Red Bluff Daily News

August 13, 2013

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Tuesday, August 13, 2013 – Daily News Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 .O. or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. TUESDAY, AUGUST 13 Red Bluff Childbirth Class, 6:30-8:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Columba Room, 529-8026 Community BLS/CPR class, 6 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Columba Room, 529-8031 Cribbage Club, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner, 259 S. Main St., 527-6402 Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1, Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. 527-8177 Homeschool Support Group, 7 p.m., North Valley Baptist Church, 345 David Ave. International Order of the Rainbow for Girls, 6:45 p.m., Masonic Hall 822 Main St. 527-6715 PAL Kickboxing, 6 p.m., 1450 Schwab St., 5298716 or 200-3950 Photo club, 6 p.m., Community Center,1500 S. Jackson St., 528-8066 Pinochle for Seniors, 12:30-3:30 p.m., 1500 S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Playtime Pals Playgroup, 10 a.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 5288066 Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and practice, 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building at Tehama District Fairgrounds Red Bluff Rotary, noon, Elks Lodge Red Bluff Union Elementary School District board meeting, 5:30 p.m., 1755 Airport Blvd. Take Off Pounds Sensibly — TOPS, 10 a.m., First United Methodist Church, 525 David Ave., 824-0556 or 529-1414 Tehama 4-H, 7 p.m., First Baptist Church , Pine Street, 527-3101 Tehama County Board of Supervisors, 10 a.m., 727 Oak St. Tehama County Fish and Game Commission, 8 a.m., Conference E, courthouse annex, 527-2095 Tehama County Flood Control and Water Conservation District, 8:30 a.m., 727 Oak St. Tehama County Genealogical and Historical Society, 6:30 p.m., library, 529-6650 Tehama County Tea Party Patriots, 6 p.m., Grange Hall, 20794 Walnut St. Tehama County Young Marines Parent Meeting, 5:30-7 p.m.,332 Pine St., 366-0813 Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1932, 7 p.m. Veterans Building, Oak Street Weight Watchers meeting, 9 a.m., 485 Antelope Blvd., #N, 1-800-651-6000 Westside 4-H, 7 p.m., Reeds Creek School Gym, 527-3101 Corning City Council, 7:30 p.m., City Hall, 794 Third St. Dance with Juana, noon to 1 p.m., Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 Domestic Violence Information and Support Group (Spanish language), call for time and location., 528-0226 ESL, 9 a.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Soccer training, 4-6 p.m., Woodson School Soccer Field, 150 N Toomes, 824-7680 Vacation Bible School, 9-11:30 a.m., Neighborhood Full Gospel Church, First and South streets, ages 3 through eighth grad, 824-2323 Women's Support Group, 6 p.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Gerber El Camino 4-H, 7 p.m., Gerber School Cafeteria, 527-3101 El Camino Irrigation District, 6 p.m., 8451 Highway 99W, 385-1559 Los Molinos Homemade softener good for health There is nothing quite like the sensations of laundry fresh out of the dryer that's been treated with any number of commercial fabric softeners. So why bother making it yourself? I can think of a couple reasons: ALLERGIES. If you take yourself or you kids to the dermatologist because of some kind of skin irritation, prepare for the first question: Do you use fabric softener? According to the Mayo Clinic the offending ingredients in fabric softeners are quaternium and imidazolidinyl, both of which can cause hives and skin irritations. The "fumes" from fabric softeners for some can lead to tiredness, difficulty breathing, anxiety, dizziness, headaches, faintness and memory troubles. COST. Depending on the brand, both liquid fabric softeners and dryer sheets can cost up to $.15 per dryer load. But why pay for the stuff, if you have an option to not spend your money that way? You can make your own fabric softeners for less than a penny a load and know exactly what's in it. Consider these options: Volunteers are needed for the 34th annual Adobe Day from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 17, at Wm. B. Ide Adobe State There are special moments when people look back and evaluate a life or an era: birthdays, class reunions, holidays, anniversaries. Time is, after all, simply the stringing together of a number of events, some small, others significant. These events can speed by quickly, but each one can have an effect on the greater whole. A lifetime of seemingly mundane events can pass in what seems like the blink of an eye … until one looks back to examine them and realizes just how much has filled the space. When I think about Social Security on the eve of the program's 78th anniversary, I am amazed by what a significant difference it has made, one event at a time, one person at a time. Over Social Security's long history, every single monthly payment has made a difference to an American somewhere. But when you string those payments together, it's remarkable what a huge and positive effect Social Security has had on the people and economy of our nation. Social Security has been a cornerstone of our nation, touching the lives of almost every American at Police reports The following information is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol. Cottonwood Red Bluff SACRAMENTO (AP) — The winning numbers drawn Saturday night: SuperLotto Plus Powerball games 5-7-14-44-46 4-12-14-37-58 Meganumber: 27 Powerball: 13 Historical Park in Red Bluff. Come help make the pioneer life of the 1850s come alive for park visi- By Carolyn W. Colvin Acting Commissioner of Social Security Manton Lotto numbers Hunt Everyday Cheapskate tors. There is also a need for bakers to make biscuits and corn bread to be served in the Adobe, for those who are unable to attend. For more information on volunteering, call the park at (530) 529-8599. 78 years of Social Security Arrests Vacation Bible School, 9-11:30 a.m., Neighborhood Full Gospel Church, First and South streets, ages 3 through eighth grad, 824-2323 Option No. 1. The easiest home- der or peppermint. Pour enough of made fabric softener is plain this liquid over the cloths in the white vinegar. Add 1 cup of container to saturate them. Close white vinegar to the last the container. To use, simply washer rinse. Vinegar is remove a sheet from the container, squeezing any excess liqcheap and nonuid back into the jar, and toxic, effective toss into the dryer. and antimicrobial. It Option No. 4. Here's a helps to remove every great way to cut the cost of last bit of detergent and your favorite liquid softenaids in static reduction er: Mix one part fabric during drying. softener with three parts Option No. 2. Comdistilled water, and pour bine six parts water, into a spray bottle. Spray three parts white vinegar the inside of your dryer and two parts hair condibefore tossing your clothes tioner in a container with Mary in the dryer. This option a sealable lid. A cheap works amazingly well and bottle of hair conditioner will make that bottle of from the dollar store softener seem to last forevworks great to soften and er. Just that small amount also fragrance your launwill soften and fragrance dry. Use this in the final an entire load of laundry. rinse or fill the softener dispenser in your washer. Mary Hunt is the founder Option No. 3. To make your own dryer sheets, cut square of cloth of www.DebtProofLiving.com, a from an old t-shirt or cotton baby personal finance member website. can email her at blanket. Place them in a sealable You container with tight-fitting lid. In a mary@everydaycheapskate.com, small bowl, mix 1/2 cup white vine- or write to Everyday Cheapskate, gar and eight drops of your favorite P.O. Box 2099, Cypress, CA essential oil, such as lemon, laven- 90630. Volunteers sought for Adobe Day Los Molinos Women's Club meeting, 1 p.m., Veteran's Hall, 7900 Sherwood Blvd. • Joseph Bernard School Readiness Play Group, 10-11:30 a.m., up Doucette aka Joseph to 5 years, free, First Steps Family Resource Center, Gordy, 33, Corning was 7700 Stanford Ave., 384-7833 arrested Friday on Valley Vista Drive for misdemeanor obstruction Manton 4-H, 7 p.m., Manton Grange, 527-3101 and disobeying a court order. Doucette has an outstanding felony Evergreen School Board, 5 p.m., 19500 Learning charge of harming the elderly. Bail was Way $31,000. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14 • Joseph Edward Garibay, 34, Corning was arrested Monday at 4th and South streets for Adult Carving Class, 10 a.m. to noon, Veterans felony possession of a Memorial Hall, Jackson and Oak, 527-0768 dangerous weapon and Al-Anon, noon to 1 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Jef- misdemeanor obstruction. Bail was $18,000. ferson and Hickory • Roy Christian HerAlcohol, Anger and Abuse Group, call for time nandez, 26, Red Bluff was arrested Monday on and location, 528-0226 Corning 3A more than just a retirement program. We provide benefits to disabled individuals and their families. We provide survivors benefits to widows, widowers and the minor children of deceased workers. We provide Supplemental Security Income (SSI) to aged and disabled people who have low income and resources. We provide work incentives to help people work. We even provide Extra Help with Medicare prescription drug costs. In so many ways, Social Security benefits America. Milestones come and milestones go. But looking back over the past 78 years of the nation's most important program, it is those millions of individual moments — the monthly benefit payments — that have made a tremendous difference. In good times and bad, in sickness and health, Social Security has helped Americans. Each payment has helped someone, somewhere. But place them side by side and the difference Social Security has made in the lives of Americans is certainly something to celebrate. Learn more about Social Security's rich history at www.socialsecurity.gov/history. Become a part of Social Security's history by doing business with us online at www.socialsecurity.gov/onlineservices. one time or another, for 78 years. It's the most successful domestic program in our nation and, arguably, the world. When President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law on August 14, 1935, he said, "The civilization of the past hundred years, with its startling industrial changes, has tended more and more to make life insecure. Young people have come to wonder what would be their lot when they came to old age. The man with a job has wondered how long the job would last." The same can be said of the current information age, with our rapidly evolving digital revolution and periods of economic instability. Social Security is a safety net cast to help those who need it. President Roosevelt knew that the cornerstone of his administration would offer security, but he also understood that Social Security would need to evolve as new changes challenged the nation. "This law, too, represents a cornerstone in a structure which is being built but is by no means complete," he admitted. "It is, in short, a law that will take care of human needs and at the same time provide the United States an economic structure of vastly greater soundness." Today, Social Security is much Houghton Avenue for felony possession of a narcotic and misdemeanor public intoxication. Bail was $15,500. • Tiffany Nicole Kikuchi, 25, Cottonwood was arrested Sunday on Bowman for an outstanding felony charge of controlled substance paraphernalia. Bail was $50,000. • Colby Dewayne Pfeiffer, 24, Corning was arrested Saturday on Barham for felony threatening a crime with the intent to terrorize and possession of a controlled substance. Pfeiffer has an outstanding misdemeanor charge of vandalism. Bail was $67,500. • Fhileen Gillermina Diaz Ruvalcaba, 19, Red Bluff was arrested Saturday on Center Street for felony possession of a dirk or dagger. Ruvalcaba has outstanding charges of felony possession of a controlled substance and misdemeanors of failure to appear and possession of a smoking device. Bail was $15,000. • Estella Kaye Wright, 27, Red Bluff was arrested Friday on Gilmore and Sandy for felony possession of a controlled substance, obstruction and misdemeanor paraphernalia. Bail was $33,000. Boating A small metal boat overturned on the Sacramento River near Bend Bridge around 11:30 a.m. Friday. Another boater was able to rescue the man. Dispute A pair of neighbors on Philbrook Avenue got into a dispute Sunday evening. A 53-year-old man reported his neighbor has threatened to shoot his dog. The neighbor was carrying a toy gun. Over 25 years of experience 50% Red Tag The North State's premier supplier of stoves BBQ PELLETS SALE Now in Stock! Two Locations - 30,000 square feet Popular customer request RED BLUFF 530-917-1138 REDDING 530-917-7797 22660 Antelope Blvd. 3351 S. Market St. amazingfindsredbluff.com amazingfindshome.com 9am – 8pm (closed Saturdays) 9am – 6:30pm daily Summer Sale! Serving Butte, Glenn & Tehama Counties Tues-Sat 9am-5pm • Closed Sun & Mon 22825 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff 530-528-2221 • Fax 530-528-2229 www.thestovejunction.com All makes and models. We perform dealer recommened Members Welcome 30K, 60K, 90K SERVICES AT LOWER PRICES Smog Check $ starting at + 25958 $ • L and L Thrift reported the theft of 15 gallons of gasoline from U-Haul trucks. The estimated loss was $60. • Someone reported the theft of four handicap parking signs Friday at Java Lanes. • Fiber optic cable was reported stolen near Highway 99W at Chase. • A black and purple girls bicycle with skulls on it was reported stolen Saturday night on the 21000 block of Chimney Rock Drive. • Sav-Mor Foods reported the theft of a bottle of tequila Friday afternoon. Vandalism The Amazing Finds STOVE JUNCTION NEW & USED FURNITURE & MUCH, MUCH MORE! Theft 25 certificate (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. • A woman reported $700 in damages to a gate on the 3000 block of Columbia Avenue. • About $300 in damages was done to a keypad on a security gate on the 23000 block of Gyle Road.

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