Red Bluff Daily News

July 10, 2013

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/143055

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 2 of 15

Wednesday, July 10, 2013 – Daily News Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 .O. or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. WEDNESDAY, JULY 10 Red Bluff Adult Carving Class, 10 a.m. to noon, Veterans Memorial Hall, Jackson and Oak, 527-0768 Al-Anon, noon to 1 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Jefferson and Hickory Alcohol, Anger and Abuse Group, call for time and location, 528-0226 Bunco Party, 5:45 p.m. registration, 6:30 p.m. games, Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road, 529-9262 Community Good News Club, 6-8 p.m., North Valley Baptist Church, 345 David Ave., $10, 527-0543 Elks duplicate bridge, noon, Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road, 275-4311 Farmers Market, 5-8 p.m., Washington Street between Pine and Oak, EBT/credit/debit accepted Nurturing Parenting Dads Program, 10 a.m. to noon, 1860 Walnut St. #D, Shasta Room, call Keith at 527-8491, ext. 3012 Nurturing Skills for Teen Parents, 9-10 a.m., 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, ext. 3012 PAL Martial Arts Women's Self Defense, 5:306:30 p.m., 1005 Vista Way, Ste. C, 840-0345 Parks and Recreation Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall, 555 Washington St., 527-8177 Red Bluff Cemetery District Board of Trustees, 4 p.m., Oak Hill Cemetery office Red Bluff Kiwanis, noon, Elks Lodge Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and practice, 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building at Tehama District Fairgrounds Retired Public Employees Association, Chapter 18, noon, Cozy Diner Senior Dance, 7 p.m., Westside Grange, Walnut Street Soroptimist International, 5:30 p.m., Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St., siredbluffclub@yahoo.com Strategic Prevention Framework Subcommittee meeting, 11 a.m. to noon, Tehama County Drug and Alcohol Division, 1850 Walnut St., Bldg. G, 527-8491 x 3107 Team Kid, 5:30 p.m., First Southern Baptist Church, 585 Kimball Road, 527-5083 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., free by appointment, 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 Tehama Coffee Party Loyalists, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner 259 Main St. Tehama County Library story time, 9:30 a.m., 645 Madison St. 527-0604 Tehama County Mosquito Abatement District, noon, 11861 County Road 99W Waterbirth class, 5 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Columba Room, Anita 529-8377 Widowed persons breakfast, 8 a.m., Tremont Cafe, 731 Main St., men and women, 384-2471 Corning Corning Elementary School Board, 7 p.m., 1590 South St. Corning Rotary, noon, Rolling Hills Casino, Timbers Steak House, 2655 Barham Ave., corningrotary.org Nutrition Classes, 10:30 a.m. to noon, West Street FRC, 824-7670 School Readiness Play Group, 10-11:30 a.m., up to 5 years, free, Family Resource Center, 1480 South St., 824-4111 Spanish Adult Education, 5 p.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Strategies for Success, Life Skill classes, 1:30 p.m., Family Resource Center, West and south streets, 824-7670 VFW Charity Bingo, 6 p.m., Veterans Memorial Hall, 1620 Solano St., 824-5957 Los Molinos Bible Study, 1 p.m., Sherwood Manor, 7975 Sherwood Blvd.All welcome., Pastor Clyde Brant, 347-1330 Chamber of Commerce, 6:30 p.m., 7904 Highway 99E Take Off Pounds Sensibly — TOPS, 8:30 a.m., 25160 Josephine St., 385-1068 Cottonwood Cottonwood Library Story Time, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., 3427 Main St., 347-4818 THURSDAY, JULY 11 Red Bluff California HEAT Chorus - Sweet Adelines, 7 p.m., Meteer School Room 26, 695 Kimball Road, 8950139 Childbirth Class, 6:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Columba room, 529-8377 Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1, Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. 527-8177 Grief Support Group, 3 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, 528-4207 Kelly-Griggs House Museum, 1-3 p.m., Thursdays and Sundays, 311 Washington St., group tours by appointment, 527-1129 or 527-5895 Kick Off Party for The Big Walk, 7 p.m., Bethel Assembly, 625 Luther Road, all captains and team members welcome, 200-4847 La Leche League, 11 a.m., Sunrise Bible Fellowship, 956 Jackson St., 347-0562 or 527-6818 Live country music, with dinner, 5-7 p.m., Veterans Hall 3A Keep kitties out of kids' sandbox Pop Quiz: What looks like water, is certainly inexpensive, has a pungent odor but is not toxic (in fact, you can drink it if you like), is biodegradable, serves as a useful disinfectant and will repel kitties from your kids' sandbox? Give up? Read on to learn the answer in today's first great reader tip. SCAT CAT! Keep cats out of your kids' sandbox by pouring distilled white vinegar around the box once each month. Keep in mind that vinegar will kill some types of grass and other vegetation, so be careful where you pour it. -- Sally, email CLEAN AND DEODORIZE ICE CHEST/COOLER: Add about 1 inch of water to the bottom of the cooler, drop in 4 Alka Seltzer tablets, and allow to sit for an hour. Pour out the dirty water, then rinse and dry. All odors will be gone, making the cooler clean and ready for its next use. -- Claudio, New Mexico GLASS BOTTLE CUTTING: Soak a piece of yarn or string in nail polish remover. Tie it around a wine or other kind of glass bottle right at the spot where you want the cut. Carefully light the soaked yarn with a lighter. Let the yarn burn all the way around for about 10-15 sec- onds, then dip in a bowl of cold ribbon and other kinds of craft supwater. Give it a tap, and you'll plies that come on spools. Now get a perfect cut every time. with a single glance you can see (Caution: You're dealing your entire collection. Hang this with a toxic liquid, fire and "caddy" in a closet, and that will cut down on the clutter, too. -broken glass here. Candace, Arizona Take every preSpa-style loofah gloves caution necessary!) are awesome for outdoor -- Nita, Connecticut window washing and for NO AGE LIMIT. At a cleaning outdoor furniture. wedding I attended With a quick swish in the recently, I witnessed the soap bucket and a wipesweetest thing. The down, the dirt disappears. grandmothers served as Then, rinse everything off flower girls. They thorwith a hose. Wear them on oughly enjoyed their one hand or both. They are flower-strewing duty, as Mary great for cleaning baththe audience stood and room counter surfaces, too. cheered. -- Zenda, New -- Wilda, Oregon York MIRACLE WORKER BOOT FORMS. Roll LAUNDRY STAIN up a couple of magaREMOVER: Mix together zines, and stick them into 1 teaspoon of traditional your boots to keep them blue Dawn dishwashing standing tall between wearings. Works great, and the liquid, 4 tablespoons hydrogen permags can be reused many times. -- oxide and 2 tablespoons baking soda. Scrub on stain, let it sit for at Janet, Colorado PERFECT RATIO. A mix of 75 least one hour, then launder. And percent salt and 25 percent pepper don't forget to be totally blown makes the perfect seasoning combo away that even that stain came out! to fill an all-in-one shaker. -- Edgar, This is particularly miraculous on baby stains, if you know what I'm Texas RIBBON CADDY. Use multi- talking about. Yes, that one and the tiered pants hangers to store rolls of others, too. -- Mary, California Hunt Everyday Cheapskate Health Sciences Dean hired at Shasta College REDDING – As of July 1, the health sciences programs at the Downtown Redding campus of Shasta College are being overseen by a new dean, Kathy Royce. Dean Royce was most recently the Royce administrator in charge of the Nursing Enrollment and Retention grant at Shasta, a position she had held for five years. She replaces Wanda Spratt, who had been Health Sciences Dean since 2007 and retired in June 2013. Dean Royce received her b a c h e l o r 's degree in Nursing from Biola University and her master's degree in Nursing from UCLA. She was a clinical staff nurse, clinical nurse educator, and head nurse for obstetrics at UCI Medical Center in Orange, CA, before becoming the Director of Women's and Children's Services at UCI, a position she held for 10 years. Dean Royce has also served as Chief Operating Officer for her own business. The Health Sciences Division includes the Associate Degree Nursing Program, which admits 30 students each semester; for its fall semester graduating class, the program had an unprecedented 100% pass rate on the NCLEX (the national nurse licensing exam). Another program in the division, Dental Hygiene, recently received a high national ranking. The Licensed Vocational Nursing program, which is a three semester certificate, and the Certified Nursing Assistant program make up the remainder of the division. Dean Royce also will oversee the Community and Contract Education department at the college. For more information about health sciences programs at Shasta College, go to www.shastacollege.edu. One Less Wildfire campaign SACRAMENTO — The U.S. Forest Service and other land management agencies have a new fire safety campaign in California. The One Less Spark, One Less Wildfire campaign is designed to provide constant reminders during this fire season to reduce the numbers of human-caused vehicle and equipment wildfires throughout the state. "All the stories we hear about sparks starting wildland fires are true, especially during this hot, dry summer," said Joe Aragon, U.S. Forest Service Region 5 Interagency Fire Prevention Action Team coordinator. "With the low precipitation winter brought, conditions are ideal for fire starts. We're here to coordinate with communities, agencies, organizations and schools to heighten awareness and ultimately protect the public from damaging fires in order to create more fire-adapted communities." The campaign features posters, bumper stickers, informational cards and public service announcements which give safety messages about equipment such as lawn mowers igniting fires, tow-chains sparking fires along roadways and safe handling of campfires. Partner agencies include: The National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, Cal Fire, Caltrans, California Department of Fish and Game, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Reclamation and many others. Fire season in California has technically just begun, and already campfires have been blamed for 45 fires on national forest land. Thirteen fires have been sparked by equipment such as string trimmers, chain saws and mowers. An abandoned campfire started the 1,708 acre Carstens Fire on the Sierra National Forest near Yosemite, costing millions of dollars. Human-caused fires are avoidable. For more information about fire prevention, go to www.fire.ca.gov. Chainsaw hours and restrictions A Klamath National Forest fire restrictions order going into effect this week makes it illegal for people without permits to operate internal combustion motors off of forest system roads and designated trails. 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 • Daniel Robert O'Conner, 50, Corning was arrested for felony vandalism and misdemeanor violation of a order to prevent domestic violence. Bail was $17,500. • Garrett Wade Stanridge, 43, Corning was arrested at Yolo and 5th streets for a felony parole violation. Now Serving Beer & Wine ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Prime Rib every Fri. & Sat. Best Homemade Pies in Town • Ice Cream Orders to go 731 Main St., 530.529.4012 open 7 days 5:30am-9pm Forest permit-holders, including firewood permit-holders, are exempted for permitted activities from these general fire restrictions. Permit-holder activities are governed by the conditions of their permit, Project Activity Level or PAL guidelines and chainsaw hours of operation. Information on when it is safe and permitted to operate chainsaws on the Klamath National Forest is available by calling 530-841-4588. All non-permitted internal combustion motor uses off of NFS roads and designated trails are restricted by the order. See http://www.fs.usda.gov/d etail/r5/fire-aviation/management for more information. • Lela Maria Trevino, 35, Corning was arrested at Toomes Avenue and McKinley for felony possession of a narcotic and misdemeanor false identification to peace officers. Trevino had an outstanding charge of felony transportation of controlled substance and two misdemeanor failure to appear charges. • Averille Leon Willis, 32, Red Bluff was arrested at the Red Bluff Police Department for a felony parole violation. The resident told officers that someone had entered the home and stolen computer equipment. block of Woodson Avenue and 5000 block of Edith Avenue were reported smashed. Burglary A burglary was reported on the 800 block of Dumosa Drive Sunday. Theft Red Police officers located a stolen 1984 Mazda truck Monday after it was reported stolen over the weekend from the 1300 block of Aloha Street. Monday morning a resident reported seeing a truck parked on the south end of Forward Park. Officers found the truck hidden in some bushes. It was returned to its rightful owners. Vandalism Mailboxes on the 4000 Get Moving Tehama Need low cost options for fun activities this summer? ➞ find ideas TODAY! View a complete list of activities in Tehama County at our website: tehamacountycaa.org USDA recommendations suggest: Adults: 2 1/2 hours of exercise per week Children: 1 hour of vigorous exercise per day 365 S. Main St., Red Bluff Wild Wednesdays 4pm-close Found it •A 36-year-old woman reported her 79year-old mother-in-law's residence had been burglarized. A laptop and other items were taken. A family member eventually called back to state the missing items had been located inside the residence. • A 24-year-old man reported his wallet had been stolen from his residence, only to later report he found it. PHYSICIAN REFERRAL +more specials! A FREE SERVICE PROVIDED FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE See website for details 1-888-628-1948 $2 Bowling Burgers & Beer www.lariatbowl.com or call 527-2720 Providing year round family fun since 1958 www.redbluff.mercy.org

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Red Bluff Daily News - July 10, 2013