Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/705042
The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Red Bluff Fire, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment, Corning Fire, Cal Fire and California High- way Patrol logs. Arrest KatrinaMarieDeshetres: 30,ofParadisewasar- rested and booked into Te- hama County Jail Friday on the felony charge of vehicle the . No bail was set. Susan Lorraine Hess: 52, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked Friday on the charge of assault with caus- tic chemical. Bail was set at $50,000. Larry Anthony Parker: 67, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked Saturday on the charges of being in posses- sion of a billyclub, blackjack or leaded cane and making threats to commit a crime that would cause great bodily injury or death. Bail was set at $65,000. Amanda Marie Shoffner: 23, of Red Bluff was ar- rested and booked Saturday on the charge of receiving known stolen property. No bail was set. Jeremy Rolland Waldow: 36, of Corning was arrested and booked Saturday on the charge of inflicting corporal injury on a spouse. No bail was set. Laura Elizabeth Graham: 24, of Red Bluff was ar- rested and booked Sunday on the charges of burglary and vandalism causing more than $5,000in damages. Perry Joseph Perez: 24, of Los Molinos was arrested and booked Sunday on the charge of buying or receiv- ing a stolen vehicle or equip- ment. No bail was set. Marcelino Rodriguez Jr.: 20, of Red Bluff was ar- rested and booked Sunday on the charges of battery with serious bodily injury, burglary, conspiracy to com- mit a crime and obstructing an officer. Bail was set at $253,000. Rene Romero Rodriguez: 25, of Red Bluff was ar- rested and booked Sunday on the charges of assault with a deadly weapon that is not a firearm, burglary, conspiracy to commit a crime and willful cruelty to a child with the possibility of causing injury or death, Bail was set at $283,000. Oscar Enrique Polanco: 31, was arrested and booked Monday on the charges of possessing ammunition and a firearm as a felon. No bail was set. Fire Smith Avenue: A small fire Friday burned a quarter acre. 100block of Sale Lane: A fire occurred at 1:47 p.m. Sunday in an apart- ment. The cooking fire was contained to the stove and caused by not attending to the cooking. The resident received care for smoke inhalation. Suspicious 15500block of South Siskiyou Loop: A man reported an unknown person broke into his neighbor's shed Friday. The man is the caretaker for the property so does not know if anything is missing. 12100block of Angel Court: Extra patrol was requested Saturday due to heavy vehicle traffic at odd hours and recent the s in the area. East and Solano streets, Corning: It was reported Friday that three gunshots were heard in the area, pos- sibly near Rolling Hills Clinic. Corning Police Depart- ment: A man recorded a call from a person who was offering him a government grant if an iTunes gi card was purchased and caller be sent money. The call was considered a scam phone call. The 6800block of Pueblo Point: It was reported Saturday two firearms were stolen from an unsecured vehicle. Lincoln Street: A woman reported Sunday items were stolen from around her resi- dence and garage. Vista Ridge Apartments: It was reported Sunday the office at the apartments on Southridge Drive was broken into and keys to apartments are missing. Stolen Vehicle Walmart: A vehicle was stolen Saturday night from the parking lot. The vehicle was located at the AMPM store on South Main and a man was arrested. Vandalism 23600block of Moon Road: A woman reported sometime Friday her mailbox was destroyed. The total loss is $40. Best Western Plus Corn- ing Inn: It was reported Fri- day there were two vehicles with broken windows and several others were possibly ransacked. The Hope Chest: Officers checked the building a er an alarm was activated Sunday at 5:15a.m. It was discovered an unknown subject entered the build- ing by unknown means. An interior door was damaged but it was unknown whether anything was stolen. Policelogs COURTESY PHOTO ReedsCreekSERRFstudentsspendana ernoonwithrobots.Itisallapartofthesix-weekLegoMindstorm Programming curriculum. Students have enjoyed designing a program that allows the robots to dance, navigate a set course and complete a designated task. Picture are fourth-graders Brandon Porter, Tyler Peterson, Grace Bish, and Jamiee Porter. SERRF REEDSCREEKSTUDENTS LEARN ALL ABOUT ROBOTS The strike of the river boat deckhands was set- tled this afternoon by compromise between the shipping companies and the strikers. C. A. King, agent for the Norther Elec- tric, was notified immedi- ately by the Sacramento offices. The agreement covers all the points in dispute, compromising the wage, working day and other de- mands. The river boats will re- sume their service imme- diately. The night boats from San Francisco will start up the river with cargo tonight. — July 19, 1916 100 YEARS AGO... River boat men call off strike, return to work A total of $1,500 was awarded to five Tehama County students who re- ceived the 2016 Tehama County Republicans Com- munity Service Scholar- ship. Senior Jesus Madrigal of Orland, a student of Corn- ing High School received $700. Seniors Daisy Alston of Orland, Tessa Betenbaugh, of Orland, Sarah Grine of Corning — all seniors at Corning High School and Gillian Coelho of Gerber, a senior at Mercy High School received $200 awards. The role of community service in being a good and contributing citizen is the focus of the scholarship awarded by the Tehama County Republican Party. "As a committee we felt this was one way we could invest into the future," said Mike Holtsclaw, Te- hama County Republican chairman. "Most scholar- ships reward those stu- dents who stand out aca- demically, and that's im- portant, but we also want to honor those who do a lot in order to better the com- munity of which they are part. In this case these stu- dents reflect both." The scholarship was open to all qualifying high school seniors attending school in Tehama County. Applicants must be mem- bers of the current year graduating class from any public, private, charter or home school located in Tehama County who have maintained at least a 2.0 grade point average. Applicants were asked to complete an application, provide two letters of ref- erence and submit an es- say detailing their commu- nity service and why it is important in being a con- tributing citizen. Out of the 35 applicants, eight where chosen as fi- nalist and interviewed. The number of recipients and amount awarded was determined by the scholar- ship committee. The final determination was based on the applicant's essay, interview and financial need. "It was encouraging to meet so many young peo- ple who understood what community service about," said Jerry Crow, a member of the scholarship commit- tee. "They were all inspir- ing." This is the third year that the Tehama County Republican Central Com- mittee has offered this an- nual award, which will help support worthy recipi- ents who plan on pursuing a course of study leading to a post-secondary degree or certificate from a college, university, community col- lege or vocational school. The school where such studies are to be pursued shall be accredited and ap- proved by the appropriate State Department of Edu- cation. TEHAMA COUNTY Republicans award scholarships for community service The Blue Room The- atre will present "Twilight Zone Live! Jess-Belle," written by Earl Ham- ner Jr. and directed by Tom Kinnee, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Satur- day, July 21-23, and 2 p.m. Sunday, June 24, at 139 W. 1st St. in Chico. To win the man she loves, a young Appala- chian woman strikes a bargain with a witch — and pays a terrible super- natural price. Ticket price is $8 at the door. Box office opens at 6:30 p.m. THEATER 'Twilight Zone Live! Jess-Belle' to open Thursday in Chico PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER. (530) 529-1220 100 Jackson St. Red Bluff Water Aerobic Classes Monthly Special $ 28 00 a month No Enrollment Fee Stop by or call for information RUNNINGS ROOFING and CONSTRUCTION SheetMetalRoofing ResidentialCommercial • Composition • Shingle • Single Ply Membrane ServingTehamaCounty 530-527-5789 530-209-5367 NoMoney Down! "NoJobTooSteep" " No Job Too Flat" FREE ESTIMATES CA.Lic#829089B&C39 TUSCANPOOL SUPPLY MonthlyPoolService Equipment Upgrades and more Licensed, Bonded & Insured CLS#944446 40 CHESTNUT AVENUE (530) 527-3262 STOVEJUNCTION The TheNorthState'spremiersupplierofstoves 22825 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff 530-528-2221 • Fax 530-528-2229 www.thestovejunction.com Over 25 years of experience Tues-Sat9am-5pm• ClosedSun&Mon Now Carrying! GreenMountainGrills & Accessories Serving Butte, Glenn & Tehama Counties Smog Check (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. starting at $ 29 95 + $ 8 25 certificate Shop Equipped With 4SmogMachines For Fast Service No appointment Needed 734MainStreet 530-690-2477 11am-9pm Mon.-Thur. 11am - 10pm Fri. & Sat. 11am-8pm Sun. 9 CRAFT BEERS ON TAP Pizza Restaurant Patrick's Pumping SepticPumpingServices Red Bluff, CA Garet Patrick Owner/Operator 530-366-6899 4patricks@att.net Available 24/7 Round Up Saloon Round Up Saloon 610WashingtonSt. Red Bluff Supporting Farmers Market with live music on Wednesdaynites call for dates (530) 527-9901 www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service....................(530) 737-5048 Fax....................................................................................... 530-527-5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Main Office...........................................527-2151 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..........................................728 Main Street, Red Bluff, CA 96080 All Access subscription rates, Tuesday through Saturday: $7.24per week. Digital-only subscription, Tuesday through Saturday $2.99per week. Print-only subscription, Tuesday through Saturday, $4.25per week. Business and professional rate, Tuesday through Friday: $2.19for four weeks. Prices included all applicable sales tax. (USPS 458-200) The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955. Published Tuesday through Saturday by California Newspapers Partnership. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080© 2012Daily News Postage Paid Periodicals NEWSROOM News Tips........527-2151, press 7 Sports............................737-5043 Obituaries .....................737-5046 Fax..................................527-9251 clerk@redbluffdailynews.com ADVERTISING Classified.........1-855-667-2255 Gayla Eckels .................737-5044 Suzy Noble....................737-5056 Fax..........................530.527.5774 advertise@redbluffdailynews.com Publisher, Advertising director Greg Stevens......................................gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Editor Chip Thompson........................................editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports editor.........................................sports@redbluffdailynews.com Production manager Sandy Valdivia..........................................sandy@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation manager Kathy Hogan.......................................... khogan@redbluffdailynews.com Home Delivery Subscription Terms & Conditions: Your subscription to the Red Bluff Daily News is a continuous subscription for as long as the service is offered. You will be billed at the interval you have selected, which shall be your Billing Term. You may cancel by calling Customer Service at 530-527-2151ext 2. You must cancel before the end of your Billing Term. No unused portion of a Billing Term will be refunded. No credit is offered for vacation service interruptions. Future prices are subject to change. All home delivery subscriptions will include the Thanksgiving Day special edition which will be charged at the normal Thursday rate plus $3.00. All home delivery subscriptions will include no more than five additional special editions annually, that will be charged at the normal daily rate plus $3.00, which will be charged to the subscriber's account. To opt out of any special editions, please contact custom er service at 530-527-2151ext 2. Receiving these special editions will cause your selected billing term to expire sooner. A portion of your subscription price is allocated to digital online content. Digital online content is not subject to California sales tax. The sale of printed newspapers is subject to sales tax reimbursement per Cal. Code Regs., tit. 18, § 1590(b)(1) COMMUNITY » redbluffdailynews.com Tuesday, July 19, 2016 » MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A3