Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/94459
Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20 Red Bluff Bend School Board, 4:30 p.m., 22270 Bend Ferry Road Book Club, 6 p.m., Tehama County Library City Council, 7 p.m. City Hall, 555 Washington St. Cribbage Club, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner, 259 So. Main St., 527-6402 Diabetic Education, 12:30 p.m. St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Columba Room, 529-8031 Emblem club dinner, 5:30 p.m., Elks Lodge, 350 Gilmore Road Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1 per class, Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. 527-8177 PAL Kickboxing, 6 p.m., 1450 Schwab St., 529- 8716 or 200-3950 P.E.T.S. (Providing Essentials for Tehama Shel- ter), 6 p.m., Cozy Diner, S. Main St., 527-8702 Pinochle for Seniors, 12:30-3:30 p.m., 1500 S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Playtime Pals Playgroup, 10 a.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St., Ste. 101, 528- 8066 Providing Essentials for the Tehama Shelter, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and prac- tice, 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building, Tehama District Fairground Red Bluff Rotary, noon, Elks Lodge Take Off Pounds Sensibly — TOPS, 10 a.m., First United Methodist Church, 525 David Ave., 824- 0556 or 529-1414 Tehama County Arts Council Board of Direc- tors Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Tehama County Depart- ment of Education Tehama County Board of Supervisors, 10 a.m., board chamber, 727 Oak St. Tehama County Resource Conservation Dis- trict, 8:30 a.m., USDA Service Center, 2 Sutter St., Ste.D Tehama County Society for Crippled Children and Adults, 11 a.m., Elks Lodge, 350 Gilmore Road Tehama County Tea Party Patriots,6 p.m., Grange Hall, 20794 Walnut St. Tehama District Fair board, 1 p.m., Tehama Room, Tehama District Fairground, 650 Antelope Blvd. 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 community, 12:15 p.m., St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 820 Marin St., Sr.Warden Charles Rouse, 824-2321 Corning Healthcare District, 6 p.m., 275 Solano St., 824-5451 Corning-Area Red Cross Disaster Volunteers, 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Corning Fire Department, 814 Fifth St., 1-800-934-5344 or arcnec.org Domestic Violence Information and Support Group (Spanish language), Call for group time and location., 528-0226 Dance with Juana, noon to 1 p.m., Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 ESL, 9 a.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Healthcare District, 6 p.m., district office building, 145 Solano St., conference room Planning Commission, 6:30 p.m., city hall, 794 Third St. Red Cross Disaster Volunteer meeting, 6 p.m., Corning Fire Department, 814 Fifth St., 800 934- 5344 Soccer training, 4-6 p.m., except for holidays and rain, Woodson School Soccer Field, 150 N Toomes, 824-7680 Tehama County Health Partnership, 1-3 p.m., City Hall, 794 Third St. Cottonwood Community Library Readers Club, 4 p.m., 347-4818 Cottonwood Los Molinos Bingo, doors open at 4:30 p.m., dinner, Early Bird round at 6:15 p.m., regular session 6:30 p.m., Los Molinos Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall, 7900 Sher- wood Blvd., 384-2738 Los Molinos School Readiness Play Group, 10-11:30 a.m., up to 5 years, free, First Steps Family Resource Cen- ter, 7700 Stanford Ave., 384-7833 Paskenta Elkins School Board, 5:15 p.m., 2960 Elkins Road 37th "Service above Self" extraordinary things! 80+ ordinary local people doing Check out Rotary International www.ContactRotary.org Interested in attending a local meeting? Email: tehama.up@gmail.com TEA AND BOUTIQUE Fri., Nov. 30th 10AM to 3PM 25076 Sycamore Avenue, behind La Corona, Los Molinos 9AM to 8PM Sat., Dec. 1st , 2012 , 2012 Annual Spaghetti, Meatballs & Garlic Toast (served w/ choice of soup or salad) Shredded Beef Taco w/ Rice & Beans Tuesday Special: $8.95 Monday Special: $10.49 Corn Beef & Cabbage (served w/ choice of potato & veggies, soup or salad) Thursday Special: $10.49 Wednesday Special: $9.99 (stuffed w/ bell peppers, onion, mushrooms and cheese, topped w/ gravy) (served w/ choice of potato & veggies, soup or salad) Stuffed Burger Steak Best Homemade Pies in Town • Ice Cream Orders to go 731 Main St., 530.529.4012 open 7 days 5:30am-9pm COMPLETE AUTO REPAIR recommened 30K, 60K, 90K SERVICES AT LOWER PRICES All makes and models. We perform dealer Smog Check starting at$ (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. +$ 825 certificate 2595 Tuesday, November 20, 2012 – Daily News 3A Drought-proof your grocery bill down in history as having pro- duced one of the most severe droughts in the heartland of America. Corn especially was all but wiped out, and that is bound to have a major impact on supermarket prices as we head into winter. Just since July, corn prices have surged 50 per- cent. The summer of 2012 is sure to go effective, tips to steer clear of high prices as a result of the drought. 1) Eat fruit. While the unprecedented summer heat was horrible for many crops, such as corn and soy beans, it was a great season for fruit. Watch for great prices Dealing with this problem will not be as easy as simply avoiding corn until a new crop comes to harvest next year. The problem is that in our culture, corn has a wide array of uses. It's used to feed cattle and poul- try. With the supply so low now, the price of feed corn is way up. There is a very real chance that we will see the price of meat and poultry soaring. Corn is used in sweeteners for every imaginable kind of processed food, including ketchup. And it finds its way into gasoline and ethanol, too. While the summer drought may be over, we should look for higher prices on food through much of 2013. So what can we do? Kathy Kristof, CBSNews.com columnist, recently suggested five simple, yet on fall fruits, especially grapes, suggests Kristof. 2) Switch. Corn, beef and poultry are likely to be expensive at least for the foreseeable future. Reasonable substitutes might be oatmeal for breakfast and lots of fish. Look for products that use simple sugar, not corn syrup, to stay on budget. 3) Shop local. If you before we see price hikes kick in. That's because as farmers saw no end in sight for the drought, many went for early slaughters rather than pay huge increases for feed. This can cause a temporary over-sup- ply of product. When you see a great sale, load up the freezer. Mary Hunt 4) Stock up. There may still be time to stock up on meat and poultry SACRAMENTO (AP) — The California Depart- ment of Motor Vehicles is trying a humorous approach to answer common questions online. It introduced the ''DMV AnswerMan'' on Tuesday, releasing the first in what will be a series of nine Inter- net videos on its website, http://bit.ly/SZKEs5 . The two-minute video addresses how to get a Cali- fornia driver's license. It features 'AnswerMan' 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 • Christopher William Clark, 56, Red Bluff was arrested at Modern Cleaners Saturday for failure to appear after written promise. Bail was $1,500,000. • Marsil Alan Denudt, 43, Redding was arrested for felony second degree burglary, three misde- meanor charges of failure to appear after written promise and misdemeanor driving on a suspended license. Bail was $500,000. • Roger Lee Hayden Jr., 41, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday for possession of a controlled substance. Bail was $15,000. • Nicolas Hernandez- Mendoza, 32, Corning was arrested on Kraft Avenue Saturday for false citizen- ship and perjury. Bail was $25,000. • Curtis Lee Landing- ham, 32, Vina was arrested Sunday on Highway 99E near Hogsback for posses- sion of a controlled sub- stance. Bail was $10,000. • Dusty Lane Rhoads, 50, Red Bluff was arrested Friday near Tractor Supply for misdemeanor probation violation. Rhoads is an AB 109 parolee and has an out- standing under the influence of a controlled substance misdemeanor charge. Logs show someone reported a man without pants was at a homeless encampment. • Michael Patrick Van- gundy, 50, Gerber was arrested Sunday on Ventura Avenue for failure to appear on a felony charge. Bail was $40,000. • Darek Jessie Zeimet, 23, Cottonwood was arrest- ed Saturday on Del Norte Drive for assault with a deadly weapon and threat- ening a crime with the intent to terrorize. Bail was $160,000. ed on Walnut Street Sunday. • A burglary was report- ed on Pine Street early Monday. •A vacation home on the 17000 block of Prentice Road was burglarized sometime since July. The front door was kicked in and food and miscellaneous items taken. Burglary •A burglary was report- Prowler •A 74-year-old woman reported a man was looking through her window around 8:30 p.m. Saturday on the 19000 block of Country Hills Drive. She told the man to leave and he did. •A 29-year-old woman on Sherman Drive reported someone was trying to get into her house around 4 a.m. Friday. The man wearing a black hoodie was trying all the doors and windows before eventually leaving to go the neighbor's house across the street. Theft •A purse and cell phone charger were taken from an Lotto numbers SACRAMENTO (AP) — The winning num- bers drawn Saturday night in the California Lottery's ''SuperLotto Plus'' game were: 8-9-16-22-26. Meganumber: 15. Gold Exchange Christmas The presents Help us fill our wish lists www.manttus.com/christmasforacause for A Cause Nov. 23rd your jewelry purchase25%off and get 423 Walnut St. Red Bluff 528-8000 to Dec.15th do not live in the drought- stricken regions, look to your local farmers mar- kets and independent grocers for locally grown produce, meat, poultry and eggs. That's where we can save a bundle, promises Kristof. Everyday Cheapskate Price hikes are going to hit processed foods more than raw ingredients. To stay clear of those budget- busters, cook at home from scratch, and you'll just natu- rally avoid many processed foods. That's good for your budget and for your health, too. 5) Cook your meals. you don't know what chicken costs normally, you'll have a difficult time knowing if $.79 a pound for whole chickens is a good deal or not. Just so you know, it is. And when you see that, back up the truck. degree in nutrition to figure out food prices. But it's to your advantage to know your prices. For example, if You don't really need a 'AnswerMan' to field Calif. drivers' questions describing how to make an appointment, which docu- ments to bring to the DMV office and what to expect. Other videos will be released monthly on topics that include registering a vehicle for the first time, steps to take if a vehicle fails a smog test and selling or trans- ferring a vehicle. The videos were produced in-house. The DMV describes the video series as a way to inform motorists. unlocked vehicle on Wiltsey Road Friday. •Walmart reported Fri- day a white man with a black hoodie and beard named "Ben" stole a cell phone and left his old phone behind. • A cell phone was reported stolen at Taco Bell Friday. • Sheri's reported two men left without paying their bill early Saturday. • Someone on Sacra- mento Avenue reported some checks were stolen and cashed. • A Walton Avenue resi- dent reported the theft of checks. • Someone on Luning Street reported a theft from their checking account. • Sunday afternoon it was reported people driving in the area of Schwab and Bidwell streets in a smaller red pickup were stealing landscape boulders. • Motel 6 reported the theft of lawn chairs Sunday. • A resident on the 24000 block of Tehama Vina Road reported the theft of 100 morphine tablets and a red and yellow can containing about $100 in change Sun- day. ished for throwing eggs. The remainder of eggs were destroyed. The cause of a fire reported at 8:40 a.m. Satur- day on Brushtail Road, cross of Indian Camp Road, is undetermined. The fire, which according to Tehama County Sheriff's logs was reported as vandalism involving an ATV and rid- ing lawn mower set on fire, cause $6,000 damage with a $250,000 save. Fire Someone reported at 10:10 a.m. Saturday that someone had come into the Carniceria Dos Amigos on Solano Street and hit a cus- tomer with a metal pipe. The Suspect fled toward the left side of the building and got into a gray Honda. Violence •Jewelry and other items were reported stolen from a residence on the 18000 block of Basler Road. Egged A woman reported Fri- day at 8:57 p.m. being hit in the back with an egg thrown from a dark colored sedan in the area of Fig Lane and Houghton Avenue. A sec- ond person flagged down an officer and reported their vehicle had been egged ear- lier in the evening in the area of South Street. The officer contacted Aaron Gash, Travis Rich and 3 teens who were admon- Collisions • In the Corning area, Mark Thomas, 67, of Corn- ing tried to pass Matthew Peacher, 33, of Vina who had stopped on South Avenue east of Stephens Road to make a left turn onto Stephens. Thomas lost control of his vehicle due to the wet road, rearending Peacher's vehicle about 4:45 p.m. Friday. A third vehicle driven by Jorge Curiel, 40, of Orland was approaching from behind and tried stopping, but was unable to avoid colliding with Thomas' vehicle. • Karrie Lopes, 41, of Anderson was driving south on Interstate 5, north of Hooker Creek Road about 5 a.m. Saturday in heavy rain when her vehicle hydroplaned while she was passing a big rig. The vehi- cle spin into the center median, hitting the guard rail.

