Red Bluff Daily News

May 31, 2013

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Friday, May 31, 2013 – Daily News Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 .O. or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. FRIDAY, MAY 31 Red Bluff Celebrate Recovery, 7 p.m., Bethel Assembly of God, 625 Luther Road, 527-0445 or 366-6298 Hospice Second Hand Store half price sale, all day, Riverside Shopping Center Cottonwood Cottonwood Garden Club18th Annual Garden Tour, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tickets $10, 347-3852 Singles Praise Social, 7-8:30 p.m., Assembly of God Church, 20404 Gas Point Road, for unmarried adults ages late 30s to mid 60s, 347-3770 Corning Car Show, 5-9 p.m., Bartels Giant Burger, 22355 Corning Road, local car clubs welcome, 824-2788 Corning Junior Rodeo, 7 p.m., Estil C. Clark Park SATURDAY, JUNE 1 Red Bluff Frontier Village Farmers Market,8 a.m. to 1 p.m., 645 Antelope Blvd. EBT accepted Farmers Market, 7:30 a.m. to noon, River Park, EBT accepted Weight Watchers meeting, 8 a.m., 485 Antelope Blvd. #N, 1-800-651-6000 Corning Corning Junior Rodeo, 5 p.m., Estil C. Clark Park Los Molinos Honey, let's talk Emotional intimacy is the key to a healthy marriage and necessary for developing financial harmony. The secret to creating emotional intimacy is for each of you to meet the needs that are most important to the other. Emotional intimacy is key because it produces authentic trust and respect. Studies show that married people who behave as true financial partners tend to do better financially and emotionally. So if you haven't already, you and your spouse need to make a commitment to each other to become equal financial partners in your marriage. This can be a verbal or written commitment, whichever suits you best. For some spouses, this step of commitment will mean giving up control. For others, it will require them to get involved. Begin thinking of the financial aspects of your marriage as a business rather than an extension of your relationship. As business partners you: 1. Have trust in and respect for each other's unique abilities, knowledge and skills. 2. Bring individual strengths and abilities to the partnership. 3. Have no secrets. Each of you is fully aware of the other's activities and of the state of their business. Tehama Red Bluff Corning Tehama MONDAY, JUNE 3 Red Bluff Al-Anon New Comers At Heart, 7-8 p.m., North Valley Baptist Church, 345 David Ave., 690-2034 Bend Jelly 4-H, 6 p.m.,Bend School, 527-3101 Diabetic Support Group, 6:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, Columba Room English as a Second Language class, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Red Bluff High School Adult Ed building, 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednesday and 9 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Thursdays, free childcarefrom 9 a..m. to 12:20 p.m. classes in Richlieu Hall, 900 Johnson St. Head Injury Recreational Entity, 10 a.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, Rusty, 5292059 Key to Life, 6 p.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-8066 Masterworks Chorale rehearsal, 6:45 p.m. to 8 p.m., Red Bluff Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 527-4203 PAL Martial Arts, ages 5-18, 3-5 p.m., 529-7920, www.tehamaso.org Red Bluff Community Band Practice, 7-9 p.m., Red Bluff Presbyterian Church, Jefferson St., 5273486 Salvation Army Writing Class, 9:30-11:30 a.m., 940 Walnut St., 527-8530 Sons in Retirement, 11:30 a.m., M&M Ranchhouse Restaurant, Antelope Blvd., 529-5700 Sun Country Quilters Community Service Group, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-1126 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., free, by appointment only, Youth Empowerment Services, 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 TOPS Club (take off pounds Sensibly), 8:30 a.m., First Christian Church, 926 Madison Ave., 527-7541 or 347-6120, visit www.tops.org US citizenship preparation class, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Red Bluff High School Adult Ed building, 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednesday Venture Crew 1914 meeting, 6:30-8 p.m., Moose Lodge on 99W, co-ed ages 14-20 welcome Women's Domestic Violence Information and Support Group, Spanish speaking only, call for time and location, 528-0226 Corning Alcoholics Anonymous, noon Monday through Friday, 5 p.m. Thursday, 7 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday, 783 Solano St. Some are reluctant to converse 4. Do not make independent decisions, and when there is a on an emotional level. That may be disagreement or conflict, part personality trait, but more likeyou negotiate and compro- ly it's wrapped up in fear -- fear of mise until you reach a solu- being known, fear of opening up, fear of being found out. tion that both of These days there seem you can agree to to be studies relating to just enthusiastically. about any topic you can 5. Make decisions possibly imagine. And sure with the best interest of enough, there's a study that the partnership in mind says about 70 percent of all and are fully committed conflicts in marriage to the success of the partresolve themselves by simnership. ply talking about them. Think of all the differCommunication is the ent hats you wear in your secret, and time spent daily life; even the differMary together cannot help but ent hats you wear in your affect your relationship in marriage. You need to ways you never dreamed know when to put on possible. your financial partner By opening the door to hat, which signals that the most private place in it's time to shift into your heart and soul and money management taking the risk of letting mode. I suggest that in the beginning your spouse in, you will be taking a you schedule weekly business huge step toward the kind of intimeetings, at which time you wear macy that promotes financial haryour non-emotional money-man- mony. agement hats. I know that the idea Mary Hunt is the founder of of one-on-one meaningful converand sations with all electronic devices www.DebtProofLiving.com turned off and the door closed can author of 23 books, including her be threatening for some couples. 2012 release, "7 Money Rules for And it can be particularly difficult if Life." You can email her at money issues have turned into bar- mary@everydaycheapskate.com, or riers that are repelling rather than write to Everyday Cheapskate, P.O. Box 2099, Cypress, CA 90630. attracting the spouses. Hunt Everyday Cheapskate Lake Almanor fault acting as expected after earthquake By ROGER H. AYLSenior Dance, 7 p.m., Senior Center, Josephine WORTH Street, 384-2100 MediaNews Group A week and hundreds of Tehama County Museum, 1-4 p.m., 275 C St., aftershocks after the 5.7magntude quake near Lake group tours, call 384-2595 Almanor, the fault that genSUNDAY, JUNE 2 erated it is performing as expected, according to a federal geologist. The quake, the largest AA Live and Let Live, noon and 8 p.m., 785 recorded in that area since at least 1934, was centered Musick St., meets seven days a week Knights of Columbus All-You-Can-Eat Break- about seven miles westfast, 8 a.m. to noon, $4 adult, $2 child or $10 family, northwest of Greenville. It did some structural damage Sacred Heart Parish Hall, 2285 Monroe St., 527-6310 in the Almanor area and WHEE Picnic and Prayer Circle, 4:20 p.m., 22116 was felt sharply in much of Riverside Ave. Butte County. At the time of the quake, some theorized the tremor Evangelist services, 7 p.m., Family Bible Church, was in some way connected to volcanic activity around 609 Marin St., 824-9989 Lassen Peak, an idea seismologists have ruled out. Tehama County Museum, 1-4 p.m., 275 C St., group tours, call 384-2595 3A Police reports The following information is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol. Arrests • Walter Joe Brantley, 65, Los Molinos was arrested on Marek Road for felony possession of a controlled substance for sale. Bail was $15,000. • Emily Ann Carlton also known by the last name Blunkall, 24, Red Bluff was arrested for felony transportation of a controlled substance, failure to appear, burglary, perjury, two counts of misdemeanor petty theft, two counts of paraphernalia, driving under the influence, fraud, possession of marijuana while driving and misdemeanor failure to appear. Bail was $200,000. • Gabriel Forrest Holton, 32, Los Molinos was arrested on Walnut for felony possession of a firearm by a felon, possession of a short-barreled shotgun and misdemeanor paraphernalia. Bail was $253,000. • Drew Michael Kennedy, 30, Red Bluff was arrested at Sherman Drive and Antelope Boulevard for felony possession of a narcotic, transportation of a narcotic, transportation of a controlled substance and mis- Last week, Keith Knudsen, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, based in Menlo Park, said the fault responsible for the quake still hasn't been determined, but that may change. In a telephone interview this week, he said four additional seismographs from the University of Nevada at Reno had been moved into the area to collect more information by measuring the aftershocks. As of Wednesday, there had been more than 250 of them, ranging from miniscule to a 4.9-magnitude shaker. Last week, the geologist said aftershocks generally emanate from the fault that triggered the original event. At the time of the origi- nal quake, the USGS had relatively few seismographs in the area which meant the scientists didn't have detailed information about the depth of the quake center under the ground and the precise location of the fault. Knudsen said much more data has been collected but to date, that information has not been subjected to detailed analysis. He said a simple count of the aftershocks has been compared to the "normal" number of aftershocks from California quakes of the same magnitude. The count can be important because an unusually high number of aftershocks can be a clue that another perhaps more powerful quake is about to hit the area. Knudsen said Wednesday the count of the "aftershock productivity" is statistically right where it should be for a quake of that size, and is not suggesting something bigger is on the horizon. While the structural damage near the epicenter of the Greenville quake is reasonably minor, Knudsen said it would be inaccurate to think of this as an "insignificant" event. He said if a quake of the same magnitude stuck under San Francisco, it would have been a much bigger deal. demeanor possession of concentrated cannabis. Bail was $58,000. • Jose Luis ValdesLuna, 34, Corning was arrested for felony illegal entry. Later in the day the store reported a woman was trying to pass counterfeit $20 bills. She was described as having dark gray hair, wearing glasses, a brown tank top, jeans and flip flops. • Someone reported a purse was stolen at Food Maxx Tuesday. • A bicycle was reported stolen at the Creekside Village Apartments. • Four gallons of gasoline were reported taken from a truck on the 18000 block of Quail Ridge Road. • An employee at Rite Aid on Edith Avenue in Corning reported about 1 p.m. Wednesday that Stephanie Delisle, 40, of Corning had stolen about $60 worth of merchandise. an assault with a deadly weapon had occurred earlier. The reporting party said a gun had been brandished and the weapon was still inside the Colusa Street home with a person at the residence. Nothing further was available. Burglary • An air compressor, welder, three Stihl chainsaws, various Craftsman tools, a Schwinn bicycle and other items were taken from a garage on the 17000 block of Benson Road. • A fishing pole and reel and a set of keys were reported taken from a barn on the 12000 block of Peach Tree Lane. Prowler A resident on Gamay Court reported around 5:40 a.m. Wednesday she heard someone jiggling her doorknob. She saw a man walk away who looked to be in his 30s with facial hair wearing a black beanie cap, a black shirt with a white collar blue jeans. Some friend A 52-year-old woman reported at 4 a.m. Wednesday that her friend had come over the previous evening and vacuumed her residence. The woman was now missing $200 and lottery tickets. Theft • Grocery Outlet reported a shoplifter around 9 a.m. Wednesday. RUNNINGS ROOFING All makes and models. We perform dealer recommened Member Discount 30K, 60K, 90K SERVICES AT LOWER PRICES Smog Check $ starting at + 25958 $ 25 certificate (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. Sheet Metal Roofing Residential Commercial • Composition • Shingle • Single Ply Membrane "No Job Too Steep" " No Job Too Flat" Serving Tehama County No Money 530-527-5789 530-209-5367 CA. LIC#829089 Down! FREE ESTIMATES Owner is on site on every job Vandalism A vehicle was reported vandalized while parked in a driveway on Garden Avenue. Cited Michael Dean Dugger, 30, of Orland was cited and released for engaging in a motor vehicle speed contest during a traffic stop about 11:45 p.m. Wednesday in the area of Solano and Hoag streets in Corning. Fight Logs show a report at 2:18 p.m. Wednesday of several youth in a fight on Colusa Street near where Reach Roger H. Aylworth at 896-7762, raylworth@chicoer.com, or on Twitter @RogerAylworth. Lost A Corning woman reported Wednesday that her exchange student had lost her Chinese passport at Bank of America on Solano Street. Non-injury A collision involving a big rig clipping another vehicle at 1:41 p.m. Wednesday at the Iron Skillet Restaurant on South Avenue was a noninjury. Threat A woman reported a restraining order violation Wednesday at Jack in the Box on Route 99W in Corning in which her husband was at the business. While the woman was eating in car with her window down, he came up to her and started yelling at her, threatening to kill her friend if the woman divorces him. Youth Someone at the 7-11 Store on Solano Street in Corning reported Wednesday afternoon that a boy had tried to purchase tobacco products from the store. An account has been established at Cornerstone Community Bank for donations to the family of Skylar Garcia for information please call 529-1222

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