Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/415476
Boyles: Joyce Rosalie Boyles, 96, of Corning died Monday, Nov. 10 at her home. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers CorningMortuary.Published Thursday,Nov.13,2014inthe Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Foster: Frank David Fos- ter, 64, of Red Bluff died Wednesday, Nov. 5 in Red Bluff. Arrangements are un- der the direction of Hoyt- Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Thursday, Nov. 13, 2014 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Skahan: John J. Skahan, 71, of Red Bluff died Tues- day, Nov. 11 at his home. Ar- rangements are under the di- rection of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Thursday,Nov.13,2014inthe Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Wernett: Lela Virginia McDonald Wernett, 92, of Corning died Monday, Nov. 10 at Brentwood Skilled Nursing and Rehab in Red Bluff. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Thursday, Nov. 13, 2014 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Williams: Mary Ann Wil- liams, 59, of Corning died Friday, Nov. 7 at her home. Arrangements are under thedirectionofHallBrothers CorningMortuary.Published Thursday,Nov.13,2014inthe Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Deathnoticesmustbepro- vided by mortuaries to the news department, are pub- lished at no charge, and fea- ture only specific basic in- formation about the de- ceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Clas- sified advertising depart- ment. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publi- cation linked to the news- paper's website. Paid obitu- aries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of con- tent, including photos. DEATHNOTICES untary manslaughter, bat- tery with serious bodily in- jury and assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury stemming from the death of Rogelio McDarment. Cadotte has pleaded not guilty. Red Bluff police re- sponded about 5 p.m. Oct. 15 to the 700 block of South Jackson Street, where they found McDarment, who was 33, lying unrespon- sive on the ground. McDarment had stopped breathing after officers ar- rived, and he was flown to Mercy Medical Center in Redding where he was placed on life support. Police identified Cadotte as a suspect in the fight, and he was taken into cus- tody at the Tehama County Landfill on Plymire Road after a Tehama County Dis- trict Attorney investigator spotted Cadotte driving. McDarment was taken off life support on Oct. 18 and subsequently died. The defendant remains in custody. Trial FROM PAGE 1 & Engraving, 223 Main St.; Amundson Physical Ther- apy, 355 Main St.; Baskin Robbins, 333 S. Main St.; Casa Ramos, 2001 Main St.; Cornerstone Commu- nity Bank, 237 S. Main St.; Farmers Insurance, Agent Linda Durrer, 437 Cedar St.; Farmers Insur- ance, Agent Erica Garcia, 645 Antelope Blvd. Ste. 14; Grocery Outlet, 388 S. Main St.; Lariat Bowl, 365 S. Main St.; M & M Ranch House, 645 Antelope Blvd.; Red Bluff Community and Senior Center, 1500 S. Jackson St.; Starbucks, I-5 and Adobe Road; Te- hama County Health Ser- vices Agency, 818 Main St.; Tehama Country Vis- itor Cente, 250 Antelope Blvd.; Tobin & Associ- ates, CPA, 958 Washing- ton St.; Umpqua Bank, 333 S. Main St.; The Gold Ex- change, 413 Walnut St. and Walmart, 1025 S. Main St. Other partners this year include Sacred Heart Church Parish Hall, Mercy High School and the Cali- fornia Department of Mo- tor Vehicles, Red Bluff. New and unwrapped toys can be dropped off through Dec. 13 at these lo- cations or 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays at the CHP office, 2550 Main St. For more in- formation, call 527-2034. Toys FROM PAGE 1 ing Northman. "You're not taking any re- sponsibility after I read you the transcript," Garaventa asked Northman. Northman said he should have said he believed hear- ings in the case had been short set, not the trial itself, whichrequiredhimtospend time filing motions of con- tinuance. Garaventa asked North- man if he was standing firm with his quoted comment from the Oct. 10 hearing. Northman said he had felt pressure from Superior Court Judge Todd Bottke to set the initial preliminary hearing, when he had not received the autopsy report. Bealerischargedwithkill- ingNicholsinFebruary2013. She was last seen near Red BluffUnionHighSchooland herbodywasdiscoveredtwo days later in a wooded area just south of the campus. Delayed FROM PAGE 1 The Associated Press SAN RAMON About 25,000 pounds of frozen boxed turkeys that an overturned tractor-trailer spilled on a Northern California free- way two weeks before Thanksgiving will be do- nated to a local food bank. California Highway Pa- trol Officer Kevin Bartlett tells KPIX that a health inspector determined the turkeys are still safe to eat. The semi-truck also spilled an estimated 40 gallons of diesel fuel on Interstate 680 about 40 miles east of San Fran- cisco, snarling traffic dur- ing the Wednesday morn- ing commute. The driver had minor injuries. CHP Sgt. Joseph Aze- vedo tells KNTV that the driver took a highway off- ramp too quickly around 2:30 a.m., and the truck's trailer flipped on its side. Boxed turkeys spilled on hi gh wa y wi ll b e don at ed APPHOTO/BAYAREANEWSGROUP—DANROSENSTRAUCH Workers unload frozen turkeys from a tractor-trailer that overturned and spilled about 25,000pounds of frozen boxed turkeys on the Alcosta Boulevard offramp in San Ramon on Wednesday. The truck also spilled an estimated 40gallons of diesel fuel, snarling traffic for hours during the morning commute. The Associated Press MILWAUKEE A man who drove his tractor-trailer onto a walkway at a Mil- waukee park, getting it stuck on a foot bridge, says his GPS device is to blame. The 50-year-old driver has been cited for reckless driving and failing to obey road signs, which carry nearly $580 in fines. Milwaukee County sher- iff's officials say the Indi- ana man drove the truck, which had a 53-foot trailer, onto a walkway Tuesday afternoon at Lake Park. The truck got hung up on a peninsula behind the North Point Lighthouse along Milwaukee's lake- shore. The mishap dam- aged several trees and con- crete railings on two pe- destrian bridges. Crews were still at- tempting to remove the truck Wednesday. FOOT BRIDGE Tractor-trailer stuck in park, driver blames GPS The Associated Press SACRAMENTO California's Department of Motor Ve- hicles is expanding office hours as it prepares to is- sue an expected 1.4 mil- lion licenses to people in the country illegally. The DMV announced Wednesday that it will ex- pand Saturday hours at up to 60 field offices as of Jan. 3 — a day after Assembly Bill 60 takes effect. The ex- tra time is set aside for ap- pointments by people seek- ing their first California driver's license. Those seeking new li- censes also will be able to scheduled DMV appoint- ments 90 days in advance — double the current time period. AB60 — signed by Gov. Jerry Brown last year — allows people in the coun- try illegally to obtain driv- er's licenses by submitting identification from their home countries. The DMV expects to issue an addi- tional 1.4 million licenses in the first three years of the measure. LICENSES DMV expanding hours to meet immigrant demand By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press GRANTS PASS, ORE. Scien- tists say a swarm of earth- quakes since July in the re- mote desert linking Oregon, California and Nevada can be traced to the constant stretching of the Earth's crust. The Sierra Nevada is moving northwest about a half-inch a year, leaving gaps in Nevada's northwest- ern corner, where one fault has produced hundreds of small quakes, Glenn Biasi of the University of Nevada Seismological Laboratory said Tuesday. Similar swarms beneath populated areas have cul- minated in quakes in the magnitude 5.0 range that have cracked walls and top- pled chimneys. However, the desert swarm is so re- mote that damage is un- likely. The swarm has gener- ated more than 800 trem- ors that registered on seis- mographs but were rarely felt by people. The two big- gest shakers came last week and were measured at mag- nitude 4.7. Whereistheswarm? The swarm is centered in the northwest corner of Ne- vada about 40 miles south- east of Lakeview, Oregon, in a dusty plain of dry alkali lakebeds called Long Valley. The Sheldon National Wild- life Refuge and the Summit Lake Indian Reservation are to the east. The Black Rock Desert is to the south. How big is it? The area measures about 7 miles long and about 2 miles at its widest point. There are no nearby instru- ments to give a good idea just how deep it is, but Bi- asi said it is likely 3 or more miles below the surface. Did anyone feel it? Probably. But there are just not many people out there. Gina Barr at the wild- life refuge headquarters in Lakeview didn't feel it. Nei- ther did Morgan Bryson at the Denio Motel, about 50 miles to the east. The one man who lives at the Shel- don refuge did, but he is gone for a month's vacation, Barr said. "It's one of those corners of Nevada where a blind man could run an ar- tillery school without hurt- ing anyone," Biasi said. Whatwoulditfeellike? Even the biggest of the quakes was not big enough to shake you out of a lawn chair if you were sitting right on top of it, Biasi said. Bigger quake potential The fault moves up on one side and down on the other and covers a distance of about 30 miles. If it all let loose at once, it could produce a magnitude 7.0 quake, but that is very un- likely, Biasi said. Swarm meaning Some swarms in the past have culminated in larger quakes before settling down, but it is impossible to say if this one will. In 2008, a swarm west of Reno, Ne- vada, included a magnitude 5.0 temblor that cracked walls in about 100 houses in the bedroom community of Mogul, Nevada. Pictures were knocked off walls, furniture was upended, and glassware was broken. Overall damage was esti- mated at $1 million. Where to learn more The U.S. Geological Sur- vey has an interactive on- line map at http://earth- quake.usgs.gov/hazards/ qfaults/map/ that shows all the known faults in the country. You can see on the map that the Sierra Nevada has few, but there are lots to the north, where the moun- tains smoosh up against the Cascade Range. TREMORS Remote Nevada earthquakes result from stretching crust The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO Officials are looking for a cheaper way to extend the Bay Bridge pedestrian path and give walkers, joggers and bikers a way to get all the way from Oakland to San Francisco. The Contra Costa Times reported that extending a 2-mile trail along the west- ern span cost would cost $400 million to $500 mil- lion. Administrators with the Bay Area Toll Authority, the regional agency that col- lects toll money to operate the Bay Bridge and six other state-owned spans, said the cost is too much. Still, interest in extend- ing the path roughly 2 miles across the western span — between Yerba Buena Is- land and San Francisco — has picked up since late last year, when the $6.4 billion new eastern bridge span opened along with the walking path. An oversight committee on Wednesday will consider authorizing a $10 million engineering study to look for more affordable alter- natives and options to pay for them, the Contra Costa Times reported. Authorities said if solid alternatives emerge, the toll authority may spend millions more for a de- tailed design and environ- mental study. The 15.5-foot-wide bridge path starts in Oakland and nearby Emeryville, heads gently up onto the bridge just past the toll plaza and runs along its south side, stopping short of Yerba Buena Island. It has one lane in each direction for bi- cyclists and an outside lane for walkers and has been widely used since opening more than a year ago. WESTERN SPAN San Francisco Bay Bridge path costly to extend TRACTOR-TRAILER PLEASERECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER. Thankyou! JudyElaineStock May 17, 1953 - November 2, 2014 Judy Elaine Stock, 61 passed away quietly from pneu- monia surrounded by her children on November 2, 2014. Judy was born to Delburt and Juanita Geppert on May 17, 1953 in Eagle Point, Oregon. Judy married John and resided in Red Bluff for over 30 years. Judy was a Mother of five children and had four won- derful grandchildren. She enjoyed spending time with family, shopping and gambling. She is survived by her children, Shanke Stock, Travis Stock, Sarah Ramsey, Johnny Stock and Kamber Stock and 4 grandchildren Pierce, Paylin, Devon and Daniel. The family would like to invite all family and friends to a celebration of life for John and Judy, at their home Tri County Drilling and Pump, 20911 Walnut St., November 15th at 2:00 pm. The event will be pot luck. Obituaries THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2014 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 7 A

