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Snow is still banked so high on Lassen Peak that mountain climbers experi- ence more or less difficulty gaining the top of Ameri- ca's only active volcano. F. J. Southerland and John D. Kent of the PG&E staff here, however, came pretty close to making the grade Sunday. Despite the oceans of snow, now melting rapidly, they walked up the mountain side to within a stone's throw of the crater base. — May 21, 1924 90YEARSAGO... Lassen Peak snow is deep but vanishing The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Te- hama County Sheriff's De- partment, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol logs. Arrests GabinoMadera:18,Corn- ing was arrested Monday at West Street and Alger Avenue on a charge of felony possession of narcotics. Bail was $15,000. Carlos Luis Partida: 21, Gerber was arrested Mon- day in the 3100block of the Esplanade in Chico on an outstanding failure to ap- pear on a felony charge. Sergio Luis Zambrano: 25, Corning was arrested Monday in the 1900block of Solano Street on sus- picion of felony assault to commit mayhem, prostitu- tion, kidnapping and sexual penetration with a foreign object with force. Bail was $155,000. Danny Ray White: 52, Corning was arrested Mon- day at Sixth Street and Fig Lane on suspicion of felony possession of a controlled substance, transportation of a controlled substance, possession of a narcotic controlled substance, transportation of narcotics and misdemeanor controlled substance paraphernalia. Bail was $83,000. Nicholas Edward Craig: 25, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday at Sunshine Gas on suspicion of felony posses- sion of a controlled sub- stance and misdemeanor controlled substance para- phernalia. Bail was $18,000. Animal 18500block of Bywood Drive: A woman reported Monday an ongoing issue with two pit bulls chasing livestock on her property. The 7900block of State Route 99E: Staff at More for Less reported Monday that a man ran into the store, grabbed an 18-pack of beer and a bag of chips and ran back out of the store. POLICE LOGS This recipe for Beef ten- derloin with blue cheese top- ping is ideal beef for Father's Day". The recipe came from "Thirty Meals in 30 Minutes, Beef It's What' For Dinner." Beef tenderloin with blue cheese topping INGREDIENTS 4beef Tenderloin Steaks, cut 1inch thick (about 1 pound) 1large clove garlic, halved 1/2 teaspoon salt 2teaspoons chopped fresh parsley BLUE CHEESE TOPPING 2tablespoons cream cheese 4teaspoons crumbled blue cheese 4teaspoons plain yogurt 2teaspoons minced onion Dash ground white pepper INSTRUCTIONS 1. Combine topping ingredi- ents in small bowl. Rub beef steaks with garlic. 2. Place steaks on rack in broiler pan so surface of beef is 2to 3inches from heat. Broil 13to 16 minutes for medium rare (145'F) to medium (160'F) doneness, turning once. To grill, place steaks over medium, ash-covered coals. Grill, covered, 10to 14minutes for medium rare (145'F) to medium (160'F) doneness, turning occasionally. 3. One to two minutes before steaks are done, top evenly with topping. 4. Season with salt; sprinkle with parsley. COOK'S TIPS Makes 4servings. Total recipe time: 25min- utes CATTLEWOMEN CORNER Te nd er lo in s te ak s get a tangy, blue cheese topping COURTESY PHOTO Tehama County CattleWomen urge you to celebrate Sunday, June 15th with "Beef for Father's Day". TC and Allyson are pictured with their father Tim Drury at the recent Tehama Co. Jr. Livestock Auction Committee meeting when they were honored with a plaque and check for $100for their sportsmanship at the 2013 Tehama District Fair. TC and Allyson came to the fair and helped their fellow members during the week, even though they didn't have any animals since their lamb and goat had been killed by stray dogs just before the fair. Idealrecipefor Father's Day RANCHO TEHAMA SUBSTATION RENO COURTESY PHOTO Local officials recently met up at the renovated Tehama County Sheriff's substation in Rancho Tehama. On hand were representatives from the Sheriff's Department, California Highway Patrol, Tehama County Health Department, Supervisor Bob Williams and Rancho Tehama Association. Snacks were served from a new sandwich shop going into Suite E. TheAssociatedPress SACRAMENTO California's drought will cost the state's agricultural economy an es- timated $1.7 billion this year and leave some 14,500 farm- workers without jobs, says a preliminary study released Monday by the University of California, Davis, Center for Watershed Sciences. The study was done at the request of the Califor- nia Department of Food and Agriculture and used computer models and re- cent water delivery figures to arrive at its conclusions. Central Valley farmers expect 1/3 less irrigation water in a state that leads the nation in the produc- tion of fruits, vegetables and nuts. The report estimates 6 percent of farmland in the Central Valley — or 410,000 acres — could go unplanted because of cuts in water de- liveries. A more detailed re- port is due out this summer. "We wanted to provide a foundation for state agri- cultural and water policy- makers to understand the impacts of the drought on farmers and farm commu- nities," said the study's lead author, Richard Howitt, a US Davis professor emer- itus of agriculture and re- source economics. With less river wa- ter available for irrigat- ing crops, the report says that farmers will pump more ground water, which will cost an estimated $450 million but still leave them short of supplies. The communities hard- est hit by the drought lie in the San Joaquin and Cen- tral Valley, the report says. UC Davis' Jay Lund, a co-author of the study, said he expects the drought to create hardships on farm- ers, their communities and the environment, but Cal- ifornia's overall economy shouldn't be threatened. He said agriculture makes up less than 3 per- cent of California's $1.9 tril- lion gross domestic product annually. STATE Study: Drought will cost Central Valley $2 billion, 14,500 jobs Farmers will get third less water for irrigation "We wanted to provide a foundation for state agricultural and water policymakers to understand the impacts of the drought on farmers and farm communities." — Richard Howitt, a US Davis professor emeritus of agriculture and resource economics PaidforbyRe-ElectGreggCohenDistrictAttorney2014 www.cohenforda.com ✔ Re-Elect GREGG COHEN ★ DISTRICT ATTORNEY ★ 15% OFF 744MainStreet,RedBluff,CA (Across from Clock Tower) SoyCandleswithMuranoPendant on the bottom (Perfect gift for house warming, birthday, anniversary) Wearable Candle - object with purpose! 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