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TheBlueRoomTheatre will present "A Kid walks into the Bar," written by Craig Blamer, the distilla- tion of 20 years deep un- dercover as a barfly. Performance is set for 7:30 p.m. through Sunday, Aug. 28 at the Blue Room Theatre, 139 W. 1st St. in Chico. A young girl is drafted into becoming a bar- tender at a Chico bar and is quickly schooled by co- workers and regulars. With a great pour comes greater responsibility. Tickets for sale online, at the Bookstore or at the door. Box office opens at 6:30 p.m. BLUEROOMTHEATRE 'A Kid walks into the Bar' opens Thefollowinginformation is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Red Bluff Fire, Tehama County Sher- iff's Department, Corning Police Department, Corning Fire, Cal Fire and California Highway Patrol logs. Animal 15000blockPaskenta Road: A woman requested information regarding a baby raccoon she had contained. Arrest MisaelEzequielMorales: 24, of Corning was arrested Wednesday at Maywood Middle School and booked into Tehama County Jail on the charges of resisting or obstructing a peace officer and disorderly conduct: alcohol. Bail was $3,000. Officers responded about 8p.m. Tuesday to a report of a man on foot saying odd things and challenging people to fight in the area. Break-in WalnutStreet: A possible break-in was reported at Farmer's Insurance about 8 a.m. Wednesday when an employee reported Bay Alarm called about 7a.m. regarding an alarm and they found a broken spot in the mail slot and the door to the business was open. Missing SixthStreet: A black and white lab and hound mix was reported missing from a Corning residence. Suspicious WalbridgeStreet: Unknown persons reportedly dumped garbage in a man's driveway between 10p.m. Tuesday and 5a.m. Wednesday. AlohaStreet: A Red Bluff resident returned home to find the blinds to a bedroom window open and reported someone had entered the residence about 11a.m. Wednesday. The s AshStreet: A vehicle was stolen. BrearcliffeDrive,cross ofPeterson: A vehicle was gone through and two hand- guns were missing from it. MarinStreet: A the of items taken from a carport in Corning took place between 3p.m. Monday and 6a.m. Wednesday. EdithAvenue: A rear license plate was stolen Tues- day evening from a 2012 Chevrolet Cruze at a Corning residence. LutherRoad: A wood burn- ing stove was stolen from a residence somewhere around June 10. Luther Road: A man was reportedly stuffing beer into a black satchel at Walmart about 2:45p.m. Wednesday. Robert Alan Jones, 62, of Red Bluff was cited and released on the charge of the . A separate incident of the happened around 10 p.m. Wednesday involving Christopher Robert Thomp- son, 27, of Red Bluff who was arrested and booked into jail on the charge of trespassing, possession of a controlled substance and possession of a controlled substance paraphernalia a er he reportedly stuffed items from the food depart- ment into his backpack. GentryWay: A man reported someone entered his garage and took items between Tuesday evening and Wednesday morning. HowellAvenue: Yard tools including clippers were taken from a residence. 8100blockStateRoute 99E: a man reported items were stolen from his mini storage unit. Trespass HickoryStreet: A warn- ing was given to a man who was reportedly inside a condemned residence about 1:30p.m. Wednesday and refusing to leave. Police logs CentralTehamaKiwanismembersPatBrown,Shelly Patchen, Willie Rodriguez and Joyce Bundy wait to distribute free lunches at the Los Molinos Methodist Church. This daily free lunch program has been avail- able to any and all during the summer months. Started by church volunteers, this program starts when the summer SERF program ends and continued until school started Aug. 17. The program served an average of more than 40 lunches daily. Thank you to the volunteers of the Methodist Church for allowing Central Tehama Kiwanis to make a difference in the day of a child or adult's life. Not pictured is Jack Pratt. LOS MOLINOS Kiwanians serve free lunches to area youth After ordering my sub- marine sandwich, I placed myself at the corner ta- ble and, when given the luxury of some ex- tra time, en- gaged in one of my favor- ite activi- ties: people watching. On the sidewalk outside the window in bustling downtown Seattle walked a nondescript gentleman. He appeared to be on break from one of the lo- cal offices and was walk- ing a leashed Beagle when he stopped outside the restaurant. Unfortunately, the only accurate descrip- tion that comes to me is "average." He was about 40, dark hair, six feet tall, normal build, dressed in black slacks, a blue but- ton-down shirt, and sport coat. Deciding he was as good as any other subject of my momentary obser- vation skills, I watched as he approached an- other man I assume to be homeless. I could not hear the conversation through the glass. The dog patiently waited, his brown eyes glancing back and forth between the faces of the two men. When the conversa- tion ended, the man of the street pushed his stuffed shopping cart against the building and entered my restaurant with Mr. Av- erage and his dog, ap- proaching the counter as a threesome. Being the guardian of an energetic Schnoo- dle, "Wille," and our or- ange cats, "Tiger," I have nothing against the more furry members of our families. However, I was raised in a different era, and I am under the im- pression health code reg- ulations prevent pets from entering restaurants unless deemed as "service animals." Based on this correct or incorrect as- sumption, I became judg- mental. "How dare he bring an animal in to this restaurant" my inner dia- logue harrumphed. "Who does he think he is? Does he have no respect for the other patrons?" Due to my perception of this seemingly incon- siderate action, I made up from whole cloth an unfavorable back-story about a man I had not even met. Moreover, I managed to extrapolate it to the general sorry state of the world. It went something like this: "He only thinks about himself. What's wrong with people today? Why don't they respect laws anymore? What's the world coming to?" It's ac- tually mind-blowing how many pre-determina- tions are unleashed from one simple observation, isn't it? Yes, I'm embar- rassed to admit it but I'm sure you've done the same thing. Both men and even the dog were staring at the menu board when the man I assumed was homeless asked of the other, "Anything?" "Yes, anything." He re- plied. "Even a foot-long?" "If that's what you want." "How about a drink?" "No problem; get some chips too. And order something for later." The unkempt gentle- man spoke to the clerk, who began slicing bread and filling the space with various ingredients. Upon completion, Mr. Av- erage paid the clerk, bid adieu to his compadre and pulled on the leash for his dog to follow him out the door. The other man stopped him, shook his hand, tak- ing one hand in both of his own, and said, "Thank you. That was very kind." "It's my privilege that I have enough to give. Good luck to you." With that, the two, dog in tow, exited, each going separate ways. I realized that the in- considerate, rude, un- feeling miserable excuse of a man who would be so uncaring as to bring a dog into a restaurant had simply taken a break from walking that dog to treat a stranger to lunch. In that new realization, everything changed. He was kind, caring, altru- istic, and now morphed into my role model. "What can I do that hon- ors his actions? How can I keep this going," be- came my new inner di- alog. It's odd, isn't it? We as- sume far more than we can ever know from far less than we really ob- serve. We see. We decide. We act — many times without checking our perceptions. It just might be time to change what we see. Al- though I'm still not so sure about bringing dogs into restaurants. Scott"Q"Marcusis a nationally known weight loss expert for baby boomers and the CRP — Chief Recovering Perfectionist — of www. ThisTimeIMeanIt.com. Check out his new series of free weight loss videos and other inspirational material at www. FourMonthsToGoal.com. SCOTT MARCUS Youbroughtadogintotherestaurant? That nearly terminated in a serious automobile ac- cident occurred yesterday morning about four o'clock about three miles south of Red Bluff of Red Bank creek hill. Mrs. Rhonda Menzel, widow of William Menzel, a former Shasta county business man, accompa- nied by Miss Ethel Rambo of Stockton, was on her way home from Stockton, tak- ing the night drive in order to avoid the heat of the day. Miss Ethel was driving a large seven passenger car, the brakes on the car be- ing out of order. Mrs. Men- zel was aware of this fact, but as is customary with her when she came to a hill like the one on Red Bank Creek she always goes up on the high. Not having traveled this road before she was not familiar with the length of the hill, but notwithstanding this she started to climb it, and when she was within ten or fifteen feet of the top her engine choked down and the car lacking proper control with the brakes backed down the hill and went over the grade, turn- ing over twice and finally rested on its side. Both women stayed with the car throughout until the last turn when it threw Miss Rambo out and caught her right arm under the car. Mrs. Men- zel being at the wheel was somewhat bruised up but she finally crawled out and went to the assistance of the young lady. Unable to raise the car she dug the dirt from around the hand of Miss Rambo with her hands and in this way re- leased the young lady. The two women then got back on the road and started for Red Bluff afoot. Before they had gone very far, however, William Men- zel, her son, and a Mr. Douglas, who had preceded the women in another car returned from Red Bluff. Mr. Menzel after reaching Red Bluff became alarmed at the non-arrival of his mother and immediately drove back, picked them up and rushed them to Red Bluff for medical treatment. It was found, however, that neither one of the women were seriously injured. — Aug. 26, 1916 100 YEARS AGO... 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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. 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