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Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P.O.Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 Red Bluff Alzheimer's and dementia support group, 6 p.m., Lassen House, 705 Luther Road, 529-2900 Cribbage Club, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner, 259 So. Main St., 527-6402 First Five Tehama, 3-5 p.m. Tehama County Department of Education, 1135 Lincoln St. Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1 per class, Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St., 527- 8177 International Order of the Rainbow for Girls, 6:45 p.m., Masonic Hall 822 Main St. 527-6715 PAL Kickboxing, 6 p.m., 1450 Schwab St., 529- 8716 or 200-3950 Pinochle for Seniors, 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., 1500 So. Jackson St., Free, 527-8177 Playtime Pals Playgroup, 10 a.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Suite 101, 528- 8066 Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and practice, 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building at Tehama District Fair- grounds Red Bluff Emblem club dinner, 5:30 p.m. Red Bluff Rotary, noon, Elks Lodge Red Bluff Union Elementary School District board meeting, 5:30 p.m., 1755 Airport Blvd. Take Off Pounds Sensibly — TOPS, 10 a.m., First United Methodist Church, 525 David Ave., 824-0556 or 529-1414 Tehama County Board of Supervisors, 10 a.m., board chamber, 727 Oak St. Tehama County Tea Party Patriots,6 p.m., Grange Hall, 20794 Walnut St. Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1932, 7 p.m.Vet- erans Building, Oak St. Weight Watchers meeting, 9 a.m., 6 p.m., weigh- in starts half-hour before meetings, 485 Antelope Blvd., #N, next to Bud's Jolly Kone, 1-800-651-6000 Corning Bible reading and noon day prayers for the com- munity, 12:15 p.m., St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 820 Marin St., Sr.Warden Charles Rouse, 824-2321 City Council, 7:30 p.m., City Hall, 794 Third St. Dance with Juana, noon to 1 p.m., Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 Disabled American Vets,7 p.m., Veterans Memor- ial Hall, 1620 Solano St. Domestic Violence Information and Support Group (Spanish language), Call for group time and location., 528-0226 ESL class, 9 a.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Jewelry beading class, 9:30 a.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Soccer training, 4-6 p.m., except for holidays and rain, Woodson School Soccer Field, 150 N. Toomes, 824-7680 Gerber Tehama Cemetery District, 4 p.m., cemetery office, 7772 Woodland Ave. Los Molinos School Readiness Play Group, 10-11:30 a.m., up to 5 years, free, First Steps Family Resource Center, 7700 Stanford Ave., 384-7833 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 Red Bluff Adult Carving Class, 10 a.m. to noon, Red Bluff Veterans Memorial Hall, Corner of Jackson and Oak streets, 527-0768 Al-Anon, noon to 1 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Jef- ferson and Hickory Alcohol, Anger and Abuse Group, Call for group time and location, 528-0226 BMX practice races, 5:30 p.m., Red Rock BMX Track, Tehama District Fairground, $3 Community Good News Club, 6-8 p.m., North Val- ley Baptist Church, 345 David Ave., $10, 527-0543 Dance with Juana, noon to 1 p.m., Corning Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 Elks duplicate bridge, noon, Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road, 275-4311 Farmers Market, 5-8 p.m., corner of Washington and Pine streets, 527-6220 Nurturing Parenting Dads Program, 10 a.m. to noon, 1860 Walnut St. #D, Shasta Room, call Keith at 527-8491, ext. 3012 Nurturing Skills for Teen Parents, 9 to 10 a.m., 1900 Walnut Street, 527-8491, ext. 3012 Red Bluff Kiwanis, noon, Elks Lodge Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and practice, 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building at Tehama District Fair- grounds Senior Dance, 7 p.m., Westside Grange, Walnut Street Soroptimist International of Red Bluff, 5:30 p.m., Community and Senior Center, 1500 S. Jackson St., siredbluffclub@yahoo.com Team Kid,5:30 p.m., First Southern Baptist Church, 585 Kimball Road, 527-5083 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments, 10 a.m.to 2 p.m., free by appointment only, Youth Empow- erment Services, 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 Tehama Coffee Party Loyalists, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner 259 Main St. Tuesday, September 25, 2012 – Daily News 3A Teen money crunch dom. You want them to take responsibility for their actions. They want decision- making power. You want them to make the right choic- es. They are struggling to break away. You cannot bear the thought of letting go. Welcome to adolescence. Take a teenager with an attitude of entitlement; mix in his desire for inde- pendence, and stir in a generous dose of financial ignorance. Now, expose the result to an already stretched-to- the-limit household income, and you have the perfect recipe for parent-teen strife. They want independence and free- recovery, we developed a simple kid- sized financial plan. In short, we assigned to each of our boys a portion of the family's financial resources to manage -- an amount commen- surate with each son's age, needs and ability. They had Not surprisingly, most conflicts between teens and parents find their roots in money issues. So what's a family to do? Are teen-parent money conflicts inevitable? Must parents white-knuckle it through the teen years and hope everyone comes out OK at the other end? There is a better way. While our two boys were still young, we recognized an alarming propensity toward narcissism, entitle- ment and dissatisfaction. And why not? From the moment they were born, we did what came naturally. We overindulged them. As a part of my journey to financial Police reports The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol. Arrests •Tabitha Marie Fischer, 19, Orangevalle and Sal- vador Cruz Valle Torres, 32, Anaheim were arrested Fri- day at Super 8 Motel in Corning. Torres was charged with using others' identification or credit cards, forging access to a card to defraud and making equipment to fake cards. Fischer was charged with using others' identification or credit cards, forcing access to a card to defraud and altering account data. Bail for each was $250,000. • Carlos Lugo Fuentes, 40 and Rube Hernandez Jr., both of Desert Hot Springs were arrested Friday at Highway 36W and Dibble Creek for possession of a controlled substance for sale, transportation of a con- trolled substance and com- mitting a felony while armed. Hernandez was charged with an additional account of felon with a firearm. Bail for Fuentes was $115,000 and for Her- nandez bail was $140,000. •Willa Chiah Connolly- Ingram, 23, San Francisco was arrested at Loleta Avenue and Highway 99W Friday for possession of a controlled substance and transportation of a con- trolled substance. Bail was $30,000. • Brian Hoye Walsh, 34 and Adam Lee Webster, 38, both of Corning were arrest- ed Saturday at Solano and Lincoln Streets. Webster was arrested for felony pos- session of a narcotic and a misdemeanor paraphernalia charge. He already had 10 pending failure to appear misdemeanors, as well as two paraphernalia, an obstruction and trespassing charge. His bail was $81,000. Webster had pend- ing felony charges of vehi- cle theft, brining a con- trolled substance into jail and misdemeanors of evad- ing a peace officer, obstruc- tion, driving without a license and hit and run prop- erty damage. His bail was From the day the plan went into effect, the change was remarkable if not miraculous. Gratitude and appreciation replaced attitudes of entitlement. They became amazing savers. They taught themselves the value of a dollar and how to live frugally. I believe our plan worked well because it addressed the five key moti- vators that influence kids: Power. Knowing their parents trust them with money empowers teens to control part of their environment, which encourages maturation. expenses to cover, deci- sions to make and conse- quences to suffer. What they didn't know was their monthly "salary" wasn't a new expense for us -- it was the money we would have spent on them any- way and which we were shelling out daily. $150,000. • Dallas Todd Lamb, 18, Los Molinos was arrested Saturday on the 7000 block of Sherwood Boulevard for possession of a narcotic and the use of tear gas. A press release stated Lamb was arrested for using pepper spray during an argument, not in self defense and was also found to be in posses- sion of 11 Klonopin pills he did not have a prescription for. Bail was $30,000. • Johnathan Ray Moral- lie, 24, Los Molinos was arrested Saturday for a felony charge of possession of a dirk or dagger and mis- demeanor charge of carry- ing a switch blade. Bail was $16,000. • John Craig Skinner, 36, Tehama was arrested at Sale Lane near McDonald's for felony possession of a con- trolled substance and a mis- demeanor paraphernalia charge. According to a press release Skinner was pulled over for a traffic stop around 7 p.m. Sunday. During the stop deputies learned Skin- ner had a suspended license. He was issued a citation and his vehicle was to be towed. During a search of the gold Honda Accord deputies located a methamphetamine smoking device under the passenger seat. Skinner admitted it belonged to him. He was then placed under arrest. While transporting Skinner to jail, he advised deputies he had metham- phetamine in his sock. Deputies retrieved about four grams of the drug from his socks. Bail was $18,000. • Randall Paul Stroble, 50, Red Bluff was arrested on Antelope Boulevard Sat- urday for a felony parole violation. • Randy Lee Stump, 51, Orland was arrested at Solano and Edith Street for forest land arson. Bail was $15,000. Animals •A woman on the 20000 block of Vintage Drive reported Sunday someone's duck had begun living in her pool. The duck was recov- ered and brought to a near- by duck farm. •A woman on Wilder Road complained of a man who was harassing her hors- es by flying a radio con- trolled airplane too close to them. A 43-year-old man Lotto numbers SACRAMENTO (AP) — The winning num- bers drawn Saturday night in the California Lottery's ''SuperLotto Plus'' game were: 4-7-13-28-34. Meganumber: 4. money gives teens the freedom to make their own decisions, but gives it to them gradually as they are able to handle it. Freedom. Managing their own ing money and being respon- sible for how they spend it is fun. Fun. Teens think manag- Mary Hunt Everyday Cheapskate Belonging. A teenager's participation in the family's money management creates a sense of community. Teens need to belong and to know they are an important part of something bigger than them- selves. know our children, to discover the gifts and abilities God created in them, and to then encourage and train them in keeping with those God-given characteristics and tendencies. Money is an excellent tool to help get the job done. As a bonus, your children will go into the real world well equipped to manage effectively the resources entrusted to them. money, a teenager becomes open to concepts like com- pounding interest, consumer debt, how to handle a check- ing account and credit card, and the basics of investing. Our role as parents is to was admonished and agreed to leave the area. Battery A 25-year-old woman reported to the Red Bluff Police Department Sunday that she had been battered by her 21-year-old roomate Saturday evening, while the two women were intoxicat- ed and involved in an arg- ment. Burglary •A garage on the 24000 block of Electric Avenue was reported have been bro- ken into Friday. Deflated Tehama County Sheriff's Department Sunday and said while he was showing a property to a client near Winans Road and Frontier Drive they returned to their vehicles to find a total of six tires had their valve stems pulled out and were now flat. He said he believed a neighbor had done it. Logs show a deputy talked to a neighbor who was responsi- ble, but an air compressor was now on site and refill- ing the tires and the parties had worked out their differ- ences. A man called the Inflated A Main Street business reported Friday that a man had thrown food on their sign and stolen their bal- loons. Police were told to look for a male suspect in his 60s wearing a cowboy hat and jeans and carrying balloons. Theft • Scoops reported their tip jar had been stolen. •A Charter modem was reported stolen from a Cabernet apartment. • Someone at Dollar ing into the back of their truck. • Miscellaneous items were reported stolen from a shop Saturday near East Canal Road and Altube Avenue. finding graffiti on the public restroom near McGlynn Pool. Vandalism • An officer reported •A vehicle near Kimball Road and South Jackson Street was keyed. • Someone reported two Hispanic juveniles spray painted the chemistry lab wall near the library at Red Bluff Union High School. •A woman reported her tire was slashed on the 13000 block of Crystal Street causing $160 in dam- age. Mastery. While managing •A desk on a porch on the 22000 block of Marjie Avenue was reported dam- aged as well as a window broken at the rental proper- ty. • Someone reported their garage door on the 22000 block of Blacktail Place had been kicked, causing a foot- sized dent estimated at $30 in damages. man was arrested on suspi- cion of DUI, but released to St. Elizabeth Community Hospital with minor injuries following a crash at 11:50 p.m. Saturday on Highway 36W, west of Bowman Road. Brett Seaton was dri- ving east on 36 when he told officers he swerved to miss an animal and lost con- trol of his vehicle, hitting a fence. Tree reported their wallet had been stolen. •A 1993 white Honda Accord with a dented front bumper and cracked wind- shield was reported stolen Saturday from Red Bluff Union High School. Corning Elementary School maintenance per- sonnel reported Friday a storm grate missing in the area of South and West streets and advised he would cover the hole with plywood, setting up a haz- ard sign. Corning Public Works was notified. Hazard • Someone at St. Eliza- beth Community Hospital reported their wallet was stolen. •A Givens Road resi- dent reported their bicycle was stolen. • Someone on the 24000 block of 5th Avenue report- ed the theft of prescription medication Friday. Diversion Dam Saturday morning reported scaring off a subject who was star- • Someone near the Over 25 years of experience The North State's premier supplier of stoves STOVE JUNCTION COMPLETE AUTO REPAIR Street, Corning (530) 824-9700 or (530) 513-2198 Jack & Keri Dean, Owner Visit us on Facebook! * Mention this ad to receive a 10% Discount on any purchase! 811 4th recommened 30K, 60K, 90K SERVICES AT LOWER PRICES All makes and models. 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