Red Bluff Daily News

April 21, 2017

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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 Highway Patrol logs. Arrests BrianScottMurray: 56,ofIgowasarrested Wednesday in the Raley's parking lot and booked into Tehama County Jail on the felony charges of arrange- ment of meeting with minor for purpose of lewd and lascivious acts, at- tempting to furnish minor with marijuana, two counts of contact with minor with intent to commit sexual offense and sending harm- ful content to minor with intent to seduce. Bail was set at $120,000. Amanda Elizabeth Row- ley: 25, of Red Bluff was arrested Wednesday in the 900block of Aloha Street and booked into jail on the charge of willful cruelty to child: possible injury or death and probation viola- tion. Jason Lorenz Black: 45, of Chico was arrested Wednesday on northbound Interstate 5at South Av- enue and booked into jail on the charge of forgery and possession of a controlled substance. Disturbance 400block Wiltsey Ave- nue: A man reported about 7:40p.m. Wednesday that two men about 19-20years old came to his residence and called him to come out and fight. The men, one wearing a green hooded sweatshirt and the other a black T-shirt, returned about 15minutes a er the initial call. Apache Trail, cross of Hillcrest Drive: Deputies were called out to Rancho Tehama just before 4p.m. Wednesday for a report of two men shooting at each other with long guns. Sher- iff's logs show an arrest was made. Jose Eduardo Madrigal-Cervantes, 28, of Corning was arrested on the south end of Apache Trail and booked into jail on the charge of obstructing a peace officer. Missing Donnovan Avenue: Police were asked Wednesday to look for a four-year-old autistic boy who had been missing for about 30min- utes about 4:30p.m. The boy was located at a Park on Toomes Avenue while the incident was being reported. 5900block of Piedmont Road: An almost three- year-old boy with autism was reported missing about 11:15a.m. Thursday, having not been seen since about 8a.m. The boy was found unharmed about 11:50a.m. Suspicious Toomes Avenue: An area check was requested about 10p.m. Wednesday for a black Honda spinning out at Woodson Elementary School. The s El Paso Avenue: A gray and brown 1995Isuzu Trooper, license 3PBT359, was stolen from a Corn- ing driveway sometime between 1p.m. and 5:20 p.m. Wednesday. Grant Street: A tool box was taken from the back of a pickup truck at a Red Bluff residence. Williams Avenue: A light blue 2000Ford Windstar, license plate 4VFZ923, was taken sometime within the last 30days from Motel 6. Jellys Ferry, cross of Saron Fruit Colony Road: A window was broken and items taken from a vehicle at the Inks Creek trail head. Youth Union Street: A warning was issued to youth at Red Bluff Union High School who were walking the roof of the main office about 12:30p.m. Wednesday. PoliceLogs The April meeting Sun Country Quilters will be 7 p.m. Monday, April 24 at the Red Bluff Community and Senior Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. This month's meeting will be a birthday party, and members will be re- viewing the quilt show, unveiling the new oppor- tunity quilt and there will be a runway show for 4H sewing students. Guests are invited to participate for $5. More information is available by writing to Sun Country Quilters, P.O. Box 771, Red Bluff, CA 96080, or visiting sun- countryquilters.com. SUN COUNTRY Quilters guild to ho ld b ir th da y pa rt y Undersheriff Carl Lange left last night for San Fran- cisco to bring back to this city Alfred J. Curtis, who was arrested on a felony warrant by the police of San Francisco. Curtis is charged by his wife, Sadie Curtis, of tak- ing an automobile from this city along about April 16. This machine was Mrs. Curtis' own property. It was a six cylinder, 1917 Buick and was purchased by her before she married him in New Mexico and carried a license number from this state. The Curtises came to Red Bluff a few days be- fore the machine was taken. Besides this the wife claims that her hus- band took about $1,000 which she had on deposit in a bank at South Pasa- dena. He got this money by having it transferred to three other banks. The taking of the money was not discovered until after the husband skipped out with the machine. Mrs. Curtis is a prepossess- ing little woman and met Curtis in New Mexico and was only recently married to him. She claims that when she met him she was pos- sessor of nearly $10,000 in cash and the machine. — April 21, 1917 100 YEARS AGO... Is arrested for stealing automobile Limericks are humorous, frequently risqué verses of three long and two short lines that rhyme in an "aabba" pat- tern. They were popu- larized by Edward Lear, in the late 19th century. (Fun fact: It is said that the term, "lim- erick" is from the chorus sung between improvised verses from the song, "Will you come up to Limerick?") When done well, limericks use puns, spoonerisms, and double-entendres. The ear- liest known American lim- erick (1902) is: There once was a man from Nantucket Who kept all his cash in a bucket. But his daughter, named Nan, Ran away with a man And as for the bucket, Nantucket. Putting words together in playful patterns is fun. Remember the long-stand- ing children's poem: Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear. Fuzzy Wuzzy had no hair. Fuzzy Wuzzy wasn't very fuzzy, was he? Another example of lin- guistic mischievousness was a novelty song from World War II: Mairzy doats and dozy doats and liddle lamzy di- vey. A kiddley divey too, wooden shoe. It's more fun to say than any sense it appears to make. However, the bridge of the song explains: If the words sound queer and funny to your ear, a little bit jumbled and jivey, Sing 'Mares eat oats and does eat oats and little lambs eat ivy.' Okay, it's antiquated and trite — but c'mon, it's amus- ing; admit it. How we arrange words gives us a sense of joy and satisfaction. Say "Alumi- num Anemone" out loud. Go ahead. No one's listen- ing. Notice how it feels on your lips? No, it doesn't make sense; it's just plea- surable to pronounce. More importantly than poems or limericks, words are the bedrock for our thoughts. The reason we lack mem- ories of our earliest years is because we did not yet possess the ability to form words to describe what was happening. No words? No memories. Since words form the foundation of what we think, and those thoughts determine our actions, we must accept therefore that words determine the qual- ity of our lives. The words (a.k.a. thoughts) we habit- ually allow to shoot across the synapses of our brains have put us where we are in life. If everything's great, keep using the same words. On the other hand, if the situation is not to our lik- ing, it's imperative we alter our words. Take the expression, "I can't…", a common phrase. We all use it. "I can't lose weight." "I can't find time to exercise." "I can't stick to a budget." "Can't…" makes us victims, unable to change, controlled by exter- nal forces. Try this experiment. Think of something you "can't" do — or use one of the examples just listed. Now, modify "can't…" to "won't…" and notice the immediate adjustment in what you feel. Shift- ing to "won't…" alters the power balance, moving it from "out there" to "in here." Granted, it might not feel very empowering to admit that we might be our own barrier to happi- ness; so we can take it a step further, substituting "I could…" and adding if "if I only …" at the end. As illustration, change, "I can't lose weight," to "I could lose weight if I only…" Minor changes in the words we use lead to ma- jor changes in what we imagine and — providing we are willing to take ac- tion, utilizing the phrase "I will…", we eventually look back and will say, "I did…" Changing behaviors without changing thoughts is akin to trying to put out a stove fire, without turn- ing off the gas. What we say to ourselves deter- mines what we do to our- selves, or with a tip of the hat to Mr. Lear… There once was a person distraught Who gave his words some thought He realized what I say Will make me okay Providing I learn what I'm taught. Scott"Q"Marcusis a nationally known weight loss expert for baby boomers and the CRP — Chief Recovering Perfectionist — of www. ThisTimeIMeanIt.com. His new book, co-written with his sister, "The Busy Baby Boomers Motivational Guide to Weight Loss" is at www.BabyBoomersGuides. com. SCOTT MARCUS Carefuluseofwords CONTRIBUTED JBStacyandLisaHansengetreadyfortheannualRedBluffKiwanisRound-Uppancakebreakfastscheduled for 7-10 a.m. Saturday, April 22 at the Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road. Tickets are $5 each and can be purchased at the door or from any Kiwanis member. Stop for breakfast of pancakes, ham, juice and coffee before heading downtown for the Round-Up Parade, which starts at 10 a.m. All proceeds go toward sending more than 100 local children to Kiwanis Camp this summer. KIWANIS PANCAKE BREAKFAST Scott Marcus CURRENTLYACCEPTING URGENT CARE APPOINTMENTS andproudtoofferqualityprimarycareby Dr. Jon Malan, Dr. Richard Wickenheiser, and our nurse practitioner on staff. • WeacceptMedi-Cal,Medi-CalManagedCareby California Health and Wellness, Medicare, and most Private Insurance. • Assistance is offered by Healthcare Options regarding Medi-Cal and Managed Medi-Cal questions or changes. • Confidential family planning services are available. • A new clinic facility is coming soon to your community. • We invite you to become part of our medical team. Call to schedule your appointment today. (530) 527-0350 Tehama County Health Services Agency Outpatient Clinic WE ARE NOW OPEN TO NEW PATIENTS 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. CERTIFIED AUTO REPAIR CENTER Smog Check $ 2 .00 off with this coupon mustpresentcoupon•exp.date6-30-17 744MainSt.,RedBluff (acrossfrom the clock tower) FineQuality Gifts & Accessories FREE LIP BALM WITH PURCHASE OF $10 OR MORE! NEW ARRIVALS: • LUMINARY CANDLES • SAGE/ESSENTIAL OIL • ROCKS & MINERALS • DRAGON/ INCENSE • HIMALAYAN SALT LAMPS NOTARYPUBLICAVAILABLE COME & SHOP WITH US 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 LaCorona Garden Center & Feed Store 7769Hwy99E,LosMolinos 530-576-3118 LaCoronaHydoponic@gmail.com Home&GardenSupplies AdvancedNutrient•RootsOrganic Humboldt Counties Own • Humboldt Nutrients General Hydroponic Supplies & Fertilizers Scratch • Wild Bird Feeds Is the place for all your Garden Supplies & Livestock Feeds Open8-6pmMonday-Sunday 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 Write to us..................................728Main Street, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..........................................728 Main Street, Red Bluff, CA 96080 All Access subscription rates, Tuesday through Saturday: $7.24per week. 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. 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