Red Bluff Daily News

September 22, 2011

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Thursday, September 22, 2011 – Daily News 3A To add an upcoming event to the Local Calendar, submit Local Calendar information well in advance to the Daily News, attention Calendar, P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 or e-mail to clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. Include a contact name and telephone number. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 Red Bluff California HEAT Chorus, 7 p.m., Meteer School Room 26, 695 Kimball Road, 895-0139 Childbirth Class, 6:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Commu- nity Hospital, Columba room, Anita 529-8377 Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1 per class, Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 South Jack- son Street 527-8177 Live country music, with dinner at the Veterans Hall, 5-7 p.m. PAL Kickboxing, 6 p.m., 1450 Schwab St., 529- 8716 or 200-3950 Phoenix Comunity Support Group for those get- ting over chemical dependency, 11:30 a.m., Pres- byterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 945-2349 Pinochle for Seniors, 12:30-3:30 p.m., 1500 S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Red Bluff Exchange Club, noon, M&M Ranch House, 645 Antelope Blvd. #1 Sunrise Speakers Toastmasters, noon, Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste.101, 529- 1841 Swinging Squares Square Dance Club, 7 p.m., Red Bluff Community and Senior Center, 1500 S.Jack- son St., for beginner or review classes, call 529-1615 TOPS Club (take off pounds sensibly), 9:30 a.m., First Christian Church, 926 Madison Ave., 547-7541 or Nanc347-6120, visit www.tops.org Widowed Persons Dinner, 6 p.m., call 384-2471 for location Corning BUNCO fundraiser, 6:30 p.m., Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 Cal-Fresh & Healthy Family Appointments, 1-3 p.m., Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824- 7670 Celebrate Recovery,6:15-9 p.m., Believers Church of God, 783 Solano St., dinner with $3 donation Degree of Pocahontas Silver Cloud Council # 168, 7 p.m. Independent Grange 470, 20945 Corning Road, Bernie 824-1114 or Kathy 586-1065 Domestic Violence Information and Support Group, 1-3 p.m., Olive Room at the Corning Health- care District, 275 Solano St. 528-0226. Dual Diagnosis Group, 1:30-3 p.m., 1600 Solano St., 527-8491, Ext. 3309 Jewelry Beading Class, 9-11 a.m., Corning Fami- ly Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 Soccer training, 4-6 p.m., except for holidays and rain, Woodson School Soccer Field, 150 N Toomes, 824-7680 Women's Support Group, 6 p.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 Red Bluff Al-Anon, 6-7 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Jefferson and Hickory Knit for Kids, 9:15 to noon, Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 527-0372 Corning Car Show, 6-9 p.m., Bartels Giant Burger, 22355 Corning Road On-Site Veterans Service Officer, 8 a.m. to noon, Will help Veterans and answer questions about bene- fits, Corning Veterans Memorial Hall, 1620 Solano St., 824-5957 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 Red Bluff BMX racing, 5:30 p.m., Red Rock BMX Track, Tehama District Fairground, $10 Farmers Market, 7 a.m.-noon, River City Park Weight Watchers meeting, 8:30 a.m., Weigh-in starts half-hour before meetings, 485 Antelope Blvd., #N, next to Bud's Jolly Kone, 1-800-651-6000 Cruzin'Car Show, 5-8 p.m., cars and owners show and shine at Hal's Eat 'Em Up, 158 Main St., free, 366- 3668 Los Molinos Senior Dance, 7 p.m., Senior Center, Josephine Street Tehama Tehama County Museum, 1-4 p.m, 275 C St., group tours 384-2595 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 Red Bluff Celebrate Recovery, 6-8 p.m., Vineyard Christian Fellowship, 738 Walnut St., 527-2449 Lotto numbers SACRAMENTO (AP) — The winning num- bers drawn Wednesday night in the California Lottery's ''SuperLotto Plus'' game were: 4 - 26 - 31 - 35 - 45 Mega Number: 4 Daily News photo by Chip Thompson Members of Red Bluff Rotary, from front left, Bill Patidar, Jim Howell, Secretary Elizabeth Soder, Ev McDonough and Robert Dunbar, DDS, back, John Gumm, President Roy Gould and Larry Champion pose around a recently completed wall feature at the Cone and Kimball Plaza on the corner of Main and Walnut streets in Red Bluff.The wall, built by Glynn Phelps Masonry, will display a plaque explain- ing the history of the Cone Kimball Building and a Rotary plaque. Police reports The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and Cal- ifornia Highway Patrol. Arrests • Billy Dean Barnes, 62, of Red Bluff was arrested Tuesday in the 20000 block of Live Oak Road. He was arrested after a woman called to report suspicious circumstances just before 6 p.m. Barnes was taken into custody about two hours later and charged with inflicting injury on a child. Bail was set at $50,000. • Bobbie Sue Venegas, 32, of Red Bluff was arrest- ed Tuesday on Main Street north of Diamond Avenue. She was charged with pos- session and trafficking of a controlled narcotic, posses- sion and trafficking of a controlled substance and on a warrant for failure to pay a traffic ticket fine. Bail was set at $70,499. • Colby Lee Bock, 32, of Red Bluff was arrested Monday evening on Sycamore Street at Monroe Street. He was charged for possession of controlled substance paraphernalia, possession of a controlled substance and violation of parole. Bail was set at $16,000. Vandalism • Graffiti was reported Tuesday on a shed in the 200 block of Bayles FIRST ANNUAL BOOSTER FALL BONANZA Featuring "1987 State Championship Girls Basketball Team" Saturday, October 15, 2011 Social Hour: Tri-Tip Dinner: 6:30pm Dancing: Live Band - Northern Heat Tyler-Jelly Building Red Bluff Fairgrounds Pre- Ticket: $30 (available from a Red Bluff Spartan Athlete) Tickets at the Door: $40 Sponsored By Counseling Center 5:30pm 8:30pm Avenue. "Emo" was spray painted in red during the night causing about $20 damage. Theft • A bicycle was reported stolen Tuesday at the Gold- en Crest Mobile Home Park, 1245 Montgomery Road. The boy's silver Dia- mondback Grind BMX sin- gle speed with blue handle- bars, valued at $250, was taken between 2 and 4 p.m. Tuesday from in front of a residence. Collision •A 61-year-old Redding man was flown to Mercy Medical Center in Redding with major injuries follow- ing a collision at 9:18 a.m. Wednesday on southbound Interstate 5, south of Gyle Road. Edward Watkins was driving his 2008 Harley Davidson motorcycle south in the slow lane behind a big rig driven by Cleveland Seegars, 60, of Spokane, Wash. For unknown reasons, Watkins rearended the big rig. The collision blocked the slow lane and part of the fast lane with traffic back- ing up about half a mile at 9:28 a.m., according to the CHP Website. The road was reopened at 10:09 a.m. Counseling Center Giving Families Hope! Did you think we were just for children? • Individual & Family Counseling • Couple/Relationship Issues • Anger • Depression • Anxiety • Emotional Trauma • Family Relationships • Parenting Call our office for more info. 529-9454 Red Bluff 590 Antelope Blvd. Suite B-30 Corning 275 Solano Street #2 Crash • A Cottonwood man was taken to Mercy Med- ical Center in Redding with minor injuries following a DUI crash at 9:39 p.m. Tuesday on Bowman Road. David Armentrout, 64, was driving west on Bow- man, east of Meeks Lane, when due to his intoxicated state he allowed his vehicle to drift off the right road edge, overcorrected going across the road and off the other road edge. The vehicle hit a power pole, breaking it off at the base, causing a loss of power and road closure for two hours. Thank You for Supporting the 275 C St. / Tehama Fires • An electrical-caused structure fire was reported at 8:12 p.m. Tuesday on Roe Way, cross of Freshwa- ter Drive in the Lake Cali- fornia area. The first unit on scene at 8:31 p.m. reported a fully-involved garage. The fire was contained at 8:52 p.m. Damage was $50,000 with a $225,000 save. • The 28-acre vegetation fire reported at 11:44 a.m. Tuesday on Spring Branch Road, cross of Jellys Ferry Road, was caused by some- one target shooting at the shooting range on BLM property. Smallest balance or highest rate? Dear Mary: A friend and I were having a debate over paying off multiple credit card balances. Which is better, to pay off the lowest balance first and then add that payment to the sec- ond-lowest balance or to pay off the balance with the highest interest rate? -- Darla, Iowa Dear Darla: My Debt-Proof Living Rapid Debt-Repayment Plan places at the top the debt you can pay off first. There's a good reason for this: Reaching that first $0 will give you a powerful emotional payoff. You'll need that to make sure you will stick with your RDRP no matter what. Putting the debt with the highest inter- est at the top could mean years before you see that first $0 balance. Truly, the difference in payoff time is usually two or three months when all the smoke clears. Can you imagine going on a diet and not losing a pound for months or even years? You'd fall off that wagon in no time at all. Ditto for paying off debt. The RDRP isn't really magical. It just seems like it! Dear Mary: I collect Blue Ridge pottery, manufactured in a Tennessee factory that closed in the 1950s. I dis- play the plates on my kitchen walls, but now I have too many. I would like to actual- ly use the extra plates, but I need to find out whether they are safe for food. I know that people used them for years and years, but today you hear so much about harm- ful lead content in antique dishes. I would appreciate your help on this. -- Joyce, Wisconsin Dear Joyce: I can find nothing to indicate that your dishware is unsafe. If I were you, I would contact the people at http://www.AntiqueMas- ter.com, a site that buys and sells your specific pot- tery. They have an email contact form, and they invite ques- tions. Your dishes are beautiful, by the way. I can see why you are eager to use them. Dear Mary: I purchased a new Mary Hunt Everyday Cheapskate car and financed it through the deal- ership. I planned to make payments with a credit card, paying the bill in full each month and earning big cash rewards on that card account. The cash rewards earned on this credit card would be more than the interest I'm earning on my money in the bank. Now I've learned the lender charges a fee if I pay with a credit card. If I were to pay off the car loan, would it negatively affect my credit rating? -- Diane, Indiana Dear Diane: No. In fact, paying your car loan off early probably would raise your credit score, because a debt paid as agreed is a positive entry. A word of caution: If you signed a loan based on the Rule of 78s, you agreed to pay all of the interest even if you pay it off early, as opposed to signing a simple interest loan, on which you pay only on the outstanding balance. Wall feature completed at Cone Kimball Plaza

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