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Wednesday, August 7, 2013 – Daily News Obituaries MARIALICE BROWN February 25, 1921 - August 3, 2013 Marialice Brown, age 92 of Red Bluff, passed away peacefully on Aug 3, 2013. Marialice was born to Ross and Neva Parker in Paisley, Oregon on February 25, 1921. Marialice attended Elementary and High school in Red Bluff, CA. She married Philip Brown in 1940 and resided in Mineral, CA before returning to Red Bluff in 1958. She was a charter member of the Red Bluff Elks Emblem Club. Marialice was preceeded in death by husband Philip. Marialice is survived by daughter Christine Thomas Ramsey (Robert), son Gerald Brown (Mary), five grandsons, 7 great grandchildren and 2 great great grandchildren. Graveside services will be Friday, August 9, 2013 at Oak Hill Cemetary at 10:00 a.m. Services are being handled by Red Bluff Simple Cremations. LaVONNE OLIVE SCHAUL March 21, 1921 - July 6, 2013 Born on March 21, 1921 in Los Angeles, CA, passed away July 6, 2013 in Davis, CA. LaVonne passed away peacefully from Complications from pneumonia with most of her family by her side at Sutter Davis Hospital. She is survived by two sons, Chris and Brian, their spouses and grand and great grand children. LaVonne was a pioneer for women! A member of Beta Sigma Phi starting in the 1940's and a proud member of the Business and Professional Womens Club in Northern California! One of the first Licensed Administrators for a Convalescent Hospital in California. She had a passion, knowledge and foresight for Real Estate like no other! A family graveside service is scheduled on August 16th, at 10:30 a.m., friends and family are invited to honor this beautiful Lady at a celebration of life at the Red Lion Hotel in Redding, CA, August 17th at 11:30 a.m. ALERT Continued from page 1A ern California comedy club. "Yeah, I got it," O'Neal said. The alerts were part of a national Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) program, which was rolled out at the beginning of the year and has expanded as wireless carriers have refined their infrastructure to accommodate the new system and as more people upgrade to smartphones with the function built in. Monday's alert was the first to be issued statewide. In previous instances, including cases in San Jose and Oakland, the alerts were targeted to a specific geographic region. The California Highway Patrol, which serves as the clearinghouse for the dispatches, expanded its reach because of concerns the suspect was either headed for Canada or Texas. The system is opt-out: cellphone users — depending on the service carrier — can adjust which alerts they get through their phone settings. Besides the Amber Alert, there are "imminent threat" alerts, covering events like natural disasters, and "presidential" alerts concerning matters of national security or concern. Users cannot opt out of the presidential alerts. In a new development, people with non-smartphone cellphones received free text messages with the Amber Alerts. Additionally, non-wireless emergency systems sent automated messages to landlines, and in some instances, TV watchers saw their pay-per-view programs interrupted with the alerts, all products of long-existing "Reverse 911" systems in each county being deployed. As was the case in a San Jose instance back in March, reactions were mixed, with some being grateful for the alerts — lest they ever become a victim in need of the widespread notifications — and others trying to figure out how to the disable the emergency warnings. "It informs so many people," said Jaime Coffee, a CHP spokeswoman based at the agency's Sacramento headquarters. "The success of the pro- HORSE Continued from page 1A GLORIA MAE SCHOOLING January 20, 1957 - August 4, 2013 Gloria Mae Schooling passed away at her Red Bluff home on August 4, 2013 at the age of 56 after many years with ALS. She was born in Red Bluff, CA to Warren and Pauline Myers on January 20, 1957. Gloria is survived by her husband, Brian Schooling, married 38 years. Her mother Pauline has passed away, and she is survived by her father Warren Myers, of Anderson, CA. Gloria had her close family surrounding her throughout her illness and in her recent days. Her husband Brian, her daughter Leslie Faggard, son-in-law Jim Faggard and grandson Micah Faggard all of Red Bluff. Her son Jared Schooling, daughter-in-law Ginger Schooling, and grandsons Luke and Henry Schooling, all of Chico, CA. She is also survived by her brothers' families: Bradley and Shelly Myers and family. And Charles and Mary Myers and family. The family is also very thankful for Gloria's wonderful and loving caregivers: Alicia Manzo, Anna Peck, Suzanne Love, Nichole Toothman, Shelly Myers, Colleen Myers, Helen Raglin. Gloria graduated from Red Bluff High School in 1975. She was a talented and devoted homemaker and mother all her years. She was a born again Christian, attending Gerber Bible Fellowship all her life. Gloria's talents and hobbies included birdwatching, volleyball, flower arranging, piano playing, singing, miniature shoe collecting, and being a Grandma! Her memorial service will be held at Gerber Bible Fellowship, 301 Samson Ave, Gerber, CA on Saturday, August 10, 2013 at 11:00 am, with a luncheon following. She will be remembered at Tehama Cemetery in Gerber, CA. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made at www.facebook.com/gloria.schooling Also visit her facebook to make condolences and enjoy photos. The family has been enjoying this Bible verse: Romans 14:8-9 If we live, we live to the Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord. So then, whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord's. To this end, Christ died and lived again, that he might be Lord both of the dead and of the living. Death Notices Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Claudette Hayes Claudette Hayes of Red Bluff died Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 at her home. She was 68. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Gloria Mae Schooling Gloria Mae Schooling of Red Bluff died Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013 at her home. She was 56. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Deputies: Redding man cuts off hands with saw REDDING (AP) — A Northern California man is accused of stabbing his father with a pair of scissors before using a power saw to cut off his own hands. Twenty-seven-year-old Jason Dunn pleaded not guilty on Monday in a Shasta County courtroom to an attempted murder charge in the attack on his father, Gregory. The Record Searchlight of Redding reports Jason Dunn appeared in court with his hands reattached but heavi- ly bandaged. According to court records, deputies who went to a Redding area home on June 17 found the elder Dunn lying in the driveway with multiple stab wounds and Jason Dunn standing nearby with both of his hands severed at the wrists. and burros, a raffle of premium items is being held. Topping the list of raffle items is a three-day Wild Horse Sanctuary trail ride for two and twonight stay at the Sanctuary guest cottage valued at $1,200. To view all raffle items, visit www.WildHorseSanctuary.org, where you can also buy a book of five raffle tickets for $10. The winning raffle tickets will THEFT Continued from page 1A Previously the California Food and Agriculture Code gave local agricultural commissioners the authority to require proof of ownership for anyone who PARKS Continued from page 1A the advisory group in the wake of the scandals. The privately financed commission will be led by co-chairs Christine Kehoe of San Diego, a former state senator and champion of state parks, and Lance Conn, a Bay Area businessman and conservationist. Laird's goal had been to appoint leaders from business, finance, public policy and arts communities to examine the structure of the department and assess future needs for a growing state that already has 38 million people. Other members include Michael Lynton, CEO of Sony Entertainment; John Reynolds, a former National Park Service superintendent and regional director; Hawk Rosales, executive director of the InterTribal Sinkyone Wilderness Council; and Michael Woo, a former LA City Council member and dean of the College of Environmental Design at Cal Poly Pomona. Packard has led the gram relies on the public receiving notification. They're the eyes, the boots on the ground who can call 911 and alert law enforcement." That appeared to be the case with a March 25 abduction in East San Jose when an 11-month-old girl was whisked away from her driveway by a stranger who took off with the car she was strapped inside when the mother briefly darted back into the house. People throughout the Bay Area got the notification, and a few hours later, the infant was found in the missing car, which had been abandoned in South San Jose. A suspect was arrested the same week. That was preceded by an alert broadcast in Oakland in February along with the WEA notifications, though the case turned out to be a hoax. Under the previous Wireless Amber Alert system, users had to subscribe to receive text messages notifying them of children suspected of having been recently abducted. The architects of the new system say it allows for more precise targeting of notifications. Instead of relying on voluntary sub- be drawn at the Open House. "The Open House gives our guests the rare opportunity to walk onto the Sanctuary and view wild mustangs in a natural setting," said Dianne Nelson, co-founder and president. "It's also a good time to thank our Wild Horse Sanctuary friends and supporters and share our story with others who weren't aware of what we do." For 35 years the Wild Horse Sanctuary, a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization, has been 7A scribers, the system uses local cell towers to send alerts to any WEAenabled phone in the targeted area regardless of whether a user's cellphone service is based there. That way local residents with out-of-town area codes and visitors in an affected area will be notified. It also means that when you go out of town, you won't get alerts from back home. Law enforcement where an abduction occurs must complete a methodical process to ensure the incident warrants such a widespread alert. Once a high-ranking supervisor is satisfied that Amber Alert criteria are met — child victim, imminent danger and specific vehicle information like a license plate number — police contact the CHP in Sacramento and its 24-hour Emergency Notification and Tactical Alert Center. Concurrently, the Department of Homeland Security was notified, and the WEA alert is then issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in conjunction with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. rescuing wild horses and burros and providing them a home to live out their natural lives. In its location at 5796 Wilson Hill Road near the community of Shingletown, some 300 wild horses and burros freely roam the 5,000-acre sanctuary. For more information and directions, call (530) 474-5570 or visit www.WildHorseSanctuary.org. You can also follow the Wild Horse Sanctuary on Facebook at www.facebook.com/WildHorseSanctuaryShingletown. was in possession more than 25 pounds of walnuts. The added chapter eliminated the restriction on processed nut possession and requires documentation approved by the agricultural commissioner. It also creates a buying period, after which non- processing associated walnut buying operations may take place. It includes an exception for those who harvest less than 1,000 pounds annually. The walnut industry has been especially vulnerable to thefts because of the way the nut is har- aquarium — the first in the nation to focus on a specific geographic region — since 1984. It now lures more than 2 million visitors a year to the Monterey Bay. The parks leadership has been criticized in the past for a lack of revenue-generating innovation. Consequently, the department has allowed millions of dollars in maintenance problems to pile up as it struggled with shrinking state budgets. Critics also say managers were slow to figure out how to generate money. Last year, a $22 million cut from the system's $779 million budget threatened the closure of 70 parks. Then the discovery of $54 million, which was hidden from the governor and Legislature in two special funds, damaged the public's faith in the system of towering redwoods, breathtaking beaches and old Gold Rush sites. Already, state parks Director Anthony Jackson has been working on structural improvements, including the hiring of new top management. The retired Marine Corps vested from windrows. There were 21,753 harvested acres of walnuts in Tehama County in 2012. major general is also looking to undo the culture that said only rangers with law enforcement backgrounds were eligible to become superintendents, leaving behind naturalists, archeologists and others who might be innovative managers. The staff at Red Bluff Simple Cremations would like to thank all of the families who trust us with their loved ones needs. Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service 527-1732 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff, FD Lic. 1931 The Rich Greene can be reached at 527-2151, ext. 109 or rgreene@redbluffdailyne ws.com. funding will come from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the James Irvine Foundation, the S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation and others, under the auspices of the Resources Legacy Fund, which aids organizations involved in conservation commission's efforts. THE PASSING PARADE (From Dave Minch's I Say column of 1942) To the San Francisco Examiner: Years ago you did the city of San Francisco a big favor by helping remove the Southern Pacific Railroad from control of the city. You accomplished this by making it your most important project and keeping at it until you accomplished your purpose. At the time, business was strangled; shipping was dying and justice a thing unknown. You earned the gratitude of the people and they rewarded you by making your paper the most widely read newspaper in northern California. At the present time your city is challenged by another menace every bit as serious as the Southern Pacific was. It is the ever present menace of the dock strikes. The people of San Francisco do not realize the intense hatred which is being stored up against your city by its inability to do anything to stop the strikes. The country people furnish the only reason for there being a city where San Francisco is; it is their products that make up your exports and their buying that makes it possible for your retailers and wholesalers to exist. Every town and every county is a heavy loser and indirectly every citizen because you allow Harry Bridges and his Longshoremen Union to tie up your port. Who is going to pay for the Olives from Corning that were to be shipped to New York but instead are rotting on your wharves? Who is going to pay the livestock raisers for the losses they incur when boats load their meat elsewhere? These are just two of the examples. The rackets, which Thomas Dewey famous for prosecuting in New York were no more serious than this racket that menaces San Francisco. Your civic officers have failed your people as they have several times in the past. We who live outside the city believe these officers are afraid to do anything for fear some of their soiled linen may be aired. A big newspaper owes it to the people that support it to champion their rights. Here is your chance to do something worthwhile. *** Went down to our Strain Ranch on Tyler Road to see what damage the recent flood has caused. Whenever the river rises above 24 feet it leaves its banks and takes off across our alfalfa field. It takes out all the fences in its way and leaves sand and debris in its wake. Supervisor Ben Osborn was busily engaged in repairing some of his fencing but stopped a few minutes to discuss the seriousness of the Jap situation. *** About 35 of the bulls consigned to the Bull Sale last week were purchased by cattlemen from this area. Watch for this sale to go even bigger next year. We should provide for some entertainment for the buyers. It might convince them to come back year after year.* *He went on to produce several shows with stars from show business, to the delight of all. Dave Minch 1900-1964 The Passing Parade is brought to you by by Minch Property Management, 760 Main Street specializing in commercial leasing and sales. 530 527 5514

