Red Bluff Daily News

November 10, 2015

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/599199

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 7 of 15

Bondy:NancyBondy,93, of Red Bluff died Sunday, Nov. 8at her home. Arrange- ments are under the direc- tion of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Davies: Sandra Davies, 73, of Flournoy died Thursday, Nov. 5at her home. Arrange- ments are under the direc- tion of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Moilan: Clifford Moilan, 74, of Cottonwood died Friday, Nov. 6at his home. Arrange- ments are under the direc- tion of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Smith: James M. Smith, 90, of Red Bluff died Saturday, Nov. 7at his home. Arrange- ments are under the direc- tion of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. DEATHNOTICES man were discovered, the release said. Following an interview with the resident, officers determined the man was delusional as a result of a mental illness and the man was detained for a mental health evaluation, the re- lease said. The name of the man is being withheld due to privacy laws. Claim FROM PAGE 1 Two teenage girls had been in a dispute on social media and met near the Di- version Dam to discuss it, Tehama County Sheriff's Detective Jeff Garrett said at a previous hearing. He saidthetwogirls,onebeing the victim, also had weap- ons.Whentheybothsaidto put the weapons down they heard a gun shot. The victim of the shoot- ing was sent to Mercy Med- ical Center in Redding fol- lowing the incident and has sincerecoveredfromherin- juries. Judge Todd Bottke set the three-day trial for 1:30 p.m. Jan. 6 and 9 a.m. Jan. 7and8ifasettlementisnot agreed upon before then. Teenager FROM PAGE 1 She first saw the two art- ists when different pieces they created came into the office she works in, but she now has pieces of her own at home, Swithenbank said. Starr Webb of Cotton- wood dabbles in photogra- phy as a hobby, but her son is a professional photogra- pher so when her friend of more than 30 years invited her to attend she decided to check the show out and found it to be full of beau- tiful work, she said. Joel Reinhard of Red Bluff has been showing at Art Walk for about three years, he said. "You see people that you only see once a year plus you get to give out your cards so it's a good networking op- portunity," Reinhard said. "I love the people's reaction to my work. They love black and white photography." Jack Kirchert of Red Bluff had several pieces from a butterfly that took him five minutes to cap- ture, partially because it flew off, to a waterfall shot that took about 10-15 min- utes to fully capture all the way up to his most compli- cated work, which took 5-10 hours. The shot, titled Blood Moon in Millville, shows all the changes in the moon in seven different shots in var- ious phases that he com- bined with the background being from the last shot of the night. "I like to be able to meet people and get other perspectives on my art," Kirchert said. "They see things I don't see on my own. It's also the grati- tude I feel in hearing their thoughts." Sometimes when he steps back to listen, he gets to hear someone in awe of a piece he thought wasn't his best and it's a reminder that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, Kirchert said. Art FROM PAGE 1 PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB - DAILY NEWS A woman gazes at pottery on display in Holbrook Stoneware Friday at the 2015Art Walk held in downtown Red Bluff. Donna Hake, right, points out a antler head art piece she finds interesting on display at The Closet on Main on Friday at the 2015Art Walk held in downtown Red Bluff. PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB - DAILY NEWS Tehama County CattleWomen First Vice President Jeannie Smith, le , announces 2015 Cowbelle of the Year Charlene Priest, right, Saturday at the 56th annual fashion show and luncheon at Rolling Hills Casino. hard on all the projects and is always in the back- ground as a silent leader, Event Chairwoman Joyce Bundy said. "Thank you guys," Priest said. "I love this organiza- tion. You ladies are great women." The luncheon is a fun- draiser for the scholar- ships given out each year with about $10,000 given out in 2015. Recipients in- cluded Emily Andreini, Jase Northrup, Corey Carpenter, Stacy Stroing, Savannah Miller, Jessica MacDonald and Zakry Stroing. "We've been able to main- tainthescholarshipsthrough all the projects such as the trail ride, Beef 'N Brew and the fashion show," Bundy said. "We also took on sup- portingeachoftheFFAclubs this year as an expansion." Each local club, which in- cludes Corning, Los Molinos and Red Bluff FFA, received a $1,000 donation, Tehama County CattleWomen Presi- dent Linda Borror said. The group also donates to the Safe Education and Rec- reation for Rural Families (SERRF) after school pro- gram, Sober Grad, the 4-H Awards for Cook With Beef, classroompresentationsand other events such as Educa- tionDayandFarmDayatthe fairgrounds. They are also membersoftheRedBluff-Te- hama County and Los Moli- nos chambers. California CattleWomen President Shelia Bowen gave a brief address in which she gave Jean Barton a shout out for her work with keeping the California CattleWomen newsletter full and being "so thorough you feel like you're there." "As the California Cattle- Women President, part of my job is to visit the women who are a part of the Cali- forniaCattleWomen,"Bowen said. "It gives you a greater appreciation for what they do. What you ladies accom- plish is truly impressive. It makes me feel good to be a part of what is being done at the grass roots level. We re- ally do accomplish a lot." In particular, she was im- pressed by the youth devel- opment,throughtheTehama County Beef Ambassador program,thebeefpromotion and the groups work for the community, she said. Before the fashion show, which Tehama County Su- pervisor Steve Chamblin was Master of Ceremonies for, Borror said she strongly encouraged those attending to support the stores that participated in the fashion show and to keep their shop- ping local. 2015MissTehamaCounty Mahlon Owenst kicked off the day by singing the Na- tional Anthem. Stores and models were as follows: The Loft Vicki Mahoney and 2015 Tehama County Jr. Beef Ambassador Kayla Mc- Giffin; The Closet on Main Street 2015 Tehama County Jr. Beef Ambassador Emyli Palmer, Marion Jensen and Liza Jensen; Eddie Bauer 2015 Tehama County Sr. Beef Ambassador Danielle Mueller, 2015 Miss Tehama County Mahlon Owens and 2015TehamaCountyAmbas- sador Mitchell Sauve; Dress BarnVanessaOsterand2015 Miss Tehama County Sec- ond Alternate Mallory Rain- water; Wheeler West Bou- tique Anne Butler and Bev Govi; Plum Crazy 2015 Miss Tehama County First Alter- nate Jena McDonald. Cowbelle FROM PAGE 1 Tehama County Beef Ambassadors, from le : Junior Ambassador Kayla McGiffin, Serior Ambassador Danielle Muller and Junior Ambassador Emyli Palmer. model at the fashion show and luncheon at Rolling Hills Casino. PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER. | NEWS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2015 8 A

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Red Bluff Daily News - November 10, 2015