Red Bluff Daily News

August 03, 2016

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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 Highway Patrol logs. Arrests RobertJosephRoland: 60,wasarrestedMonday in the area of Sherwood Boulevard and Buena Vista. He was booked into Tehama County Jail on the charge of DUI: drug and possession of transporta- tion of a machine gun. Bail was $15,000. 11600block State Route 99E: One person was ar- rested and booked into jail on the charge of battery following a disturbance about 8:15p.m. Monday. Disturbance Barge Hole: A man was reportedly firing off a hand gun about 5:30a.m. Mon- day. The vehicle left prior to deputy arrival and was seen going into Shasta County. Logs show the driver, who was reported as possibly under the influence of drugs or alcohol, was involved in a verbal dispute and le the area in a late 1980s or early 1990s white Cutlass Supreme in posses- sion of a long barrel hand gun. Fire 24000block Clem- ent Avenue: Firefighters responded to a spot fire in wood chips at 6:06p.m. Monday. The fire, caused by spontaneous combus- tion, was contained at 6:35p.m. Missing El Verano Avenue: A one- year-old white husky by the name of Buddy went missing Monday from a Corning residence. North Street: Two stan- dard poodles, one black and white and one silver and white, went missing from a Corning residence Monday. Snake 14800block Oak Knoll Drive: A woman reported about 10a.m. Monday finding a rattlesnake in her yard and requested assis- tance in removing it. Suspicious McKinley Avenue: A woman was reportedly pacing about 10p.m. Mon- day near a Corning resi- dence threatening to break vehicle windows. Toomes Avenue: A Corning woman reported someone was using her dumpster unlawfully and she was having to pay for removal of items at the Valley Terrace Apartments. She requested a civil standby if she needed to talk to the people dumping things. Thefts Richfield: A man reported the theft of a gun from a residence. Gilmore Road: A lawn mower and weed eater were stolen from a back yard Sunday night. 1000block Lakeside Drive: A metal table, um- brella and a broken air com- pressor were stolen from a residence Monday. Extra patrol was requested. 300block South Jackson Street: A white Honda Civic was stolen from a Red Bluff residence some- time Saturday evening. Vandalism Lincoln Street: Vandalism was reported at the Te- hama County Department of Education. Mill Creek Park: A man re- ported two tires had been slashed while he was fish- ing at the river in the park. He requested extra patrol of the boat ramp area in the evening hours. Alta Way and Bywood: Multiple mailboxes were vandalized in the 18300 and 18200block. PoliceLogs This recipe for crock pot beef fajitas comes from diethood.com. Ingredients 2 pounds beef chuck roast Salt and fresh ground pepper, to taste 1 to 2 teaspoons ground cumin 2 large yellow onions, sliced 1 red bell pepper, juli- enned 1 orange bell pepper, ju- lienned 1 green bell pepper, juli- enned 2 cups tomato salsa 10 flour tortillas, warmed Sour cream for garnish Directions Season meat with salt, pepper and cumin Place in crock pot Add onions and peppers to the crock pot Pour salsa over meat Cover and cook on high for 4 to 5 hours or on low for 7 to 8 hours. Transfer meat to a cutting board; using two forks, pull meat apart into shreds. Remove onions and peppers from the crock pot Add meat and vegetables onto one side of each warmed tortilla and top with sour cream. If you want, drizzle some of the cooking liquid over the meat-filling. Makes 8 to 10 servings, prep time 10 minutes, 5 hours cooking time. CATTLEWOMEN'S CORNER Cr oc k po t be ef f aj it as re ci pe Simpson University for Seniors is offering two courses in September for adults of any age. The non-credit, no- homework classes, which begin Sept. 7, are taught on Simpson's campus by university professors and professionals in their field of expertise. Classes meet 10:20-11:20 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Mon- days, Wednesdays and Fridays. The following courses are being offered. A Wheel Within a Wheel: The Book of Eze- kiel will be 10:20-11:20 a.m. This course pro- vides an introduction to the situation, language and themes of the Book of Ezekiel, as well as an investigation into how it has been received by later readers. The presenter will be Michael Lyons. Learning to Cope with Life's Transitions will be 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Whether the precipitating factor is the loss of health or wealth, divorce or rebel- lion of a child, a new loca- tion or vocation, transition can be a time of chaos and marginalization. A biblical worldview of autonomy, identity and fulfillment brings order and belonging in times of change. Presented by Beth Dummer. Two courses are of- fered each month through April. The cost is $95 per person, per course, or $145 for couples register- ing for the same course. Register online with a credit card at simpsonu. edu/seniorschool. For more information, call Glenn Schaefer at 226-4146 or Dianne Muel- ler at 226-4758. SIMPSON UNIVERSITY Courses available for adults of any age WIC is a federally funded nutrition pro- gram for women, infants and children. You may qualify if you are pregnant, breastfeed- ing or just had a baby or have a child under age 5 and a low to medium in- come. Ne w ly pr e g n a nt women, migrant workers and working families are encouraged to apply. WIC provides nutrition education and health in- formation, breastfeed- ing support, checks for healthy foods like fruits and vegetables and refer- rals to medical providers and community services. Qualifying income levels change annually, but for a family of two monthly income must be below $2,470 and for a family of 4 it must be be- low $3,747. A pregnant woman counts as two persons. Visit www.wicworks. ca.gov for specific infor- mation about income re- quirements. To enroll, visit Tehama County Health Services Agency in Red Bluff at 1850 Walnut St., Bldg. H and in Corning at 275 So- lano St. or call 527-8791 or 1-800-698-4942. ASSISTANCE Program supports healthy families CONTRIBUTED PHOTO Tehama County CattleWomen Jacqueline Leininger and Jean Barton with Caroline Vann, Glenn-Colusa CattleWomen, enjoyed a weekend in Surprise Valley, Modoc County at California CattleWomen 2nd Vice President Debra Cockrell's High Desert Lodge. In her report to the board of supervisors filed with the county clerk, su- perintendent of schools Miss Lang shows that quite a number of schools have lapsed or been sus- pended for lack of schol- ars. Two schools, Butte and Lantz, have lapsed and were ordered closed, while Champion, Dry creek, El- more and Murray have been suspended for one year, Elmore and Murray have an application on file with the board asking to be reinstated. Under the law where a school fails to show a daily attendance of at least eight scholars each day throughout the school year it can be suspended and if they desire to get back again the trustees must make this applica- tion showing they have the necessary scholars to con- tinue the school. —Aug.3,1916 100 YEARS AGO... Two schools have lapsed and four suspended The non-credit, no-homework classes, which begin Sept. 7, are taught on Simpson's campus by university professors and professionals in their field of expertise. Classes meet 10:20-11:20 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. B 6 0 65 N G 52 I 28 B 6 0 65 N G 52 I 28 BINGO Friday,Aug5 th Red Bluff Community Center 1500 S. Jackson St. Doorsopen@5:00pm Bingo at 6:00 pm 12 extra Hot Ball Jackpots Buy-In $10 Early Birds $5 Augustis Tehama County Customer Appreciation Month CALIC#778199 GERBER 385-1153 HINKLE ROOFING & CONSTRUCTION, INC 744MainSt.,RedBluff SUMMER SALE WOMEN'S CLOTHING "One Size Fits All" 30% OFF SOAP SALE L'IPE DE PROVENCE 5 FOR $30 Comeandshopnow! Round Up Saloon Round Up Saloon 610WashingtonSt. Red Bluff Supporting Farmers Market with live music on Wednesdaynites call for dates (530) 527-9901 LaCorona Garden Center 7769Hwy99E,LosMolinos 530-576-3118 General Hydroponics Fox Farm Soil Grow More Fertilizer YaraMila Fertilizer Chicken Feed Garden Plants Mon.&Sat.10am-4pm•Tues.-Fri.10am-5:30pm www.redbluffgoldexchange.com www.angelsamongusall.com SeHablaEspañol 413 Walnut St. Red Bluff 530 528-8000 Summer S ummer Je welry Clearance Jewelry Clearance Get Your Bling On ServingOurCommunityForOver21Years 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. 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