best Possible
Price Achieved,
Every Time!"
COMING SOON:
Claremont Village Heritage House - $995,000
Towne Ranch Custom Classic - $600,000
FOR LEASE:
Claremont Village Walk Loft - $2,400 monthly
Coveted North Claremont Home - $2,400 monthly
Two Bedroom Condo Close to Village - $1,350 monthly
New
Price!
New
Listing!
SELLERS:
I have motivated and qualified buyers
looking for a Claremont home.
Please contact me today for a FREE
complimentary market analysis of your
property. Thank you!
909.621.0500
Geoff@GeoffHamill.com
D.R.E. #00997900
For more information, photos and virtual tours, please visit www.GeoffHamill.com or call 909.621.0500
(909) 753-9789
Nancy Telford
PR
IC
E
RE
DU
CE
D
Nancy Telford, Century 21 Beachside Broker Associate. Telford@Telford.com. www.NancyTelford.com. BRE #01191038
We have qualified buyers wanting a Claremont home. Call Nancy today for a FREE market analysis and the best quality service. 909-575-8411.
NE
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Top 7 in the USA! Top 12 in the World for the Century 21 Global System! #1 in the Inland Empire/San Gabriel Valley & awarded again for the Best Quality Service
CUSTOM MEDITERRANEAN
This elegant estate on over one-acre of land will take your breath away! Discover luxurious
design and detail throughout from the moment you enter and take in the grand staircase.
The magnificent style and flow warms the heart at every turn from the formal living room with
opulent fireplace to the formal dining room where you will entertain in style. Relax with a
book in the cozy library/study which features custom built-in cabinetry. The remodeled
kitchen is a chefs dream. Show off your culinary artistry while guests mingle in the breakfast room that spills over into the family room. Enjoy views of the spacious yard from the
master suite balcony. Ultimate outdoor living encompasses a pool, spa, tennis court, builtin BBQ and outdoor entertainment area. Dont miss out on this spectacular north Claremont
custom! $2,350,000. Lori Johnson 909-561-7338. (B902)
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GATED COMMUNITY
This beautiful home is nestled in a private
neighborhood and features three spacious
bedrooms and bathrooms. Find wood laminate flooring throughout the downstairs
which flows from room to room in this open
floor plan. Fresh paint, recessed lighting,
master suite deck plus a private yard and
patio. $519,000. Jason Nagy 626-2445000. (M4321)
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DISTINCTIVE TOWNHOME
Situated in a beautiful complex with a
stream that meanders through the green
belts, is this super clean unit featuring tile
flooring and a cheery kitchen with granite
counters, hickory cabinets and some
stainless steel appliances. Walking distance to local shopping and restaurants.
$260,000. Alexander Nagy 626-4371824. (I991)
LD
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EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Bring your tool belt to this fixer-upper that
needs remodeling to capture an excellent
opportunity at an unbelievable price! This
single-story features three bedrooms with
both living room and dining area. Currently
zoned R2, so check with the city for zoning
and land use, then transform this home into
its full potential. $219,000. Lori Johnson
909-561-7338. (T727)
GREAT LOCATION
Nestled in the foothills and situated on a
beautiful tree-lined street is this singlelevel home in north Glendora. Enjoy the
warmth of a fireplace in both the living
room and in the huge master suite. With a
little TLC you will have the home of your
dreams! $550,600. Leticia Guerrero 951545-1763. (L355)
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PARC CHATEAU
Fabulous home is upgraded inside and
out! Inside find a very open and bright
floor plan with skylights, hardwood flooring and an upgraded kitchen with granite
countertops. Outdoors find custom
stamped concrete along the side and
backyard that creates the perfect outdoor
living area as it is nestled amidst mature
trees and shrubs. $649,999. Laura Dandoy
909-398-1810. (C2166)