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2A Daily News – Tuesday, September 3, 2013 Community people&events CattleWomen to resume regular meetings Thursday The Tehama County CatttleWomen will resume their regular meeting schedule Thursday, Sept. 5. The first meeting of the fall will be at 11 a.m. at the Tehama County Farm Bureau conference room on Sale Lane in Red Bluff. Members may bring a brown bag lunch, if they wish. On the agenda will be plans for the fourth annual Beef 'N Brew which will be Sept. 21 in Red Bluff. Beef and Brew tasting begins at 5 p.m.at 35 different downtown locations. Country music by Chad Bushnell begins at 6 p.m. at the Cone Kimball Plaza. Street dancing will take place at the Plaza from 7-10 p.m. Tickets are available at The Loft, Plum Crazy, The Gold Exchange and at www.statetheatreredbluff.com. The CattleWomen's Beef Ambassadors will be on hand to talk about the beef industry at Ag Education Day at the Tehama District Fair on Sept. 26. The CattleWomen will also sell beef related products at the Agricultural Market Place at the Fair. The CattleWomen's fall fashion show and luncheon will be Nov. 9 at Carlino's in Rolling Hills Casino, Coming. Jeanne Garton is chairwoman of the annual event. Emblem Club fall schedule Red Bluff Emblem club will embark on its fall schedule with two food booths at the Red Bluff Junior Round-Up on Sept. 7 and 8. Meanwhile Bonnie Lewis will be attending the convention of the Supreme Emblem club of the United States of America in Portland, Maine. She is a past president of the local club and the California, Nevada and Hawaii Association of Emblem Clubs. The club business meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 10, at the Red Bluff Elks Lodge. Weekly dinners have been moved to Wednesdays and will resume on Sept. 11. The club sponsors the Red Bluff Community blood drive on the third Wednesday of each month at the Red Bluff Veterans Memorial building. The September date is the 18th. Registration is 2-6 p.m., and is open to the public. An innovation is a Welcome to Emblem event on Tuesday, Sept. 24, at the Elks Lodge. The club is encouraging men and women who are interested in giving service to their communities and the Elks Lodge to join. SECRET WITNESS 529-1268 A program of Tehama County Neighborhood Watch Program, Inc. Setting it straight –––––––– It is the policy of the Daily News to correct as quickly as possible all errors in fact that have been published in the newspaper. If you feel a factual error has been made in a news story, call the news department at 527-2153. DAILY NEWS RED BLUFF TEHAMA COUNTY THE VOICE OF TEHAMA COUNTY SINCE 1885 VOLUME 127, NUMBER 123 HOW TO REACH US On the Web: www.redbluffdailynews.com MAIN OFFICE: NEWS Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. News Tip Hotline: 527-2153 FAX: (530) 527-9251 E-mail: clerk@redbluffdailynews.com Daytime: (530) 527-2151 Sports: Ext. 111 Death Notices: Ext. 115 Tours: Ext. 112 After hours: (530) 527-2153 ______________________ ADVERTISING Main Phone (530) 527-2151 Outside area 800-479-6397 545 Diamond Ave. Red Bluff, CA 96080 ______________________ Mail: Red Bluff Daily News P.O. Box 220 Red Bluff, CA 96080 Fax: (530) 527-5774 ______________________ CUSTOMER SERVICE: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Subscription & delivery Display: (530) 527-2151 Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. (530) 527-2151, Ext. 1 Home delivery subscription rates (All prices include all applicable taxes) Monday through Saturday $9.50 four weeks Rural Rate $10.59 four weeks Business & professional rate $2.19 four weeks, Monday-Friday By mail: In Tehama County $12.17 four weeks All others $16.09 four weeks (USPS 458-200) Published Monday through Saturday except Sunday, by California Newspaper Partnership. Classified: 1-855-667-2255 Legals: (530) 527-2151 Ext 101 Email: dispatch@redbluffdailynews.com Obituaries: (530) 527-2151 Ext 101 Email: dispatch@redbluffdailynews.com Online FAX: (530) 527-2151 (530) 527-5774 I am a people watcher. It is the social scientist in me. I enjoy observing people in their natural habitats, like Starbucks and at the grocery check out line. Travel time is the best time to watch how others interact, cope with life and meld with their surroundings. From the outside we all seem so different, the way we dress, wear our hair, what we drive, and how we behave. People are introverted, extroverted, kind, arrogant, distracted or engaged and to some degree you can tell these things by observation. What you can't tell is their back stories. Imagine if you could tell what someone has survived just by looking at them. A lot of times you can tell what someone has done to their body by observation, how hard their life has been, but you can't tell why. It seems to me that the why behind everything has the potential to make a radical difference in how we treat other people. If we could somehow know the whole story about everyone we meet, maybe we could react with more. A lot of times if you see someone who doesn't measure up to your standard, you begin to write them off. What would happen if you had the benefit of knowing why they we so off putting? What if you could know that they were abused as a small child? What if you could know that they lost their wife and young child in a car accident and now they are so angry with the world, they act mean and ugly? don't do more is that their hurts are What if you knew that they often as locked up inside of them as they are in the people they are times had to make deciwatching. You and I have sions as to whether or not our own issues that make pay their electric bill or us feel sad, lonely, unfairly buy food for their famijudged and criticized. ly? What if you knew Sometimes people let their that they lost their job hurts become an excuse to unfairly or were being not pay attention to the discriminated against? hurts of others. I mean, if What if you knew sometheir hurts are unaddressed thing about them that why should they care about would tenderize your other people? Well, if they heart towards them instead of stand in judgFaydra were outwardly presented for all to see, maybe they ment? A lot of us take time Rector would get more love and more compassion too and out of our lives to think of others. We donate You Matter then they would have the fulfillment they need to when asked to, we tithe to our churches, we are affected turn their hearts and give more. Every single one of us has a back when we see commercials about abused animals, but how many of us story. There may be little degree of walk in a state of perpetual willing- difference between the officer who ness to see the needs of this world? pulls over and the man who broke How worthwhile is it for the world the law. Little difference between if on the day-to-day we file our the physician who treats the patient compassion under things to do at and the patient who has the disease. some point, rather than things to be We are all more alike than different on the look out for at all times? and we all have more to give. What would it take for you to be Faydra Rector, MA is a mental willing to give more? If everyone had signage on their health administrator, author, public bodies that told their story in a visi- speaker, educator and life coach ble way, I think we would all do who lives in Red Bluff. She can be more. I think we would all have the reached at lifecoach@shasta.com view her blogs at drive to be more compassionate, or more accepting, more reasonable, http://faydraandcompany.blogspot. and more forgiving, more helpful, more com/ concerned about others. You see, I http://allaboutdivorce.blogspot.com think a lot of the reason people /. Jubilee to feature antiques appraisers The Tehama County Museum will feature Antique Appraisal by Sam Kissee and his team of appraisers 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sept. 7 during its 32nd Annual Jubilee fund raiser celebration. What is the difference between a valuable antique and a piece of junk? That question is on anybody's mind who is faced with cleaning out the garage, the basement, the attic or the barn. Sometimes it's a matter of age; sometimes it's a matter of rarity; sometimes it's a matter of perception. Whatever the situation, it is a primary reason those places don't get cleaned out – we just don't know whether there is net worth beyond what a yard sale would bring in. If you see yourself in this characterization, the Tehama County Museum can offer some help when Sam Kissee and his team of professional appraisers will convene in the Marty Graffell Annex. "For a $5 per item donation to the museum, these appraisers will proStarting on September 3rd Abbey's Hair Works is now Blue Sun Hair Studio!! And I'm moving to 245 Pine Street (Behind Gipson Realty) 527-3974 So come check out my new place!! And I look forward to your business!! Courtesy photo Sam Kissee of Chico will have a team of antique appraisers at the 32nd Annual Tehama County Museum Jubilee to support the Museum and help members of the public discover the background and value of their special family heirlooms. vide more than just an appraisal, they will provide background information and context so folks can better determine how extensive their unexpected windfall might be," board President Chris Bauer said. "I was skeptical when they told me that my grandfather's antique fountain pen was worth GERBER UNION ELEMENTARY $1,300, so I asked them to prove it – which they did, right out of the resource book. The highest value of an item brought in to our event was a $24,000 blanket rooted in Native American history. These appraisers have been supporting the museum in this manner for many years, and it's really an act of love because all of the money generated by their work goes directly to benefit the museum. We'd like to see those garages and barns get some attention before Sept. 7." Sam Kissee is the proverbial "local boy made good." He went through the local schools beginning with Lassen View Elementary in Dairyville, and he developed a passion for collecting bottles with his dad, Archie Kissee. This led to a career as an antique dealer in Chico, California where he is a respected member of the antiques community. He has developed many contacts to cover the wide gamut of items folks bring in for appraisal, and the appraisal team will be comprised of those contacts. The Tehama County Museum is at 275 C St. in Tehama and can be reached by phone at 3842595 or by e-mail at tcmuse@tehama.net. The museum is open 14 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Bird Walks start Saturday Gerber School is NOW ENROLLING IN ALL GRADES: Kindergarten through 8th! Gerber School is a proud No Excuses University school. Office Hours: 8:00AM-3:30PM (530) 385-1041 23014 Chard Ave. Gerber, CA 96035 SPECIAL PAGES ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS Tuesdays: Wednesdays: Business Thursdays: Entertainment Fridays: Education Saturdays: Farm, Religion, TV Publisher & Advertising Director: Greg Stevens gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Editor: Chip Thompson editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports Editor: Andre Byik sports@redbluffdailynews.com Do you have more to give? Circulation Manager: Kathy Hogan khogan@redbluffdailynews.com Production Manager: Sandy Valdivia sandy@redbluffdailynews.com POSTMASTER SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO: PO BOX 220, RED BLUFF CA 96080 The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955 © 2013 Daily News Postage Paid Periodicals 90 years Courtesy photo ago... Farm Bureau Annual Picnic Lightly Attended The Tehama county farm bureau is holding its annual picnic at El Camino headquarters today. The attendance is not heavy, causing the bureau to decide that Labor Day is not a proper day for this annual affair of the farmers, and as a move to decide on a better time a committee was appointed to set some other date. The farmers are in the midst of their fruit harvest and it is difficult to count on them for a day off. — Sept. 3, 1923 The first Sacramento River Discovery Center Bird Walk of the 2013-14 season is scheduled for 8 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 7 at the center. Pictured is a Bewicks Wren that nested in the eves at the corner of the SRDC porch this summer. LOST DOG Male Border Collie Gilmore Ranch Road / Willams Ave Area 527-3504 Contact with information REWARD