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Ashurst:LarryWarren Ahurst, 76, of Cottonwood died Saturday, Oct. 8at Shasta Regional Medi- cal Center. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Lewis: Frank Estel Lewis, 89, of Red Bluff died Sunday, Oct. 9at his home. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Smith: Mark Smith, 53, of Red Bluff died Saturday, Oct. 8at Mercy Medical Center in Redding. Ar- rangements are under the direction of Blair's Crema- tion & Burial. Published Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Deathnoticesmustbe 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. Deathsnotices ing held. Funds raised by the non-profit association go towards helping to keep McGlynn Pool in Red Bluff open and other areas for the pool such as chairs for the kids area. Donations to Blues For The Pools are always wel- come. Checks, made out to Blues For The Pool, or cash donations can be mailed to the Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St., Red Bluff, 96080. For more information check out the Blue For The Pool Facebook page. Golf FROM PAGE 1 short presentation by the agencies on what they do." Opportunities include being a part of a mentor- ing program or helping fill the clothing closet for duf- fel bags to be filled with new clothing and hygiene packets for incoming foster youth. With winter coming, there is a need for warmer clothing in addition to ba- sics such as socks and un- derwear. To be a foster parent, there is a minimum of 15 hours of training as well as CPR and first aid along with a background check. There were about 248 chil- dren placed in out of home care in August. "We have about 46 li- censed foster family homes in Tehama County, but try to place with relatives as much as possible," Wehbey said. "There are 65 that have been placed with rel- atives, which is about 26 percent." For more information on the event or how to get in- volved with foster youth call 528-4020. Faire FROM PAGE 1 Officers obtained eight search warrants from the court, including a warrant to search four residences, three in Tehama County and one in Butte County and a search warrant for AT&T, Sprint and Verizon cellular phones, cameras and Facebook accounts, ac- cording to the release. Nu- merousitemswereseizedas evidence during the search. Officers seized phones, computers, a camera, a thumb drive and other items from the homes of Isaacson,MorrisonandSea- graves. According to the re- lease there wasn't a list of confiscated items that ac- companied the warrant for Flowerdew, who was reported to have had the shortest relationship with the teen. Seagraves is being held on $135,000 bail and Isaa- cson is being held on a $505,000 bail. Both remain in custody, according to the Tehama County Superior Court inmate information. MorrisonandFlowerdew posted bail. Courts FROM PAGE 1 JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS Leon Adams, Drew Poppleton, Patrick Hayes and Dave Jackson pose for a picture Saturday a er winning the annual Blues For The Pool Golf Tournament. By Steve Peoples, Jonathan Lemire and Jill Colvin The Associated Press WASHINGTON The "shack- les" gone, Donald Trump stepped up his fierce at- tacks on his own party lead- ers Tuesday, promising to teach Republicans who op- pose him a lesson and fight for the presidency "the way I want to." Exactly four weeks be- fore Election Day and with his campaign floundering, the businessman reverted to the combative, divisive strategy that propelled him to victory in the GOP pri- mary: Attack every critic — including fellow Republi- cans. Those close to Trump suggested it was "open sea- son" on every detractor, re- gardless of party. "It is so nice that the shackles have been taken off me and I can now fight for America the way I want to," Trump said in a tweet that brought new concern — near panic in some cases — to a party trying to stave offanall-out civilwarbefore Nov, 8. In another series of tweets, the Republican nom- inee called House Speaker Paul Ryan "weak and inef- fective," Sen. John McCain "very foul-mouthed" and "disloyal" Republicans "far more difficult than Crooked Hillary." "They come at you from all sides," Trump declared. "They don't know how to win — I will teach them!" Rage against fellow Re- publicans from the face of the 2016 GOP exposed a party slipping from mere feuding into verbal warfare with advance voting already underwayinroughlyhalfthe states. Polls suggest Trump is headed toward a loss of historic proportions if he doesn't turn things around. His scorched-earth ap- proach, days after his sexual predatory language caught on tape triggered a mass Re- publican defection, threat- ened to alienate even more supporters. "Fighting for the sake of fighting is not really very helpful," said former Trump adviser Barry Bennett. Trump has acknowl- edged the possibility of de- feat in recent days, but on Tuesday he tried to shift the blame for his struggles on Republican defections and an election system that may be "rigged" against him. On Monday, he warned of po- tential voter fraud in heav- ily African-American Phila- delphia, a claim for which there is no evidence but one that could challenge Amer- icans' faith in a fair demo- cratic process. Atthesametime,Trump's campaign is considering whether to feature Bill Clin- ton accusers at his upcom- ing rallies. Trump shocked the political world before Sunday's debate by appear- ing with several women who had accused the for- mer president of sexual im- propriety decades earlier. The aggressive shift is in line with the philosophy of recently hired campaign of- ficial Steve Bannon, whose conservative website has long fueled attacks on Re- publican leaders and per- petuated popular conser- vative conspiracy theories. Bannon is now leading the campaign's messaging. The approach has done little to endear Trump to anxious party leaders. At least 40 Republican sena- tors and congressmen have revoked their support for the embattled Republican nominee — with nearly 30 of them urging him to quit the race altogether. RepublicanSpeakerRyan, in a Monday conference call with congressional Republi- cans, said he would no lon- ger campaign with Trump. He said he would focus in- stead on ensuring Clinton doesn't get a "blank check" with a Democratic-con- trolled Congress, all but con- ceding that Trump would lose the presidential contest. CAMPAIGN 2016 Trump unleashes aggressive attacks on own party By Michael Biesecker, Julie Bykowicz and Chad Day The Associated Press WASHINGTON Hacked emails show that Hillary Clinton's campaign was slow to grasp the serious- ness of the controversy over her use of a home- brew email server and be- lieved it might blow over after one weekend. Two days after The As- sociated Press was first to report in March 2015 that Clinton had been running a private server in her home in New York to send and receive messages when she was secretary of state, her advisers were shaping their strategy to respond to the revelation. Among the emails made public Tuesday by WikiLeaks was one from Clinton campaign spokes- man Nick Merrill, who op- timistically suggested that the issue might quickly blow over. "Goal would be to cau- terize this just enough so it plays out over the weekend and dies in the short term," Merrill wrote on March 6, 2015. It did not, and became the leading example of Clinton's penchant for se- crecy, which has persisted as a theme among her campaign critics and ri- vals throughout her elec- tion season. Clinton did not publicly confirm or dis- cuss her use of the email server until March 10 in a speech at the United Na- tions, nearly one week af- ter AP revealed the server's existence. WikiLeaks began releas- ing on Friday what it said were years of messages from accounts used by Clinton campaign chair- man John Podesta. He has acknowledged his emails were hacked. Podesta warned that messages may have been altered or edited to inflict political damage but has not pointed to any specific case of this. Months after Merrill's message, the campaign was still preoccupied with emails. In May 2015, Clin- ton spokesman Brian Fal- lon alerted other staffers that the Justice Depart- ment was proposing to publish Clinton's work-re- lated emails by January in response to requests by news organizations. Fallon, a former Jus- tice Department spokes- man, wrote that unspeci- fied "DOJ folks" told him there was a court hearing planned soon in the case. The name and email ad- dress of the person who shared the information with Fallon had been de- leted. Donald Trump on Tues- day called Fallon's email "unbelievable," and his supporters said it showed collusion between the Obama administration and Clinton's campaign. The dates of court hear- ings would have been pub- licly posted in advance on the court's docket. Fallon did not respond to a re- quest for comment from AP. The Justice Depart- ment declined to discuss Fallon's email. CAMPAIGN 2016 Leaks show Clinton inner circle grappling with email server issue By Jonathan Drew and Emery P. Dalesio The Associated Press GREENVILLE, N.C. A state trooper shot and killed an armed man during a search for flood victims in a tense and dispir- ited North Carolina, and thousands more people were ordered to evacuate as high water from Hur- ricane Matthew pushed downstream Tuesday, two days after the storm blew out to sea. Matthew's death toll in the U.S. climbed to 30, half of them in North Carolina, in addition to the more than 500 feared dead in Haiti. In Greenville, a city of 90,000, officials warned that the Tar River would overwhelm every bridge in the county by sun- down, splitting it in half before the river crests late Wednesday. Evacuations were ordered there and in such communities as Goldsboro and Kinston, as rivers swelled to some of the highest levels ever recorded. Tens of thousands of people, some of them as much as 125 miles inland, have been warned to move to higher ground since the hurricane drenched the state with more than a foot of rain over the weekend during a run up the East Coast from Florida. An angry Gov. Pat Mc- Crory asked people to stop ignoring evacuation or- ders and driving around barricades on flooded roads: "That is unaccept- able. You are not only put- ting your life danger, you are putting emergency responders' lives in jeop- ardy." In the hard-hit town of Lumberton, along the bloated Lumber River, sporadic looting was re- ported, and a North Car- olina trooper searching for people trapped by the floodwaters killed a man who confronted officers with a gun Monday night, police said. Authorities gave few details, but McCrory said the shooting happened in "very difficult circum- stances," adding: "Tension can be high when people are going through very, very emotional circum- stances." In Lumberton, patience was wearing thin. Ada Page, 74, spent two nights sleeping in a hard plastic folding chair at a shelter put together so hastily there were no cots and people had to walk outside in the back to use portable toilets. She com- plained she didn't even have her children's tele- phone numbers with her. "I left at home all my clothes, everything. The only thing I have is this child and what I was driv- ing," said Page, who was with the 8-year-old grand- daughter she takes care of. HURRICANE MATTHEW No rt h Ca ro li na b ra ce s for more flooding in downstream towns ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hillary Clinton's campaign manager John Podesta, second from right, pauses while speaking with senior aide Huma Abedin aboard Clinton's campaign plane while traveling to Miami, on Tuesday for a rally. 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 Patrick's Pumping SepticPumpingServices Red Bluff, CA Garet Patrick Owner/Operator 530-366-6899 4patricks@att.net Available 24/7 ThePassingParadeisbroughttoyoubyMinchPropertyManagement, 760 Main Street specializing in commercial leasing and sales. 530 527-5514 THEPASSINGPARADE (FrommyISaycolumnofJune,1966) Minch Market, at 632 Main Street, was just oneof the struggling businesses in Red Bluff in the 1930's. The most successful merchants were located on two blocks north and south of the town clock and the rivalry was keen and spirited for the best promotional schemes. A baseball team was sponsored by the 600 block merchants on Main…and passes to movies at the State Theatre were handed out to cash patrons of the retail stores. During the early years following the Great Depression of 1929, "scrip" was printed and available in lieu of cash. It could be traded or later redeemed for hard cash. Scrip apparently kept people supplied with necessities during those trying times. During this period even some local governments were forced to pay employees in scrip. However, it seemed to me, as a seven year old boy, an ideal time of life. We lived across the alley and directly behind the store. A few years after getting the store started, and back on its feet following the depression, father bought the vacant lot at 635 Rio and instructed contractor Walter Tu rnstead to build us a 3 bedroom 1 bath home thereon. Mother had one requirement. As the house would be facing the river, she asked for a very large glass living room window, and got it. Several years later I awoke one morning to ob- serve, through said window, the collapse of the old Oak Street bridge which plunged at least one truck driver into the drink but without loss of life, as I recall. But, back to the store: On warm summer mornings, with grammar school in recess and little to do, I would pull on a pair of jeans and walk bare- foot out our back yard and across the alley to the store. There were two dock-high landings with huge metal doors on the back of the store and I would sit with bare back against their warmth awaiting the store to open. When the doors swung open I would peruse the boxes in the rear storage area to see if any remnants such as candy bars or pretzels were left behind…then it was up and skipping through the store to check out the most recent displays in hopes they would contain free samples. As a last resort, not finding br eakfast amongst the displays, I could enter the re- frigerated rooms behind the meat department and avail my- self of garlic sausage and dill pickles…the latter stored in 50 gallon wooden barrels. The fact that outside the coolers, on the alley, was the garage area for receiving live chickens and turkeys for processing, did not deter my savory early morning repast. In this same area was a wooden privy for the use of the employees. On the walls of same was inscribed doggerel such as, "No use standing on the seat because Minch's fleas jump 18 feet." WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 5 A