Red Bluff Daily News

July 29, 2015

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CHICO Enloe Medical Center is accepting appli- cations for the Enloe Hos- pice Volunteer program. Hospice volunteers are trained to provide patient companionship, caregiver respite, bereavement sup- port and clerical support in Chico and the surround- ing areas. Those interested in be- coming an Enloe Hospice Volunteer, should contact Leslie Amani, coordina- tor of Spiritual Care and Hospice Volunteers, by Aug. 6 to set up an inter- view and complete the ap- plication process. She can be reached at 332-4574 or leslie.amani@enloe.org. Training for hospice vol- unteers will begin Aug. 21. Volunteers must complete an application, interview and general orientation prior to attending train- ing. Hospice volunteers must be 18 or older. Enloe Hospice volun- teers are important mem- bers of the Enloe Hospice team, giving of their time, listening ear and compas- sionate spirit that supports our work with patients and families. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY Hospiceprogram seeks applicants Jesse Stumpf, formerly a resident of Vina, who has been living in Red Bluff several months, has filed on the island in the Sacramento river located east of the water works and south of Duncan's Hill. Stumpf made his filing several weeks ago and has posted notices on small boards at numerous places around the edge of the island and is spending much of his time there. It is understood he has engaged a Red Bluff young man at the rate of $2 per day whose duties consist of transporting Stumpf back and forth between the island and the Red Bluff side of the river. A row boat has been used for this purpose, but ap- parently it has proved in- adequate as Stumpf re- cently purchased a motor boat formerly owned by George Hartman, Charles Thode and A. Lingscheid of this city. It is reported he will have the boat re- paired at once and put in service on the river. John Scott, who is renting boats at the foot of Pine street re- ports having made numer- ous trips with passengers to the island. The place has been nick- named "Coney Island." —July29,1915 100 YEARS AGO... Island in middle of river is filed on It's nicknamed 'Coney Island' This is a recipe for hoisin barbecued steak-on-a-stick with pineapple salsa. 1 pounds beef top sir- loin steak boneless, cut 1 inch thick 1/3 cup ketchup 2 tablespoons hoisin sauce teaspoon black pepper Salt (optional) Pineapple Salsa: 1 cup diced fresh pine- apple 1/1 cup diced red bell pepper cup diced cucumber 2 teaspoons rice vinegar (optional) Instructions: Combine pineapple salsa ingredients in small bowl. Set aside. Combine ketchup and hoisin sauce in another small bowl; set aside. Cut beef steak into 1 inch pieces. Thread beef pieces evenly onto four 10- to 12- inch metal skewers. Season kabobs evenly with pepper. Place kabobs on rack in broiler pan so surface of beef is 3 to 4 inches from heat. Brush beef generously with some of reserved sauce mix- ture. Broil 7 to 9 minutes for medium rare (145 degrees) to medium (160 degrees) doneness, turning once and brushing with remaining sauce mixture. Season beef with salt, if desired. Serve kabobs topped with pineapple salsa. Makes 4 servings. CATTLEWOMEN'S CORNER Hoisin BBQ steak-on-a-stick recipe includes pineapple salsa The Tehama County Women, Infants and Chil- dren (WIC) Nutrition Pro- gram has openings for new participants who may qual- ify for services. WIC provides food checks to buy specific, healthy foods along with nutrition education, breast feeding support and refer- rals to other health and community services. WIC also has an electric breast pump loan program for eli- gible participants. Many working fami- lies are eligible for WIC. For example, a family of 4 could make up to $3,739 per month before deduc- tions. Families receiving Cal Fresh or Temporary As- sistance to Needy Families, and families receiving un- employment are usually in- come-eligible. Migrant fam- ilies and pregnant women are especially encouraged to apply. To qualify, a family member must be pregnant, breastfeeding, newly post- partum if not breastfeed- ing, be an infant or child up to 5 years of age. WIC offers individual and group sessions on a multitude of topics, such as how to breast feed, what foods should be offered first to infants, what can a pregnant woman eat if she has morning sickness and how to get a picky child to eat vegetables. Regis- tered dietitians, nurses and trained nutrition educators are on staff. Call to see if you may qualify at 527-8791 or toll- free 1-800-698-4942. Of- fices are in Red Bluff at 1850 Walnut St., Ste. H, and in Corning at the Meuser Health Care Building at 275 Solano St. Additional information about WIC can be found at www.wicworks.ca.gov. NUTRITION Program provides help for young families The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Red Bluff Fire, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment, Corning Fire, Cal Fire and California High- way Patrol logs. Arrests EdgarGriego-Rodriguez: 26,ofRedBluffwasar- rested Monday and booked into Tehama County Jail for a felony charge of burglary. Bail was set at $50,000. Fidel Morales: 30, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked into jail Sunday for one felony charge of corpo- ral injury to a spouse. Bail was set at $50,000. Miguel Banuelos: 18, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked into jail Monday for obstructing and resisting an executive officer. Bail is set at $25,000. Shae Breiten: 19, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked into jail Sunday for false imprisonment with violence, willful injury to a child, battery on a person and inflicting corporal injury to spouse. Bail was set at $175,000. Missing Carona Avenue: A woman reported Friday to Corning Police that her four-week- old pink pig was missing. She was referred to the Tehama County Sheriff's Department. Patrol Jackson Street: A Red Bluff resident requested extra pa- trol of the area due to an on- going problem with people cutting through the yard. Stolen Antelope Boulevard: Someone reported the the of a gray 2007Chevy Monte Carlo, license plate 6DMH388, taken by a homeless person with tat- toos from the area in front of Del Taco. The keys had been le inside the vehicle. Vandalism Main Street: Someone at the Villa Columba apart- ments reported vandalism involving a resident unhook- ing all her appliances and flooding her apartment. 16800block of Big Horn Lane: A man reported that at his property that is under construction wiring and a well box were missing in the past two weeks. Total loss value is $200. There are no leads or suspects. Edith Avenue, Corning: A woman at the Spring Moun- tain Apartments reported Friday that someone had keyed her car sometime Thursday evening, causing about $300in damage to the driver's side door. Marguerite Avenue: Maywood Middle School reported Friday having on- going issues of vandalism. The latest incident involved vehicles vandalized with lipstick Thursday evening. POLICE LOGS COURTESY PHOTO Tehama County CattleWomen and friends toured Highlands Ranch Resort at Childs Meadows on State Route 36East, between Chester and Mineral, before enjoying a buffet luncheon. Shawn Moore from the Tehama County Planning Commission will be the guest speaker at the Corn- ing Patriots meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Corn- ing Senior Center. The group will focus its discussion mainly on re- zoning of parcels of private property. The Patriot group has started going through the Tehama County General Plan and questions arose about the zoning, which prompted the desire to have a speaker representing the planning department to an- swer questions. PATRIOTS County official set to speak on planning OPEN: 7 days a week 5:30 am - 9 pm 528-8777 Cozy Diner TuesdayNights7-9pm Beer, Wine & Appetizer Specials During Karaoke Daily Build a Meal Specials Nightly Dinner Specials 259 S. Main St. Red Bluff Thefamilyof MaryAliceGeorge Thankyou Andi, Grace & Louisa wish to extend our gratitude & appreciation for the great loving care given to her at All About Seniors by the caring & devoted staff SHOESALE HOT SUMMER CLEARANCE BIGSAVINGSTODAY 100's of Shoes - Select Styles Dansko • Ecco • kEEn • clarks MErrEll • riEkEr • alEgria • sas Born • TEva • EarTh • vionic • rEEf (limitedtostockonhandwhilequantitieslast) A Good Fit for 101 Years Johnson's SHOES NORTHVALLEYPLAZA 343-8923 COMFORT SHOES CHICO MALL 342-2310 Ecco "BaBETT" (Black, rED, DEniM, grEy, sanD, WhiTE) Dansko "larissa" (Black, caraMEl, WhiTE) Reg $ 125 Now $ 89 Reg $ 120 Now $ 89 RUNNINGS ROOFING and CONSTRUCTION SheetMetalRoofing ResidentialCommercial • Composition • Shingle • Single Ply Membrane ServingTehamaCounty 530-527-5789 530-209-5367 NoMoney Down! "NoJobTooSteep" " No Job Too Flat" FREE ESTIMATES CA.Lic#829089B&C39 BACKTOSCHOOLPROJECTPRESENTS Sunday, August 9, 2015 2:00-6:00 pm Red Bluff Community Center 1500 S. Jackson, Red Bluff •Freehaircutsfor school-age children providedbylicensedhairstylists • Free food donated by Cornerstone Community Bank • Free professional photographs by Studio 530 Photography • Live music • Children's games • Information booths P.O. Box 292 Red Bluff, CA 96080 530.529.4074 www.backtoschoolproject.com Take 15% off your meal with this ad dine in only 723 Main St. 527.5470 www. palominoroom .com PrimeRibonFridaysnights Open Tues-Sat Regular Haircut $ 2 00 off KWIK KUTS FamilyHairSalon 1064 South Main St., Red Bluff • 529-3540 ANY RETAIL PRODUCT 20 % off withanychemicalserviceof $50 ormore Notgoodwithotheroffers Expires 8/05/15 With coupon Reg. $13.95 www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service....................(530) 737-5048 Fax....................................................................................... 530-527-5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Main Office...........................................527-2151 Toll free................................................................................ 800.479.6397 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..................................545Diamond Avenue, Red Bluff, CA 96080 All Access subscription rates, Tuesday through Saturday: $7.24per week. Digital-only subscription, Tuesday through Saturday $2.99per week. Business and professional rate, Tuesday through Friday: $2.19for four weeks. Prices included all applicable sales tax. (USPS 458-200) The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955. Published Tuesday through Saturday by California Newspapers Partnership. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: P.O. 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Digital online content is not subject to California sales tax. The sale of printed news- papers is subject to sales tax per Cal. Code Regs., tit. 18, § 1590(b)(1) COMMUNITY » redbluffdailynews.com Wednesday, July 29, 2015 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A3 ★

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