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2A Daily News – Thursday, October 25, 2012 Community people&events By MILLIE ZINK For me, this is the time of year when I start thinking of which shrubs or other plants that I have seen lately I would really like to be getting into the ground. If your new acquisitions are planted just as our rainy season starts, chances are they will adjust and thrive. One of my favorite shrubs, which Courtesy photo On Friday, Oct. 19, KTHM Red Bluff, 90.7 FM, conducted its first giveaway promotion. A pair of tickets to Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band were awarded to Gerry Sigler of Red Bluff, right, for the show at the State Theater on Nov. 5. Pictured on the left is on air personality Wild Bill. Gerry correctly answered the trivia question "What is Bob Dylan's first and last names an his birth certificate?" The answer was Robert Zimmerman. Another pair of tickets will be given away at noon on Friday, Oct. 26. A trivia question will be asked about Mark Knopfler just before noon and the first caller with the correct answer will win the second pair of tickets. add a wonderful perfume in the air in April, is the Lilac. I don't think there is any aroma that can beat stepping out your back door and being enveloped in the smell of Lilacs. When I was a kid there was an area where there had been an abandoned house, nothing left but the cellar (they had those back East). Lilacs had been planted all around and many years after the house had gone the Lilacs were 20 feet tall and blooming profusely. I liked to go up there and cut an armful and bring them home. To illus- trate my affection Washington, a route I had never taken before. Blaine isn't very big, so when I saw a little sign on my way through town that said "Lilac Park" you can just bet I went to check it out. Apparently some civic-minded local lady was also fond of Lilacs and had set up a park open to the public with a lot of different colors of Lilacs. You would be astonished at the variety of colors and sizes of individual florets. There were also Lilacs for sale, so it was a good thing I was driving the RV. My dog had to share the open area with some one- gallon Lilacs. What a great find. ioned plant, one year when I was dri- ving down through Canada on my way back from Alaska (I had decided to get off the Ferry at Prince Rupert to spare our dog from two days and two nights all cooped up in the RV) I came into the U. S. through Blaine, for this old-fash- To get back to perfumes in the air, Gardenias are a good choice. The deer are also great Gardenia lovers, so I have to fence them off until they're established enough to survive being pruned by the deer. They bloom at a later time in the summer from the Lilacs and keep the good smells going. Perfumes in the air Out of doors Gardenias are great but their perfume can be rather heavy indoors. Jasmine has its own time of year to be perfume of the day. You need to be careful where you plant it -it can be destructive on a building. Nice smell, though, and easy care. In February there is one relatively small shrub (mine is fifteen years old and only about two and one-half fee across and two feet tall) which puts out a lovely lemony odor when not much else is going on in the garden. Daphne odora lives up to its name. If you plant it where it doesn't get direct sunlight but plenty of indirect light it will grow for you. Mine has grown a little larger each year; however I think they have a finite life span so I'd better be looking for a substitute in the next few years. available which will grow in our area, such as some of the sages. All togeth- er, there is no reason not to live with perfumes in the air. There are other perfumed plants The Red Bluff Garden Club is affiliated with Cascade District Garden Club; California Garden Clubs, Inc.; Pacific Region Garden Clubs and National Garden Clubs, Inc. Antelope preschoolers make a difference SECRET WITNESS 529-1268 A program of Tehama County Neighborhood Watch Program, Inc. Setting it straight There was an error in Wednesday's front page article CalFire lifts burn ban. Burn permits are required until the fire season is officially declared over. After the season is over people will not need burn permits until May 1. The Daily News regrets the error. –––––––– It is the policy of the Daily News to correct as quickly as possible all errors in fact that have been published in the newspaper. If you feel a factual error has been made in a news story, call the news department at 527-2153. DAILYNEWS HOW TO REACH US RED BLUFF TEHAMACOUNTY THE VOICE OF TEHAMA COUNTY SINCE 1885 VOLUME 127, NUMBER 248 Courtesy photos On the Web: www.redbluffdailynews.com MAIN OFFICE: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Main Phone (530) 527-2151 Outside area (800) 479-6397 545 Diamond Ave. Red Bluff, CA 96080 ______________________ Fax: (530) 527-5774 ______________________ Mail: Red Bluff Daily News P.O. Box 220 Red Bluff, CA 96080 CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENT: subscription rates (All prices include all applicable taxes) Tuesday through Saturday $3.02 per week Business & professional rate $2.19 four weeks, Tuesday-Friday Home delivery By mail: In Tehama County $12.17 four weeks All others $16.09 four weeks (USPS 458-200) Published Tuesday through Saturday except Sunday & Monday, by California Newspaper Partnership. Subscription & delivery Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. (530) 527-2151, Ext. 126 NEWS News Tip Hotline: 527-2153 FAX: (530) 527-9251 E-mail: clerk@redbluffdailynews.com Daytime: Sports: Obituaries: After hours:(530) 527-2153 ______________________ (530) 527-2151 Ext. 111 Ext. 103 ADVERTISING DEPT. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Display: FAX: Professional Nail Services (530) 527-2151 Ext. 122 Online (530) 527-2151 Ext. 133 (530) 527-5774 E-mail: advertise@redbluffdailynews.com CLASSIFIED: 1-855-667-2255 SPECIAL PAGES ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS Tuesdays: Kids Corner, Health Wednesdays: Business Thursdays: Entertainment Fridays: Education Saturdays: Select TV, Farm, Religion Publisher & Advertising Director: Greg Stevens gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Editor: Chip Thompson editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports Editor: Rich Greene sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation Manager: Kathy Hogan khogan@redbluffdailynews.com Production Manager: Sandy Valdivia sandy@redbluffdailynews.com POSTMASTER SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO: PO BOX 220, RED BLUFF CA 96080 newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955 © 2012 Daily News The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily Postage Paid Periodicals 90 years ago... Judge Ben Lindsey To Tell Red Bluff People Why Little Boys Lie Tehama county that we are to have a high class lyceum course in this city this winter, and this feeling of satisfac- tion should go to the extent of insuring its success in a financial way and thus guaranteeing return courses year after year. The course is being sponsored by the senior class of the Red Bluff high school, the proceeds of the course to go to the student body of the school. It should be a matter of gratification to the people of — Oct. 25, 1922 Hurry Discount ends 10/31/12 492 Antelope Blvd. 20% off walk-ins welcome with this ad 530•527•2786 Mon.-Sat. 9am-7pm Antelope Preschool visits talks with a member of Red Bluff Police on an Oct. 17 field trip. Special to the DN ference" On Oct. 17, Antelope State Preschool students partnered with Sacramento River Discovery Charter school, Mrs Martinez' 6-7 grade class to "make a dif- have made a turn around by empowering children from the first years that there are "no excuses", we are all col- lege bound. Our classrooms This year our schools November 3, 2012 Rolling Hills Casino, Luncheon & Boutique Saturday, Cattle Women's Fashion Show, Corning Reservations by October 26th Tickets $ 529-9679 to 28.00 have decided that Chico State University is our col- lege of focus, although stu- dents are empowered to look at all colleges in the US. We have created a pen- pal relationship with each other and Mrs Martinez will continue visiting the Preschool at least once a month. The older students encourage the younger, and vice versa. When the group is together, all problems seem to disappear and work- ing together, having fun and being responsible college bound citizens takes focus. Students visited For the Oct. 17 field trips students visited the Tehama County Library, Red Bluff Fire and Police and the Cone and Kimball Clocktower Plaza. Birth announcement Jennifer Mae and Stevan Anthony Douglas, a son, Jason Anthony, 7 pounds, 1 ounce; 20.5 inches, born 12:25 a.m. Oct. 14, 2012 at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff. Welcoming baby are sister Rebeccah Smith, 10; grandparents William and Paula Terle of Corning, Kirk and Juanita Douglas of Los Molinos; and great-grand- parents William H. Terle of Corning and Joanne Kennedy of Chico. Harvest Festival Mount Lassen Chapter, California Native Plant Soci- ety will have native plants for sale at the Farm City Cel- ebration Harvest Festival 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 3 at Bidwell Mansion State Historic Park. Fall is the best time for planting natives as cool weather and rain help them get established in the gar- den. For more information, visit mountlassen.cnps.org. TEHAMA ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH 3rd and D Street, Tehama HARVEST FESTIVAL OCTOBER 31ST Come Join Us At The 5:30PM **FREE – FREE – FREE – FREE** HAYRIDES FOOD, GAMES, PRIZES AND LOTS OF CANDY KIDS LOVE TO CREATE THEIR OWN "SANDY CANDY" EDIBLE ART sweet and sour Mix & Match) (Choose from lots of different flavors –