The Union Democrat 10-13-2015

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I NSIDE:Tuolumne County Health Fair guide ~ MORE INSIDE:Flu shots encouraged; offered by local health departments,A3

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1HE MOl HER LODE'S LEADING INFORMAl ION SOURCE SINCE 185rI • SONORA, CALIFORNIA

TUESDAY

OCTOBER 13, 2015 A special thank you to Union Democrat subscriber Gina Barr, of Arnold.

TOD AY'S READER BOARD BRIEFING

Pic of the WeekTo submit your original photos, email a highresolution jpg file to editor I uniondemocrat. corn. Include a caption with information about the photo. Please, no more than one submission per month per photographer. This weekly feature typically runs Tuesdays.A2

CalaverasHigh

Brown signs AB 30, Redskin mascot banned By SEAN CARSON

skins at all public schools. Assembly Bill 30, authored by Luis Alejo, D-Watsonville, passed overwhelmingly in the Assembly in May. The law goes into effect in 2017. Alejo has said the term is a racial slur that promotes discrimination against American Indians.

The Union Democrat

Calaveras High School is one of four schools in California that will have to change its team name and mascot as

a result of a law signed by Gov. Jerry Brown that bans the term red-

Since May, Superintendent Mark Campbell said many in the community have opposed the ban. 'Throughout the legislative process we got feedback," said Campbell."A lot of people are upset, but I'm sure there are peoplethat are pleased by it.W e understand both sides." The estimated cost of the rebrand-

ing isbetween $60,000 to $70,000, Campbell said. There is a possibility the school will keep the logo, a portrait of an American Indian chief, and only change the name. The move would still leave a large See MASCOT / Back Page

Schools, officers to work closer c

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By SEAN CARSON

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ZOmbie Walk -The fifth annual Walking Dead Sonora, Zombie Walk and Food Drive was held Saturday in downtown Sonora.A2

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Fire above Bridalveil Fall one of several smoldering in park.A3

OPlrllOll —US poverty rate, wealth disparity a crying shame; Who even wants to be House Speaker?A4

Alex MacLean /union Democrat

FOOD 8( DRINK

Suzie Gerlitz, 29, of Leisure Pines, talks about how bark beetles have impacted drought-stressed pines in her neighborhood. A dead pine tree towers over a Pacific Gas and Electric Co. power line Monday in the Leisure Pines subdivision near Twain Halte.

• FALL FLAVORS:Walnuts bring a taste of fall to refreshing salad.B1

• FAST FOOD KNOCKOFFS:Homemade versions of Taco Bell, In-N-Out and Panda Express.B1 • BATALI:Apples, salami come together in autumn salad.B1

SPORTS • SONORA SOCCER: Wildcats top Buffaloes; stay in hunt for postseason.C1 • PREPS ROUNDUP: Wildcat volleyers sweep Amador.C1 •: Limits aplenty at Delta.C1 • BOWLING:Leonard bowls high 700 series, hits first ever.C2 • GOLF CLUBS:Standings of Mother Lode golf groups.C2

Locals feel ignored by

"It's our first time buying a home, and we thought we were so lucky," she said. "A few months later, everything was dead." By ALEX MacLEAN Hundreds of trees in the subdivision The Union Democrat about three miles east of Twain Harte are dead or dying due to bark beetle Suzie Gerlitz didn't know what a infestation, another sign of the cascadbark beetle was when she and her hus- ing impacts from the state's four-year band,Brandon, moved into theirdream drought. home in Leisure Pines this past FebruHuge piles of downed logs litter many properties throughout the neighThe stay-at-home mom, 29, has since borhood like remnants of a catastrophbecome well acquainted with the wood- ic windstorm. The once peaceful quiet dwelling pests that have killed nearly has beenreplaced by the constant roar every drought-stressed pine on her of chainsaws and thunderous cracking oftreesbeing felled. quarter-acre property.

Tuolumne County leaders and tree experts say the problem has turned into an all-out disaster for communities from throughout the county, calling upon Gov. Jerry Brown to provide emergency funding and resources to help homeowners and avert a major wildfire. Gerlitz and other Leisure Pines residents are wondering how far the problem will spread before the state finally decidestotake action. "Are we going to lose every pine on the Highway 108 corridor before someone goes, 'Oh, I guess we should have done something sooner,' " she asked.

state's lack of action

See TREES/Back Page

Tuolumne County school administrators and law enforcement want to see more of

each other. The two meet regularly, but members of the Tuolumne County Superintendent of Schools Office and the Tuolumne County S h erifFs Office are looking for more funding for school safety and wellness programs. The push comes after threatsofviolence atthree localschoolsoccurred within a week of each other. Four boys were arrested for Oct. 2 planning a mass shooting at S ummerville High School, and death threats made at Sonora High and Soulsbyville Ele m entary schoolswere reported to law enforcement last week. Superintendent of Schools Margie Bulkin and Sheriff James Mele will ask for money toexpand theiragencies existing partnership at a meeting with the Sonora Area Foundation scheduled for later today. The foundation has funneled private donations and awarded grantsto community groups since 1990. 'The meeting will address extra measures of support we need in times of crisis," said Bulkin. Bulkin was hesitant Monday todiscuss details or the See SCHOOLS/Back Page

Butte Fire

Helpers fear isolated victims will slip through the cracks By GUY McCARTHY The Union Democrat

From Jesus Maria to Mountain Ranch, many people burned out weeks ago by the devastating Butte Fire are camping out next to their destroyed homes. Their basic concerns include reliable, safe drinking water, electricity and phone service. Some are also worried the+ be vulnerable to heavy rains and postire erosion ifpredictions of a strong f

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El ¹ino are accurate this winter. They want trailers or modular housing units to get through the wet, cold months to come. At the same time there's an army of volunteers working with local, state and federal aid workers to help victims in the 110-square-mile Butte Ere burn, where 475 homes and 343 other structures have been destroyed. More than 870 people in Calaveras County have registered with the Federal Emergency Management Agency

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for assistance, and more than $2.9 million has been approved for victims

to keep warm," said Laura Fultz, 53, of Calaveritas. 'This is a wicked place to so far. live in the winter, and nobody's recogNevertheless,some helpers fear nizing that part, the people who have there are isolated people, camping in to stay and the elderly who are stuck burn areas without transportation or out here without contact." Fultz, who's lived in the Mountain phone service, who are being neglected. Ranch area since 2008, said her place did not burn in the fire, but she's been coordinating with volunteers to help 'Wicked place to live in winter' deliver necessities to isolated victims ''What they need is generators to run their wells, and they need heaters See VICTIMS /Back Page

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A2 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THEtJNIox DEMoohT

Undead haunt Sonora

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Columbia resident Colin Washburn submitted a photo of a "holz hausen" (wood house in German). He built it last spring and said it was "A different, and very efficient way of stacking firewood to dry."

The fifth annual Walking Dead Sonora, Zombie Walk and Food Drive was held Saturday in downtown Sonora. The event attracts hundreds of undead enthusiasts each year and benefits the ATCAA Food Bank and Humane Society of Tuolumne County. Participants include (clockwise, from above): Katie Morgan, 5, dressed as the bunny girl from AMC's "The Walking Dead;" Elizabeth Harper as a "Finger Licking Ghoul;" and people dressed as the Dark Nurses and Pyramid Head, characters from "Silent Hill."

"Pic of the Week" runs weekly in The Union Democrat and features the work of local amateur photographers. To submit your original photo for "Pic of the Week," email a high-resolution jpg file to editor@uniondemocrat.corn. Include a caption with information about the picture. Please, no more than one submission per month per photographer.

CALENDAR TUOLUMNE COUNTY

Curtis Creek School District Bank, Sonora, 532-6272. Jamestown School District office, Friends of the Library Board Board of Trustees, 6:15 p.m., ATCAA Food Bank distribu- 18299 Fifth Ave., Jamestown, of Directors, 3: 30 p. m., district office, 18755 Standard tion, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Columbia 984-4058. Tuolumne County Library, 480 Road, Sonora, 533-1083. College, 11600 Columbia College Tuolumne Park and RecreMi-Wuk/Sugar Pine Fire Drive, Sonora. Greenley Road, Sonora, 533ation District Board of Direc5507. Protection District Board of Senior Legal Advocacy, 10 tors, 6 p.m., district office, 18603 Columbia Area Advisory Directors, 7 p.m., fire station, a.m. to 4 p.m., 88 Bradford St., Pine St., Tuolumne. Council,5:30 p.m., Eagle Cotage, 24247 Highway 108, Sugar Pine. Sonora, 588-1597; 10 a.m. to 2 Town Hall Meeting, 6 p.m., Columbia State Historic Park. Vietnam Veterans of Amer- p.m., Tuolumne County Senior Jamestown Community Hall, Columbia School District ica, Chapter No. 391, 7 p.m., Vet- Center, 540 Greenley Road, So- 18250 Main St., Jamestown. Board of Trustees, 6 p.m., erans Memorial Hall, 9 N. Wash- nora. Summerville Union High school, 22540 Parrotts Ferry ington St., Sonora, 532-2052. Mother Goose storyti me, School District Board of TrustRoad, Columbia, 532-0202. Tuolumne County Demo- children to age 2, 10:30 a.m., ees, 6:30 p.m., library, 17555 Sonora Cribbage Club, 6 cratic Club, 7 p.m., Pine Tree Tuolumne County Library, 480 Tuolumne Road, Tuolumne, 928view Lane, Sonora, 533-0377.

TODAY ATCAA Food Bank distribution, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Columbia College, 11600 Columbia College Drive, Sonora.

Runaway Bunnies storytime, toddlers ages 2 to 3, 10:30 a.m., Tuolumne County Library, 480 Greenley Road, Sonora, 5335507.

Tuolumne Utilities District Board of Directors,2 p.m., dis- p.m., Tuolumne County Senior

Restaurant, 19601 Hess Ave., East So no ra, 536-0449.

Storytime for children,10:30 a.m., Murphys Volunteer Library, 480 Park Lane, Murphys, 7283036.

Calaveras County Farm Bureau, 7 p.m., Grange Hall, 376 Russell Road, San Andreas, 7723987.

Calaveras Public Utility District, 7 p.m., 506 West St. Charles, San Andreas, 754-9442.

WEDNESDAY Calaveras County Water District, 9 a.m., 423 E. St. Charles

Greenley Road, Sonora, 5335507.

3498.

Tuolumne County Superintendent of Schools Office, 175 S. Fairview Lane, Sonora, Room 217, 533-0377.

16929 Chicken Ranch Road, Jamestown, 984-3699, 533-4747.

Town Hall Meeting, 6:30 St., San Andreas, 754-3543. Cedar Ridge Volunteer Fire p.m., Metropolitan 55 Main St., Friends of the Library, 10 Tuolumne County Child Summerville Elementary WEDNESDAY Department Auxiliary, 11:30 San Andreas. a.m., Calaveras Central Library, Care Council, 3 to 5 p.m., School Board of Trustees, 6 Grandparents raising a.m., call for location, 586-7162. Jamestown Cemetery Dis- 891 Mountain Ranch Road, San Tuolumne County Superinten- p.m., school, 18451 Carter St., grandchildren support group, Child Abuse Prevention Co- trict Board, 7 p.m., Chicken Andreas. dent School's office, 175 S. Fair- Tuolumne, 928-4291. 9:15 to 10:30 a.m., Delta Blood ordinating Council, noon, Ranch Tribal Council Office, Storytime, 11 a.m., Calaveras trict office, 18885 Nugget Blvd., off Tuolumne Road.

Center, 540 Greenley Road, 5333946.

Columbus Day Sale!

Extended through Sunday MI18

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Full size set $1S99 King sizeset $2799

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Big Oak Flat/Groveland Supervisors,9 a.m., supervisors Calaveras County Fair Unified School District Board chambers, Government Center, Board, 6:30 p.m., administrative of Trustees,4:30 p.m.,Tioga 891 Mountain Ranch Road, San building, F rogtown, A n gels High School, Room. 4, 19304 Ferretti Road, Groveland.

Andreas.

Camp, 736-2561.

Jenny Lind Fire Veterans San Andreas Fire District, 7 Jamestown School District Memorial District, 9 a.m., 189 p.m., 37 Church Hill Road, San Board of Trustees, 6 p.m., Pine St., Valley Springs, 772-9650. Andreas, 754-4693.

37'" Annual Adult Health Fair Good Health-Life'sWealth

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Blood Draw and Booths Open 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. MotherlodeFairgrounds M any types of screenings-subject to availability

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can Party, 6 to 7 p.m., Fireside Room, Greenhorn Creek clubTODAY house, 711 McCauley Ranch Calaveras County Board of Road, Angels Camp, 736-9522.

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Board of Supervisors Chambers, fourth floor, 2 S. Green St., Sonora.

GALA VERAS COUNTY

San Andreas Sanitary District, 5 p.m., 152 St. Charles St., San Andreas, 754-3281.

Twin size set tr1999 $999 Full size set $2199 $1099

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Tuolumne County Transportation Council,3 to 5 p.m.,

Mur phys Fire Protection District, 4 p.m., Station No. 1, 37 Jones St., Murphys, 728-3864.

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Native Sons of the Golden West, Columbia Parlor No. 258,7 p.m., NSGW hall, Main Street, Columbia, 588-8475.

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This isa smoke free event. 37 S. Stewart St. Downtown Senora

556-9S54 Fgnancin Available

For More Informationor To Volunteer call:209-533-7428


Sonora, California

Tuesday, October 13, 2015 — A3

THE UNIONDEMOCRAT

Flu shots encouraged; offered by health departments By LACEY PETERSON

If someone is sick or not feeling well, they should delay getting a flu shot until they are feeling better, said Kathy Amos, Tuolumne County Public Health nurse. According to the CDC, flu shots are most important for the following groups of people (listed by rank of importance): • Children 6 months through 4 years (59 months); • People 50 years and older; • People with chronic pulmonary (including asthma), cardiovascular (except hypertension), renal, hepatic, neurologic, hematologic, or metabolic disorders (including diabetes mellitus); • People who are immunosuppressed (including immunosuppression caused by medications or by hu-

At a glance

The Union Democrat

It's flu shot time, and Tuolumne County Public Health Officer Dr. Liza Ortiz urges everyone to get one. Everyone 6 months and older should get a flu shot unless they have a medical condition or allergy that precludes them &om doing so. The benefit of getting a flu shot is that it reduces the risk of a person getting the flu and spreading it to other people. If someone gets a flu shot and still gets the flu, it will be milder, won't require hospitalization and decreases the number of days missed at work, Ortiz said. The flu can kill you," Ortiz said. 'There are thousands of hospitalizations and deaths every season." Most flu-related hospitalizations are due to severe respiratory problems. Some people also go to the hospital for flu-related dehydration. Flu shots will be available in Tuolumne County at the Tuolumne County Health Fair Oct. 20 and 21, and at the Public Health Department &om 1 to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays beginning Oct. 27. In Calaveras County, flu shots are available at Calaveras County Public Health &om 3 to 5:30 p.m. Mondays and 8 a.m. to noon Thursdays. The cost of flu shots at CCPH is $26. M edicare is accepted, and nobody is denied access because of inability to pay. The flu is contagious, and it is oftencontagiousbeforea person develops symptoms, Ortiz said. People are encouraged to wash their hands with soap and water to avoid and reduce transmission. If you have a cough or sneeze, cover

your mouth and nose in the crook of your elbow. Children with a fever should be kept home, and adults

For flu shot clinic information,

call Tuolumne County Public Health Department at 533-7401 or Calaveras County Public Health Department at 754-6460. Tuolumne County Public Health has vaccination clinics from 1 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays. Calaveras County Public Health has vaccine clinics from 3 to 5:30 p.m. Mondays and from 8 a.m. to noon every Thursday. The cost of flu shots at CCPH is $26. Medicareis accepted and nobody isdenied access because ofinability to pay.

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Fluseason can begin as early as October. Everyone 6 months and older should get a flu vaccination unless they have a medical condition or allergy that precludes them from doing so. with a fever should also stay home from worktoavoid spreading thefl u to others. This year's flu vaccine strains have been changed from last year, Ortiz said. Every year, the strains used in the

vaccine are chosen based on what strains are circulating. Even when the vaccine doesn't change &om the previous year, it's important to get the vaccine yearly, since people's immune response can wane, Ortiz said. Last year, the dominant flu vaccine strain mutated after the vaccine was manufactured,so the 2014-15 vaccine was not very effective for the circulating strain. This year, the strains in the 201516 vaccine have been updated to match the new predominant strains, and the Centers for Disease Control

and Prevention expects it will be much more effective, Ortiz said. At the Tuolumne County Health Fair, the nasal FluMist and the injectable vaccine flu shots will be available. The nasal spray vaccine is approvedforusein people ages 2 to 49, the CDC said. Only adults will be given flu shots at the fair. On Oct. 27 and after, both adults and children can get flu shots at the health department in Sonora. The flu shot is available at the departmentregardlessof their insurance type or status, Ortiz said. M edicare can bebilled atboth the health fair and health department. Otherwise the vaccine is free or people can give a donation. At the 2014 Tuolumne County Health Fair, 1,567 flu vaccines were administered.

• Women who are or will be pregnant during the influenza season; • People 6 months through 18 years old and receiving long-term aspirin therapy and who therefore might be at risk for experiencing Reye's syndrome after influenza virusinfection; • People who are residents of nursing homes and other chroniccare facilities; • American Indians/Alaska Natives; • People who are morbidly obese (body-mass index is 40 or greater); • Health-care personnel; • Household contacts and caregivers of children younger than 5 and adults 50 and older, with particular Source: Centers for Disease Control and emphasis on vaccinating contacts Prevention of childrenaged younger than 6 months; and • Household contacts and careAlthough flu season normally peaks givers of people with medical condiin Januaryand February,itcan begin tions that put them at higher risk as early as October and continue as for severe complications from influlate as May, according to the CDC. enza. The flu and the common cold are both respiratory illnesses, but they are caused by different viruses. It can be difficult to tell the differ ence between them based on symptomsalone,becausethey can have similar symptoms. In general, the flu is worse than thecommon cold,and symptoms like fever, body aches, extreme tiredness and dry cough are more common andintense. Colds are usually milder than the flu. People with colds are more likely to have a runny or stuffy nose. Colds generally do not result in serious health problems, like pneumonia, bacterial infections or hospitalizations.

Fire above Bridalveil Fall one of several smoldering in Yosemite One injury has been reported so far. The fire poses no threat Fire crews in Yosemite Nato public safety or park intional Park were monitoring frastructure, but the Pohono several smoldering fires and Trail from D ewey Point burn areas Monday, includto Taft Point and McGurk ing one that broke out Oct. Meadow junction is closed. 5 above one of the park's The cause of the fire was iconic waterfalls. unknown, Wuchner said. The Bridalveil Fire had There's been no lightning in burned 30 acres or more bethe area since early August. tween 5,600 and 6,000 feet Other fires and burn arelevation in the Bridalveil eas smoldering in Yosemite Creek watershed above the include the Wegner Fire, one-tenth of an acre around fall and below Glacier Point National Park Service / Courtesy photo 8,300feetelevation north of Road, according to G ary Wuchner, fire education and Smoke from the Bridalveil Fire is seen Monday from Tioga Road, the Middle Fire, information manager for Yo- near Sentinel Bridge in Yosemite Valley. 260 acres just above 8,000 semite. feet west of W h ite Wolf Crews are committed to bucket drops, Wuchner said. to try to fight it. Two Forest and south of Middle Fork suppressing the fire, and A crew on Helicopter 551 Service hotshot crews, from Tuolumne River,the Tenathey' ve used helicopters to rappelled into the burn area Groveland and Sierra, are ya Fire, 415 acres at about insert personnel and make the day the fire broke out among the crews assigned. 7,200 feetsouth of Tioga By GUY McCARTHY

Road, and the Cathedral Fire,42 acres at 9,400 feet near the John Muir Trail to Cathedral Lakes. The Cathedral burn area r eceived some rain a n d snow the weekend of Oct. 3, Wuchner said. The perimeter may continue to smolder in lodgepole pine needles and logs. Where trails remain open,

The Union Democrat

visitorsare advised to hike throughany fi re area quickly andstayon the trail. "Please remember Yosemite and California continue to experience very dry conditions," Wuchner said. "Although it is fall and days are cooler, all visitors are urged to be diligent in any use of fire, including smoking. And be sure all fires are outl" +y,h

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NEws NQTEs Republicans to host town hall meeting

the Calaveras County Republican Party, will feature guest speaker Steve Baird, repreA town hall meeting open senting the State of Jefferson. "State of Jefferson supto residents of Tuolumne, Calaveras and Amador coun- porters are looking to form ties will be held at 6:30 p.m. the 51st state, that will offer Wednesday at the Metropoli- m ore representati on, at both tan Event Center, 55 Main the stateandfederallevels,as well as more local control and St., San Andreas. The event, sponsored by a bigger voice for its citizens.

This isallabout representation and smaller government," a press released stated. Ten counties have signed declarati ons to remove their counties from the State of California, with some having already filed with the state. The same efforts are underway and nearing their goals in El Dorado, Placer and eight

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For more information, call Vicky Reinke at 736-0233 or Ed Langan at 728-5527.

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SI'ORTS • F A S HI O N S UNGLASSES • IN B US TRIAL

Come and Meet Oijr Excellent Staff! The Dance Quarter provides dance training for students at all levels, from beginner to advanced. We are passionately committed to providing each individual the opportunity to learn the art of dance in a positive, structured, and inspiring environment. From traditional Ballet, Pointe, Tap, and Jazz to Lyrical/Contemporary, Hip Hop, Broadway/MusicalTheatre, and Breakdancing, The Dance Quarter has something for everyone! We also offer Toddler and Me, Leaps and Turns, Stretch, Competition Teams, Gymnastics/Tumbling, Dance Acro, Boy's Hip Hop, Cheerleading Technique/Tumbling/ Stunting and Adult classes. Our teachers are friendly, educated, experienced, and professional. Our passion is dance and being able to share that with each of our students is a blessing each day. We are still registering for most classes anti invite Ifou to check out ourwebslte at www.thedancepuarterstudio.corn to learn more. If you haveany questions, please give us a call at 209-288-2812 or email thetiancequarterOyahoo.corn. We are happy to help!

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A4 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THEUNIONDEMOCRAT

Enrroaau,Bown Kari Borgen, Interim Publisher Lyn Riddle, Editor

Write a letter

Uniondemocrat.corn

letters@uniondemocrat.corn

GUEST COLUMN

US pove rate, wealth

dispari a crying shame With no prompting, the stranger standing next to you in line will volunteer, after checking his pedometer, how many steps he has already taken today, as well as how many miles per gallon his hybrid is getting. You may already know that among the baseball teams in the playoffs, the St. Louis Cardinals' pitching staff has the lowest earned-run average, allowing just 2.94 runs per game, or that of all the movies that have won the Oscar for best picture, the lowest-grossing one at the domestic box office after adjusting for inflation was 2008's "The Hurt Locker," which made $14.7 million. We Americans are frankly numbers-addicted. We measure

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years, the nation's economy has added 12 million jobs. The year the U.S. elected Barack Obama president, the country had 359 billionaires. Now, accordingtoForbes,thereare 536 billionaires — 131 of them in California alone. But the nation's median household income, which peaked at $56,895 in 1999, was just $53,657 in 2014. What these numbers do and do not mean — and who, if anyone, deserves any credit or blame for them — will be argued about &om now until our next national Election Day, Nov. 8, 2016. But there remains one surpassingly important national statistic that no Democratic or Republican contender has the courage, the conscience or the honesty to con&ont: In 2008, we in these blessed United States had living among us in poverty — which is defined as an annual income below $24,418, less than $67 a day, for an average family of four — some 13,241,000 children. In the resurgent America of 2014, where billionaires were

growing like crabgrass and where half the members of Congress were millionaires, we had actually increased the number of poor American children — innocent human beings who, by definition, depend upon their elders forfood,shelter,protection and guidance — by 2.5 million, to 15,740,000! This is not just an unwelcome or embarrassing number. It is a national disgrace. Contrast the record in our shameful treatment of children with the country's record improvement in the wellbeing of older Americans. In 1960, some 35 percent of Americans older than 65 lived below the poverty threshold. A half-century later, primarily because of the direct dollars from Social Security, Medicare and MedicaidSS provides over 70 percent of the income for a big majorityofseniors— only 10 percent ofseniors,compared with 21 percent ofchildren,livein poverty. So the same people — you and I — who determined to cut poverty among seniors by a smashing 71 percent looked the other way while over the past six years the poverty rate among the most defenseless in our midst, America's children, was allowed to climb by 16 percent. As we all know, senior citizens do vote, and they are not timid about lobbying candidates on their own behalf. (Haven't heard many bold initiatives &om the 2016 presidential field recently for cutting Medicare.) We also know that kids, especially poorer kids, do not have political action committees, which could buy a table — and some influence — at a congressman's next fundraising dinner. Credit Greg Weiner for reminding us in his splendid most recent book, "American Burke: The Uncommon Liberalism of Daniel Patrick Moynihan," that the New York giant warned how tragically exceptional America would be as "the first society in history in which the poorest group in the population were children." Moynihan's relentless answer was to "get more money directly into the hands of the poor." Let us demand that the dramatic reduction of poverty among American children be an urgent public priority, almost as important as eliminating the inheritance tax on billionaires, in the 2016 presidential campaign. What is each candidate's commitment? How will we measure our progress? Who will answer the cry of the innocent children? We cannot look away.

GUEST COLUMN

Who even wants to be House Speaker? Rep. Tom McClintock of California (who represents Tuolumne and Calaveras counties) isaboutasconservativea Republican as you can find in Congress. As a state legislator in Sacramento, he was a wellknown budget hawk. In the House, writes The Almanac of American Politics, he has been "a faithful conservative vote, though an occasionally nettlesome one to GOP leaders seeking to limit internal dissent." Former California Gov. Pete Wilson has such marked antipathy for McClintock that he took the unusual step of supporting a GOP challenger in McClintock's latest re-election bid. It says everything about how dysfunctional the GOP House has become that such a solo flier as McClintock has taken a stand against the GOP insurgency that torpedoed House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy's bid to become speaker of the House. I talked to McClintock on Thursday after McCarthy bowed out of the race. He was "stunned by the announcement and very disappointed." Last month, McClintock resigned &om the House Freedom Caucus, a rump of some 40 GOP members who have demanded outsize representation in the GOP caucus. Before McCarthy left, the House Freedom Caucus announced its support for Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida — which undercut McCarthy's ability to lead. Though McClintock says he agrees with the group's fiscally conservative principles, he also believes that its tactics have sabotaged the conservative cause. In February, the House Freedom Caucus pushed to defund President Barack Obama's immigration policies — and failed. In May,

Mark Shields is a syndicated columnist and a

political analyst for the NeriisHour on PBS.

LETTERS IN V I TED The UnionDemocra~ welcomes letters for publication on any subject as long as they are tasteful and responsible and are signed with the full name of the writer (including a phone number and address, for verification purposes onlyI. Letters should not exceed 300 words. A maximum of one letter per writer can be published every two weeks. The newspaper reserves the right to edit for brevity, clarity, taste and style. Please, no business thank-yous, business endorsements or poetry. We will not publish consumer complaints against businesses or personal attacks. Letters may be emailed to lettersluniondemocrat.corn; mailed to 84 S. Washington St., Sonora 95370; faxed to 209-532-6451; or delivered in person.

YOUR VIEWS Invite Jesus back To the Editor: It is long overdue but I believe it's time to invite Jesus back into our schools and government.

Norm Gough Sonora

Support your local coach To the Editor: Mass shootings by young males has reached a tipping point creating a momentum that is beyond horrifying. But guns are no more responsible for killing people than spoons are for making people fat. Dr. Sax M.D. and Ph.D. who wrote, "Boys Adrift," says it this way, "The problem is that we have forgotten that boys do not just become men, they are mentored into manhood. Boys must go through a conscienceprocess,the importance of initiation rites were known by the Navajo, the A&ican warrior Masai tribe and the Orthodox Jews. Otherwise they remain caught in a self-protective attitude that becomes violence against the weak. A mentoring process by a strong male serves to equip them to deal with the difficulties of life and to redirect their energies towards the good of the community."

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the next term, Democrats regamed the majority. The Republicans have their largest majority since 1928 — 247 seats — until you subtract Republicans who are willing to sacrifice unity for feckless gestures. The simple fact is that the House Freedom Caucus does not have the votes to put one of its own at the helm. It can only stop other Republicans from winning 218 votes. Rep. Devin Nunes of California, a McCarthy ally, has spent years working on serious policy, only to see conservative initiatives drowned out by the chaos. "They' ve hijacked the whole conservative movement," he lamented. Indeed, he is so fed up with this GOP minority's trying to control the party that he suggested kicking out Republicans who won't support the majority's choice. They don't understand what power is," Nunes told me. Their idea of winning is "no speaker" or a "weak speaker." After outgoing House speaker John Boehner announced his resignation, his former lieutenant, Eric Cantor, took on Boehner's detractors in The New York Times. Cantor often hears, he wrote, the lament of the GOP base that the party needs to fight: "On this I agree. It is imperative that we fight for what we believe in. But we should fight smartly. I have never heard of a football team that won by throwing only Hail Mary passes, yet that is what is being demanded of Republican leaders today."

Debra J. Saunders

the caucusers tried to kill the free trade bill. Failed again. Worse, the caucus forced the House leadership to abandon legally binding action against Obama's "disastrous Iran nuclear agreement" in favor of a symbolic and legally meaningless vote. "A common theme through each of these incidents is a willingness — indeed, an eagerness — to strip the House Republican majority of its ability to set the House agenda," McClintock wrote, saying the behavior has unwittingly become House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi's "tactical ally." McClintock believes that representatives can and should vote their conscience on specific legislation. But when it comes to the party, no Republican should sabotage the leadership. ''We' re now in a situation where at least 29 Republicans have taken the position that if they don't like the Republican nominee for speaker, they will combine with the Democrats against that nominee," he told me. It's a dangerous game, because Democrats could end up cutting deals with 29 centrist Republicans who might care to, say, eliminate the mandated spending caps. Open this door, it can swing either way. McClintock saw a prequel to the House brawl in California's 1995 speakership wars. One Republican — actually three Debra Saunders is a syndicated in a row — cut deals with the Democratic newspaper columnist who writes about minority to thwart the GOP majority's California and national politics for the ability to control the state Assembly. In San Erancisco Chronicle.

The good news is that something can be done about this problem that does not require one new piece of legislation. The answer is to support male mentors. How? If you are a manager, let your male employeesoffearly to coach. Support your local teachers, mechanics, painters and accountants, encourage him to head up a male youth group. Perhaps you have noticed aneighborhood with a young man that looks like he needs someone to take him hiking or fishing, get past your fearsand take him. Ifyou have a son, don't buy or encourage violent video games. And if he has videogames, limit his exposure to them. And finally get him to church and make him realize that there is something greater than himself that he needs to answer to. People create healthy societies, these are all ways a civilized world creates healthy men and civilized society. It's up to us and not the government.

Gunshot wounds and deaths cost Americans at least $12 billion a year. Justice Scalia acknowledged that "gun ownership is not without restrictions." Ergo, gun ownership is not a right — it is a privilege. You do have a right to defend yourselfand property; even Scalia said that — District of Columbia vs. Heller. However, the individual states have the right to place restrictions on guns and gun ownership." 220 million Americans say they do not own a gun. With an estimated 300 million guns in the U.S., that means a minority is hoarding the guns. We can restrict the number of guns purchased to one a month like we now do in California. We can require that all guns be registeredand insured just like our cars. We can restrict the size of magazines (now law in eight states and DC) and the type of weapons, (now law in seven states and DC). And thank you Gov. Brown for signing SB707 — making our schools gunSuzanne Cruz &ee. (The gun crazies will sue of course.) Much can be done to cut the number of deaths. One statistic shows that assault weapons and/or large-capacity magazines led toa 135 percent increase in people shot and a 57 percent increase in deaths. To the Editor: So let's keep the momentum goingTo get change we just need to under- we could save tens of thousands of lives stand these facts. U.S. Military killed in and billions of dollars — and the best part war from 1776 to 2015 — 656,397; gun re- is we do not violate a single right of any lateddeaths from 1989 to2014— 836,290. American. WOW! That is so cool. (Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Domenie Torehia The cost in dollars is abhorrent as well. Columbia

Sousl byville

Keep momentumgoing

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Sonora, California

Tuesday, October 13, 2015 — A5

THE UNIONDEMOCRAT

OBITUARIES Obituary policy

in death by her grandObituaries, including photos, daughter, Diana in 1981; her husband, Walter in are published at a pre-paid fee based onsize.The deadline is 1989; and her youngest 5 p.m. two business days prior son, Cli6'ord in 1999. Her to publication. Call 532-7151, family would like to thank fax 532-5139 or send to obits@ the many wonderfulpeople uniondemocrat.corn. that graced her life since Memorial ads are published the passing of her husband at a pre-paid fee based on including friends at Cosize. The deadline is noon two lumbia Sky Mobile Home business days prior to publica- Park, The 49er Church of tion. Please call 588-4555 for Columbia, Skyline Place complete information. Senior Living, Edwards J ones Sonora, Bank of Stockton, Umpqua Bank Columbia, H&R Block and Oct. 13, 1913 — July 4, 2015 her final years at Oak Terrace Memory Care. Thank you very much.

Roses Sutton

David Lake Watson June 28, 1963 —Oct. 8, 2015

A Memorial Service celebratingthe life ofRosetta Sutton will be held at First Presbyterian Church of the 49ers in Columbia, California at2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 17, 2015. R osetta Su tton, 1 0 1 years old, was born on Oct. 13, 1913, in Champion, Nebraska to William and Neva Hauscheh Rosetta grew up with three sisters, Nellie, Maxine and Ruth, and a brother, Cliff. Rosetta moved to California in the 1940s. It was here she met and married her love, Walter Sutton, and adopted his tw o y oung sons Arthur and Clifford, then residing in San Jose. She enjoyed gardening, walking, canning, baking, cooking, painting, singing, dancing, card games and sewing. Walter and Rosetta enjoyed a hobby of collecting rocks and produced beautiful pieces they displayed in their home. Rosetta began painting at 70 years old. She enjoyed painting photographs that Walterhad taken ofmountain and desert scenery. They found t h emselves in good company of dear friends and family over the years. In their retirement, they built their home in Tuolumne County. There they could garden, picnic, and travel to visit family. They enjoyed their growing family of two sons, six grandchildren in California and Connecticut, and twelve great g r andchildren in California, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., Washington and one greatgreat-grandchild in South C arolina. R osetta a n d Walter's family have fond memories of h omemade ice cream, canned fresh picked peaches, camping trips, rides through the

David L ak e W a tson, born in Detroit, Michigan, June 28, 1963, to his parents, Linnet and L eather

Watson, Jr. H e p a ssed away on Oct. 8, 2015. He was 52 years old. D avid was r aised i n Modesto, moved to S onora in 1978 and graduated from SonoraHigh in 1982. He was a seasonal Firefighter, worked as a carpenter and worked for Modesto city schools doing grounds maintenance. Da-

vid was known for his athletic abilities and vibrant personality. David leaves behind his daughter Aja, 28; his son Jordan, 15; his nine siblings, Karlene Engleton, Derek Watson, L o nnie Watson Sr., Carl Watson, Frank Watson, Lisa Watson, Monique Kaufman, Belinda Wells and Leather Watson III; his nieces and nephews; great nieces and nephews and many f riends. David w i l l b e greatly missed by all. A Celebration of Life will be held at 1 p.m. Friday Oct. 16, 2015, at Indigeny Reserve, 14679 Summers Lane, Sonora, CA 95370.

Death notices Death Notices in The Union Democrat are published free of charge. They include the name,age and town of residenceofthe deceased,the date of death; service information; and memorial contribution information. The deadline is noon the day before publication.

NEWS OF RECORD TUOLUMNE COUNTY

6:57 p.m., Sonora — A man with gray hair, wearing sunThe Sonora Police Depart- glasses, a khaki shirt and cargo shorts was in front of a Mono ment reported the following: Way business offering ice cream to kids. He followed juveniles FRIDAY 4:10 a.m., public peace — A into a store and came out and woman banged on an RV's win- sat on a bench 7:07 p.m., Sonora —A Poco dows outside a Sanguinetti Road business and yelled. After offi- Calle resident threatened to burn cers arrived, she agreed to leave their neighbor's house down. 7:07 p.m., Sonora —A Stable the area. Road man was attacked by a 11:03 a.m., public peace — A woman driving a motorhome on man wearing blue shorts, flipHospital Road reportedly tried to flops and a red hoodie. 6:51 p.m., Groveland — Kids hit a man as he jumped out. The man yelled and threw rocks at on Highway 120 picked up the back end ofa woman's vehicle the woman. 11:30 a.m., theft —A woman and moved it, causing it to not reported her purse was stolen at start properly. 10:53 p.m., Jamestown — A an Old Wards Ferry Road busirock was thrown at the windness within the past two weeks. 5:44 p.m., theft —Tools were shield of a Preston Lane vehicle. 11:59 p.m., La Grange — A stolen out of the back of a truck man was hitting walls, screamon South Poplar Street. ing and "going crazy" because his girlfriend left. SATURDAY 11:15 a.m., suspicious circumSATURDAY stances —A man and a woman 12:01 a.m., La Grange attempted to break into an abandoned houseoffofSouth Wash- Someone on Las Palmas Way said a man was "going crazy" at ington and Lytton streets. 6:13 p.m., public peace — A a neighbor's residence. 7:46 p.m., Twain Harte man and a woman fought while driving away from a Sanguinetti Someone on Lakeview Drive said a woman was yelling, cryRoad business. ing and speaking Arabic at Twain Harte Lake. SUNDAY 8:20 p.m., Jamestown — A 12:29 p.m., animal complaint — Two dogs were locked in a ve- man on Main Street said he was hicle for over an hour outside at attacked by transients.

3:58 p.m., Valley SpringsPeople were crouched behind cars with half-drawn weapons off of Hartvickson Lane and Silver Rapids Road. Upon arrival, deputies found juveniles playing with airsoft guns. The juveniles were advised to keep their play behind the residence. 6:21 p.m., Murphys — Missing medication was reported on Arrests Apple Blossom Drive. 7:47 p.m., San Andreas — A Cited on suspicion of driving un- jersey and football helmet were der the influence of drugsor alcohol: taken on East Oak Park Drive. 8:39 p.m., Copperopolis People were hitting houses and FRIDAY 9:19 p.m., Tuolumne —Keith signs with paintballs as they Michael Brooks, 29, of the 9000 drove on Copper Cove Court and Block of Carrillo Way, La Grange, O'Byrnes Ferry Road. 10:02 p.m., Murphys —A Darwas booked after an arrest on Tuolumne Road at Carter Street. by Laneman saidhe heard footsteps on his front porch. A deer was located in the area. SATURDAY 10:23 p.m., Valley Springs3:15 a.m., Sonora — Daniel Emil Miller, 27, of the 24000 A vehicle was hit with eggs in a Block of Kewin Mill Road, was Highway 26 business parking lot. 11:33 p.m., San Andreas — A booked after an arrest on Longebroken door handle was reportway Road. 3:24 a.m., Sonora —John Al- ed on Pope Street. bert Miller, 61, of the 24000 Block Felony bookings of Kewin Mill Road, was booked after an arrest on Longeway Road. FRIDAY 9:33 p.m., Valley SpringsSUNDAY Kent James Durand, 45, of an None reported. unspecified block of Covey Lane, was booked on suspicion of vehicle theft and receiving known GALA VERAS COUNTY stolen property after an arrest on The Sheriff's Office reported Hogan Dam Road at Silver Rapids Road. the following: a Sanguinetti Road business. 9:33 p.m., Valley SpringsSUNDAY 9:47 p.m., public peace — A Lea M arieOdowd, 25, ofan un9:43 a.m., Tuolumne — A naFRIDAY woman was screaming and specified block of Covey Lane, banging on the walls at a South ked person with corn-rowed hair 11:22 a.m., Railroad FlatGreen Street residence. An of- was walking with a dog on Ever- Vandalism was r eported on was booked on suspicion of possession of a controlled subRidge Road. ficer advised her to stay in her green Road. stance for sale and misdemeanor — A 9:55 a.m., Tuolumne room that night. 12:06 p.m., San Andreaspossession of a controlled subcaller said the chain of a "no Someone was punched in the The Sheriff's Of'fice reported trespassing" sign on Tuolumne eye on East Saint Charles Street. stance after an arrest on Hogan Road was cut sometime Satur1:19 p.m., Railroad Flat — A Dam Road at Silver Rapids Road. the following: day night. West Forty Road man said his SUNDAY 11:47 a.m., Pinecrest — A fence was damaged. FRIDAY 9:30 p.m., West Point woman on Pinecrest Lake Road 11:11 p.m., Valley Springs 3:26 a.m., Sonora —A woman — Vandalism was reported on Shane Colton Corey, 33, of the was heard screaming on Elsey said three kayaks were stolen. 100 Block of Barney Way, was 1:37 p.m., Jamestown — A Highway 26. Court. booked on suspicion of inflicting television was stolen on Seventh 7:51 a.m., Soulsbyville corporal injury after an arrest on Street. SATURDAY Someone saida coyoteor possiBald Mountain Road. bly a dog was in a trap on Souls11:53 a.m., Murphys — Two Felony bookings byville Road. men argued and broke a window Arrests at a Tanner Street residence. 10:59 a.m., Twain HarteFRIDAY Someone on Michigan Drive 1:04 p.m., Arnold — A HighCited on suspicion of driving unsaid a vehicle was stolen within 11:06 p.m., Sonora — Curtis way 26 resident said their brothder the influence ofalcohol or drugs: the past month. Allan Schoon, 26, of the 23000 er pushed them. 5:17 p.m., Arnold — Money 1:26 p.m., Pinecrest —A Sug- block of S table Road, was SATURDAY ar PineAvenue woman said the booked on suspicion of violation and an ID were stolen from a 8:40 a.m., Arnold —Robert Alfront and back entrances of her of probation and threatening a wallet on Highway 4. crime with the intent to terrorize len Morris, 47, of the 200 Block cabin were open. of Stephanie Drive, was booked 5:34 p.m., Twain Harte —Two after an arrest at his home. SUNDAY dogs were running loose and 9:01 a.m., Arnold — Decora- after an arrest on Highway 4. acting aggressively on Sierra SATURDAY tive light wiring was damaged Drive. SUNDAY 12:22 p.m., Sonora — Doug- on Middle Drive. 6:06 p.m., Sonora —A blond las Mitchell Alameda, 48, a tran3:01 p.m., Valley Springs — A 6:58 p.m.,Camp Connellman wearing a blue/green tank sient,was booked on suspicion dog was left in a vehicle on High- JasonAlan Perez, 37, of the 3000 top andblue jeans walked down of causing a fire of a structure way 26. Upon arrival, a deputy Block of Meko Drive, Dorrington Stable Road, threatened people or forest land and assault with a found that the dog had food, wa- was booked after an arrest on and "acted crazy." deadly weapon after an arrest on ter and adequate cooling. Highway 4.

Weekend fire destroys Groveland-area home

Mill Villa Court. 2:54 p.m., Columbia —James Michael Tracy Jr., 27, of the 21000BlockofJamestown Road, was booked on suspicion of possessing a controlled substance for sale and misdemeanor possession of a controlled substance paraphernalia after an arrest on Parrotts Ferry Road.

Tuolumne County Health Department Annual Seasonal Flu Vaccination Clinic 2075 October 208~21 7:00am-3:00pm Mother Lode Fairgrounds Creekside Bldg ' while supplies last

/

By JASON COWAN

The fir ebegan at3 a.m .and The Union Democrat was contained by noon. The fire was fought by resources A fire destroyed a home in from Jamestown, Groveland the Pine Mountain Lake sub- Fire, Coulterville Cal Fire and division near Groveland early Cal Fire in Tuolumne County. Cal Fire said no injuries Saturday morning, according to Cal Fire personnel in were reported and the cause Groveland. was undetermined.

Vaccinations are free of charge, however Medicare will be billed, and donations are accepted. Vaccinations will be available at the Health Department beginningOctober 27 on Tuesdays 1:00—4:00 pm.

Flu shotsfor childrenwill be available attheHealth Departmentonly. Formoreinformation,call533-7401or1-800-585-6606.

DYSON — John Dyson, 91, of Sonora, died Sunday at Sonora Regional Medical Center. Heuton Memorial Chapel is handling arrangements. GODBOUT — A memorial service for Ruth K Godbout, 88, of Sonora, who died Thursday at Alexander Cohan Hospice House in Hughson, will be held at 2 p.m. Oct. 31 at the Sonora Oaks Inn, 19551 Hess Ave. Terzich and Wilson Funeral Home in charge of arrangements.

mountains to Yosemite Na-

tional Park, the Big Trees, a skunk, a rattlesnake, a mountain lion and many nights guessing the shapes of limestone rocks in the moonlight, Columbia State Historic Park with stage coach rides and panning forgold,stories ofgrowing up on the Farm in Nebras-

ka, and the enjoyment of finally reaching the height that we were taller than our little Grandma. This list could go on and on. Rosetta was predeceased

Couple says 'I do' at marathon CHICAGO (AP) — One couple ran away to get married ... at the Chicago Marathon. Stephanie Reinhart says she just wanted a "short and sweet ceremony." Mark Jockel wanted a big wedding surrounded byfriends and family. The 35-year-old Reinhart and 46-year-old Jockel compromised, marrymg at the 8-mile mark of Sunday's Chi-

cago Marathon in the city' s Boystown neighborhood. R einhart wore a w h i t e running outfit and held flowers. Jockel wore a tuxedo Tshirt. They exchanged vows under a garden arch decorated with race medals. The ceremony took less than four minutes. Reinhart says she got her simple wedding and Jockel got "several thousand guests."

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Telephone Email Drawing held on Saturday, October 31, 7 p.m. Open Every Day

JOAN S IOQTIQQC 533-1550 • Downtown Sonora


A6 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THEUMO NDEMOCRAT

1 m1 AND THE NATION AND WORLD

Evidence mounts for strong El Nino LOS ANGELES (AP) — Evidence mudslides develop, it's "not going to look is mounting that the El ¹ n o o cean- like the great wet hope charging across warming phenomenon in the Pacific the landscape on a white horse." will spawn a rainy winter in California, A strong El Nino arrives about once potentially easing the state's punishing every 20 years.Ocean temperatures drought but also bringing the risk of show this one to be the second-stronchaotic storms like those that battered gest since such record keeping began the region in the late 1990s. in 1950, said Eric Boldt, a meteoroloIn the clearest warning yet that gist with the National Weather Service. Southern California could be due for a That would make it weaker than the El deluge, meteorologists said in a report ¹no of 1997-98 but stronger than the last week that the already strong El El ¹ino of 1982-83. Nino has a 95 percent chance of lasting Both of those winters were known through the winter before weakening in in California for relentless rain, strong the spring. winds and heavy snow. Waves pounded "This is as close as you' re going to the coast, mudslides rolled down mounget to a sure thing," said Bill Patzert, a tainsides and floods swamped homes climatologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion and claimed lives. Laboratory, calling this El ¹ino "too big Storms blamed on El ¹ino in 1997to fail." 98 killed at least 17 people, wiped out "In the abstract," he said, "El Nino strawberry and artichoke crops, pushed seems like our savior." But if floods and houses off hillside foundations and

washed out highways. Damage was estimated at more than $500 million. The 1982-83 tempests le 36 people dead, damaged or destroyed more than 7,900 homes and businesses, and caused $1.2 billion in losses, according totheweather service. The NASA lab has been observing El ¹no and other ocean trends for decades. In 1992, JPL, in collaboration with France, launched the first in a series of satellites capable of observing the phenomena on a global basis. Still, El ¹inos can be unpredictable. Some have produced little rain, and some of the most damaging storms have come in non-El ¹ino years. In the last 65 years, there have been just six strong El ¹inos and only two produced major precipitation statewide, according to the California Department of Water Resources.

Democratic debate a breakout chance for O' Malley and others DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Stuck far behind Hillary Rodham Clinton and Bernie Sanders in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, Martin O' Malley needs a breakout moment in the party's first debate to catch up to the front-runners.

And he knows it. "This will really be the first time that nationally voters see that there's more than one alternativeto this year'sinevitable &ont-runner, Secretary Clinton," OMalley said. "It's a very, very important opportunity for me to not only present my vision for where the country should head, but also 15 years of executive experience, actually accomplishing the progressive things some of the other candidates can only talk about," he said. The former governor of Maryland and mayor of Baltimore got into the race at the end

of May, after telegraphing for some time his plans to seek the White House in 2016. The entries of the two others who will be onstage Tuesday night in Las Vegas, former Virginia Sen.Jim Webb and former Rhode Island Sen. Lincoln Chafee, were surprises to most. But all three have one thing in common-

an inability so far to generate any of the enthusiasm among voters that has pushed Sanders into and kept Clinton at the top of the field. All three poll in low single digits in early preference surveys, well below even Vice President Joe Biden, who has yet to say if he' ll make a late entry into the race. O' Malley has been openly critical of the Democratic National Committee and the decision to hold six primary debates, with four scheduledin early primary states before the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1.

Contest dubs 1,969-pound pumpkin the plumpest HALF MOON BAY (AP) — A rippled white whopper weighing in at 1,969 pounds took the title Monday for plumpest pumpkin at an annual San Francisco Bay Area

the Safeway World Championship Pumpkin Weigh-off in Half Moon Bay, south of San Francisco, was no small feat.Steve Daletas of Pleasant Hill, Oregon, won $12,000 contest. for hislumpy, 1,969-pound Growers gathered with pumpkin. "It's been a good year," their gargantuan offerings to try tobreak the world record he said afterthe contest. of 2,323 pounds, which was "I' ve never grown an official set by a Swiss grower during 1,900-pound pumpkin before." a competition in Germany Forklifts and special harlast year. nesses carefull y placed the It didn't happen. m assive pumpkins on an But the winning entry at industrial-strength d i g ital

scalewith a capacity of5 tons as officials from the county

agric ultural commissioner' s Office of Weights, Sealers, and Measures kept close watch. Second place went to Ron and Karen Root of Citrus Heights, California, for their 1,806-pound entry. A $500 prize also was awarded to the "most beautiful" pumpkin based on color, shape and size. W ith California i n i t s fourth year of drought, some said the dry soil deflated their pumpkin-growingdreams.

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Thank you to all that aeorkedbehind the scenes to make this Project a success, We apologize for the omission of thoseere may have missed. 154213 101315

Turkey facesperiod of instability

The measure requires the

centers to notify patients that California has programs to help them access a6ordable family planning and abortion services. The suit was filed by two church-affiliated pregnancy centers.

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v ation,

We would like to thank all of the very generous businesses and individuals for making the spree a huge success, We were able to provide 74 kids from our community with essential clothing, shoes, backpacks, and school supplies,

dent Bashar Assad and the Alawite religious minority to which he belongs. After a heavy barrage of Russian airstrikes, the fightSACRAMENTO — Abor- ing was focused on the village tion opponents have sued the of KfarNabudeh, which offiCalifornia attorney general' s cials said had been seized by of5ce to block a new law re- government troops. quiring pregnancy centers to provideinformation about abortion. The Sacramento Bee says the federal suit was filed Saturday in Sacramento. It ANKARA, Turkey — The contends the bill violates free- suicidebombings that ripped dom of speech and religion through a rally promoting and seeks a court injunction peacein Turkey'scapitalhave to stopitfrom taking effectin magnified the political uncerJanuary. tainty ahead of a key election The law, signed by the gov- Nov. 1and raised fears that ernor last week, involves crisis the countrymay be heading pregnancy centers, which of- toward anextended period of ten are run by religiously-af- instability. filiated groups that discourage The blasts — Turkey's women &om getting abortions. bloodiest in years — have fur-

MIAMI (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush on Monday proposed repealing and replacing President Barack Obama's health care l aw with on e t h a t would increase tax credits for individuals, allowing them to buy coverage protection against " highcost medical events." But the t wo-page proposal, which would give more power to statesto regulate health insurance, contained no specific details on how many people could be left without coverage. It does, however, guarantee coverage for people with p r e-existing health conditions, which is part of Obama's 974-page federal health l a w. Bush was expected to release more details Tuesday, during a t h ree-day swing through New Hampshire. The Bush campaign says the former Floribroad terms, would a ccomplish t hr e e goals: promote inno-

21st Children' s „,: Shopp ng Spree

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Drawings

Internet, not promote it.

In an email exchange with The Associated Press, Leach saidthe carve outforfantasy sports in the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement

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AS — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

TREES Continued from Page Al

Sonora, California

THEUNIONDEMOCRAT ceived her second warning from Cal Fire to

Calls for action

have them removed.

The Tuolumne CountyBoard of Supervisorsdeclared a state of emergency on Sept. 15,in response tothepervasivetreemo rtality throughout the region. In a letter sent to the Governor's Office last week, the board urged Brown to do the same. Among the concerns cited in the letter were the deadtrees creating fuelfor a potentially catastrophic wildfire, falling into homes or disrupting essential services by damaging critical infrastructure, such as roads, power

The cost to have them taken down by a privatecompany would be between $1,500 and Growing crisis $2,000 per tree. That is, if the company even More than 13 million trees are believed has time to do it with the rest of their workto be dead in the central and southern Si- load, she said. erra Nevada &om one of California's worst Gerlitz was recently told by a PG&E utildroughtsin recorded history,according to re- ity forester in a phone message that the comcently conducted aerial surveys by Cal Fire pany wouldn't be able to have inspectors out and the U.S. Forest Service. to her property again until Nov. 15. She said Gerlitz first heard about bark beetles in that means the subcontractors won't be able late-May &om a neighbor who pointed out to fel lthe treesuntilabout four to six weeks lines and water conveyance systems. the signs of infestation in a 150-foot tall sugar later. According to Tuolumne Utilities District, ''We can't wait until this winter," she said, more than 400 trees have died along the TUD pine that once stood a few feet &om her home. A lack of water makes trees — especially adding that a snow load or heavy wind would ditch system that provides water to roughly pines, oaks and manzanita — more suscep- easily topple the weakened trees. 44,000 county residents. There's another tible to the beetles, which bore through bark 167 dead treesnear water treatment plants and feed o6' their weakened hosts. Gerlitz Fire risk and storage tanks, with the district having saidarboristshave told herthe lack offorest already removed 109 at a cost of more than thinning is another factor contributing to the Another concern is the possibility of a light- $10,000. speed of the outbreak. ning strike or a tree falling into power lines Supervisor Evan Royce, whose district inSigns can include white spotting on the sparking a blaze that many fear would be as cludes Leisure Pines and other communities tree trunks where the beetles have burrowed. destructive as the recent Butte Fire. along Highway 108 east of Soulsbyville, said Gerlitz said she' s found it's too late once the A tree falling onto PG&E power lines is be- the board is doing everything in its power to tree begins to seep brown, bubbly sap. ing investigated as the cause of the fire that get theattention of state ofFicials. "I'm a stay-at-home mom and have literally destroyed nearly 500 homes and le two dead 'There's absolutely no doubt in my mind watched these die in &ont of my eyes," she in Calaveras County last month. bothour board and our staffareaware ofthe ''We already have one travesty, and that' s problem and the threat it poses," he said. said, while looking out &om her deck at the numerous piles of bark-stripped logs she has losing the trees," said Don Britton, who lives However, emergency officials have been stacked around her yard. part-time in Leisure Pines with his wife, tied up responding to both the Butte and ValGerlitz and her husband married about Stephanie. "The next travesty is losing all of ley fires, the latter of which destroyed over seven years ago. The couple lived around these homes." 1,200 homes and killed four people. Calaveras County before moving briefiy to "If there was an earthquake or something, Royce said he believes it's only a matter Oakdale last year while looking for their first FEMA would come inand help people re- of timebefore the state responds to the tree home. build," he added. "Why don't we spend a little morality issue, which has grown beyond the The couple selected the two-story house less money getting rid of the trees before they scope of what the county can handle by itin Leisure Pines because they thought the have to come in and say,'Alright, so how do we self.He urged residents to write letters and area wouldbe a better place than the valley rebuild all of these houses in this community sendpictures tothe Governor'sCHFice tobring to raise their children, Vance, 6, and Asoph, 2. that was once called Leisure Pines?' " more attention and awareness to the issue. ''We don't have endless resources and bank "We saved for over two years to make sure Scott Nye, of Twain Harte Tree Service, we could make a down payment and comfort- was felling trees in the subdivision Monday. accounts sitting there where we can write ably move into a home," she said. He and his four-man crew have been work- checks from," he said. 'This is an emergency Gerlitz's husband works in construction ing 10- to 12- hour shifts, six days a week, be- situation that's above and beyond what we and theyput away money each year to carry cause of the demand in recent months. can provide." themselves through winter when his jobs typNye, who has worked as a tree contractor On Monday, The Union Democrat asked ically slow down. since1981,said thesituation is"three to four the Governor's Office if it had received the The couple spent $800 earlier this summer times" worse than the last major bark beetle board's letter and whether any plans were in sprayingtheir trees with pesticides in hopes outbreak during a drought in the late 80s and motion to provide assistance to homeowners. ''We haven't received a letter, but will take of killing the beetles, but it didn't work. early 90s. Subcontractors for Pacific Gas and Electric Another issue is that the local sawmills are a careful look when it arrives. Meanwhile, Co. have since cut down eight large pine trees so overloaded with wood that they are no lon- CalFIRE will be in touch to provide more inon her property threatening nearby power ger accepting logs &om Nye's company, which formation about this statewide issue, and its lines. She and her husband have cut up the he said has cut into about 10 percent of his severity," said spokesman Gareth Lacy in a logsand stripped them oftheir bark to pre- income. brief response via email. vent the further spread of the beetle. Nye, too, believes funding &om the state Gerlitz said she plans to continue pushing "Fortunately, we' ll be able to use it all over is needed to help homeowners, as some jobs for action within the community as well. 'There's nothing that one individual person the years, but this is more than we can cut can cost more than $10,000 depending on the up and strip and stack by ourselves," she number of trees. He also warned that even or one group can do," she said, "but if we all said, pointing to the numerous fallen trees a strong El ¹ino is unlikely to snufF out the worked together, we could save this area from throughout her and her neighbors' parcels. beetleproblem. an epic fire." Gerlitz said she's counted another 15 trees

Contact Alex MacLean at amaclean@ uniondemocrat.corn or 588-4530.

VICTIMS

field, northeast of Sacramento, Inge said. ''We' re starting to stage them at McClellan," Inge said. "People can apply and we can try to get them one if they' re eligible. We

Continued from Page Al deep in the burn areas. "I' ve been working with the Mountain Ranch Food Bank and Pantry," Fultz said. "Almost everybody I know lost their homes." On Friday, she visited a property with multiple burned structures, tents and campers set up off WendellRoad. She brought wood pall ets foruse astentplatforms, straw as bedding for one of the resident's chickens, a shower head, a guitar for whoever wants to play it, a bucket of nails for building erosion barriers, a foam m attress, two shovelsand a posthole digger,a set of rain pants and rain jacket, a chisel and some pliers. "My concern is some people out here don't have vehicles and they can't get around and they' re cut off," Fultz said. "Some people haven't left since the fire. They haven't been to the meetings. They have no electricity, no phones, no generators. I'm work-

ing ofF a list &om Mountain Ranch Food Bank."

'She's an angel' Tenant Susan Clos s, 39, walked in as Fultz was unloading supplies and said she was there on Wendell Road when the Butte Hre came through. "I went to East Murray Creek with my boyfriend and his father, and they were using water from a 22,000-gallon pool to fight the fire," Closs said."They had dredge pumps in the pool and they tried to save their home until they ran out of gas." Closs said she's been living ofF Wendell Road for about two years. The property owner, Kim Decriscio, lost her home and garage, Closs said. "The only thing left standing was the pump house," Closs said. "Right now we have no electricity, no phone and no water, except when we can run the generator."

know it's rural out t h ere and

some people can't commute. If they' re eligible, it's still going to take2 to 4 w eeks to get itin there." Anyone who is frustrated with the process should still make sure to register with FEMA and to stay in touch with FEMA representatives,Inge said.He recommends patience. ''We want people to get in touch Guy McCarthy /Union Democrat Laura Fultz, of Calaveritas (right), brings supplies to people and stay in touch," Inge said. "We she believes are isolated and unable to reach resource centers want to talk this through and unin Mountain Ranch and San Andreas, including Susan Closs derstand what's going down with (left), who is camping on property off Wendell Road in the individuals who need help. We' re Butte Fire burn area. also asking people who are registered to check on your neighbors locals as mild, and she still found fered temporary rental housing, and make sure they stay with the it "cold as hell." but he rejected it and requested process. In a matter of minutes a trailer. He said he's waiting to people lost a lifetime of belonghear back from FEMA. ings. It's going to take weeks and Basic concerns months to see these first signs of Tony Soito and Brenda Lund- Mountain Ranch recovery." gren are camping next to Soito's

burned home on Avenue A, closer to Mountain Ranch. They still feel isolated and cut ofF because they do not have phone service and they do not have a generator. ''We have water," Soito said. "I got a 300-gallon tank with money the Red Cross gave me. We don' t have a generator because I'm afraidofvandals." On Friday, an attorney from Chico met with them at Soito's property. Soito and Lundgren areupsetthatcontractorsforPacific Gas and Electric are cutting down trees on and near property owned bySoito'sgrandfather and

Lundgren near El Rancho Lorna Serena. Lundgren said she h opes FEMA will provide a trailer to help she and Soito get through the winter.

''We can't keep living in tents," Lundgren said. "Especially if the forecastsare right. It m ight be raining hard out here this winter."

The Red Cross has been out, Soito said he's been disapand firefighters were helpful as pointed PG&E and AT&T have long as they were in the area, been working hard to restore serCloss said. vicesto people whose houses did "Laura's been out three times not burn, but little's been done to see me," Closs said. "She's been to help people like he and Lundamazing. I have an angel. She' s gren who got burned out of their brought me stuff to help keep homes. ''We have an order to get temmy chicken coop together, a cooking stove, lights, batteries, water, porary power, and they haven' t blankets, clothes. We' re staying been out here," Soito said. 'What out here because we have no- about us that got burned out? We where else to go." have no place to go." Closs said she remembers last Soito said he heard &om a winter was described by longtime FEMA representative who of-

Continued from Page Al level of funding the county will ask for. Most likely it will come in the form of one-time funded items not currently offered to schools or law enforcement, Bulkin said. The county's present collaboration between law enforcement and educators is based around what is referred to as "Ed-Law," a series of semireguhe meetings — now held every other month — to discussissues ofsafety ranging &om truancy to active shooters and bullying trends. As an example, the Tuolumne County Narcotics Team will talk about drug abuse and enforcement at the next meeting. Attending parties include district superintendents, school principals, and members of Tuolumne County SherifFs OIFice, Sonora Police Department, California Kghway Patrol, Tuolumne County Probation Department and Tuolumne County District Attorney's Office. "More than what we learn, we develop very strong working relationships," Bulkin said. The Tuolumne CountyBoard of Education took time at a trustees meeting Monday to acknowledge the partnership and invited Mele to speak.

Mele addressees both the thwarted shooting and his work moving forward with Bulkin. Mele credited strength of the county's education and law enforcement partnership to a trust that "triclded down" &om leaders like himself and Bulkin to teachers and students. "I can come to Maqpe... I mean Superintendent of Schools Bulkin, say we have a problem, and have a very &ank discussion," Mele said. "Those conversations are important to have, those relationships are important to have, and I hate to say it this way, but (the incident at Summerville) is a great way to showcase this,"he said. As he has repeated over the last week, Mele applauded the actions of the students who reported the suspicious behavior to a teacher, the teacher's quickness to go to administration, and administration's work with the sheri6"s ofFice. "I can't say how proud I am of what happened that day," Mele said. Trustee Cyndi Simonson, a mother of three

Summerville Kgh students thanked Mele for his presence at a school assembly the Monday following the arrests. "In a very eloquent and heartfelt way you put them to ease, and I thank you for that," Simonson said. Her comments were echo@i by trustee Juliana

Feriani, who added, "It was almost a celebration of whatdidn't happen because everybody did what they were supposed to do." Mele thanked the trustees, but said he and

school administration can always improve.

"This coming year's water is not enough to

that are now dead on her property since the bringthe trees back,"he said."Ifthe beetle's last PG&E inspection, and she recently re- there, then they' re dead."

SCHOOLS

Butte F ir e

ResoundCenter

d e bris r e moval

teams are continuing work on Volunteers at Mountain Ranch the west side of Jesus Maria Resource Center in the park off Road and Old Gulch Road, acWhiskey Slide Road are serving cording to organizers with CalRemeals to fire victims. They have cycle and Calaveras County. They supplies for the needy including plan to continue to work toward food, water, clothing, hygiene ne- the north side of Whiskey Slide cessities and toys for children. Road, then toward Ponderosa Two community boards out- Way, south of Mountain Ranch side atSender's Market are set Road, and into East Murray up under the headings "Tell us Creek Road working northeast. what you need" and "Tell us what you have to ofFer." 'Who's checking?' Some people request help with removing burned vehicles from In spite of the local, state and their properti es. Some people federal assistance available want help getting back on their in San Andreas, and the local property as soon as possible. resources on tap in Mountain Some people request trailers or Ranch, Fultz said she fears Butte campers for living in. Fire burn areas are so vast and Offers include a f urnished many burned-out people are in studiofor one displaced person, such remote locations that some a tent trailer that sleeps six, are slipping through the cracks. ''Why isn't the state going out 275-gallon water tanks, and a message stating "Need a &ee cell there and checking on how peophone and coverage? Call AT&T ple are going to live?" Fultz said. at 877-920-0362." The number "Some of these people are elderly connects to AT&T customer ser- and single and they can't get vice. around. They need generators One message on the offer and trailers. This is the Sierra board asks in all capitals, 'Who Nevada. It's hard living. "How are they going to make stole my potbelly wood stove? Put it back or else." it through the winter living like More than $2,960,550 in as- this?" Fultz said. "They are livsistance has been approved ing in complete devastation right f or Butte Fire victims in

Ca-

laveras County, Victor Inge of FEMA said Monday. More than $2.5 million of that total is earmarked for housing assistance, Inge said. The agency has 60 modular housing units at McClellan Air-

now and this winter, the El ¹ino

conditions coming at us, that' s exactly what I'm talking about." Contact Guy McCarthy at

gmccarthy@uniondemocrat. cornor 588-4585.Follow him on Twitter @GuyMcCarthy.

''When you feel that there's no room for improvement it's time to step down," he said. In reference his work with Bulkin, Mele said it is too premature to divulge specifics, but he wants to se. more counselors and law enforcement on campuses, and efforts to do so will continue for many months. "As we give those children opportunities to have an array of professionals intervene into their lives we will be more successful," Mele said. Immediately precedixig Mele, Soulsbyville Elementary School Superintendent JefF &infiel updated the board on projects in his district. He did not mention the Soulsbyville student report-

ed Wednesday to law enforcement after threat-

ening students on the bus and in the classroom. Winfield told The Union Democrat last week the report was a routine disciplinary measure. In addition to her meeting with Mele and the Sonora Area Foundation, Bulkin will meet with a number of community agencies this week that have reached out to support the growth and development of children in the community with "heighten interest" after the highly publicized violence on Tuolumne County campuses this month, said Bulkin. "I don't want to act like this a new n~ " Bulkin said. "We are drawing on a well established relationship to do for kids."

extras things

MASCOT Conti nued from Page Al amount of items tobe replaced,like the scoreboard, team uniforms, gym mural, and various booster-club-designed clothing. But Campbell isn't interested in holding onto the image. "My concern with keeping the indian logo is what happens when they go after chiefs or braves," hesaid."It'sonly a m atter oftime." Campbell said the American Indian population around San Andreas is not among those ofFended. The school has consulted with the Calaveras Band of Mi-Wuk Indians about the use of the term and has their approval. Agreements between the tribe and school have resulted in the elimination of any images that depict American Indians as caricatures, and caused the school to re-evaluate the use of American Indian imagery in respect to tribal beliefs. When the school planned to paint the image of an American Indian headdress on the gym floor, the tribe informed the district that not even the depiction of a headdress should be on the ground. Members of the Calaveras Band of Mi-Wuk Indians and the Tuolumne County band of Me-Wuk Indian's could not be reached for comment Monday. Calaveras High School, now on fall break, will soon start the process of selecting a new mascot, which Campbell said will be studentdriven but will include staff and community input. Though the school has until 2017 and an additional two-years to "phase-out" the old merchandise and uniforms, Campbell says the school isn't necessarily waiting until the deadline. "If it comes earlier, it comes earlier," he said. Contact Sean Carson at scarson® uniondemocrat.corn or 588-4525.


Inside: Classifieds

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Homema e'fastfoo 'as oo asori inals By JENN HARRIS The Los Angeles Times

In a small apartment in East Hollywood, the sound of rush-hour traffic filters through the warm evening air. A group of tired, hungry friends voices

Home

COOKIN'

a seriouscraving — not for some sea-

Family recipesHave your own recipe you'd like to share? Email it to features@ uniondemocrat.corn

Thinkstock

In-n-Out'sDouble Double can be made at home.

sonal restaurant cuisine or even tacos, but for fast food. Crunchy, melty, salty, addictive fast food. No one is willing to make a junk food run and risk losing a coveted parking spot. But the grocery store is just down the street.

Fast forward 30 minutes. The coffee table is covered in dirty paper plates and crumpled paper napkins. A group of tired friends is now on the couch, happily satiated. This was the scene after a recentfast-food craving for a Taco Bell Crunchwrap Supreme hit.It may sound counterintuitive, but for us, at the time, making the stuff from scratch ourselves was oddly easier than the alternative. If you' re not familiar with t he Crunchwrap Supreme (really?), it involves a large flour tortilla wrapped

around taco meat, nacho cheese sauce, lettuce, sour cream and a crunchy tostada. Sometimes you need it. It creeps up on youinthe same way you yearn for the special sauce from an In-N-Out Double Doubleburger to drip down your chin. And it's that same feeling you get when you think about the takeout box of Panda Express orange chicken you can attack with some wooden chopsticks. No one is judging you. And if they See FAST/ Page B8

Burgers, steaks get EaSy Italian — Sau-

beefed-up omega-3s

sage, ricotta combine for flavorful dinner.B2 s". I

AppleSauCe — Fruity sauce can be made in the slow cooker.B2

The Associated Press

Snapshots -Ag in the Classroom at Mother Lode Fairgrounds highlighted in photos.BS

Health-conscious consumers might be persuaded toeat more beef ifit was fortified with heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids naturally found in salmon and walnuts, according to researchers and some ranchers who are feeding cattle flaxseed — even marine algae — with an

BRIEFING

eye to offering another wholesome din-

Feed theBears set Nov. 7 The Summerville High School Foundation will hold its 10th annual Feed the Bears fundraiser Nov. 7 at the Tuolumne Veterans Memorial Hall. The complete catered meal costs $40 per person. Doors will open at 5 p.m. The event will include silent and live auctions and a prize drawing for more than 100 prizes. Proceeds benefit Summerville High School art, academic and athletic programs. The Feed the Bears fundraiser is the largest annual event the foundation holds and helps accomplish the group's mission of enhancing the student experience in the district.

ner choice. People have long been told they can decreasetheir risk of heart disease by eating more omega-8 fatty acids, the kind salmon get from algae. It inspired researchers at Kansas State University: Could the steaks and hamburgers from cattlefattened on algae pass on those healthy fats? Separately, some Texas grocery stores are selling beef products fortified with omega-8 through flaxseed, a trial run so successful that orders have quadrupled since it began seven months ago. And a nationwide study shows consumers would be willing to pay $1.85 a pound more for enriched steaks and 79 cents a pound more for enhanced ground beef, Kansas State agricultural economist Sean Fox said. After putting a pot roast into her shopping basket at a Wichita grocery store, 31-year-old Lindsey Goodwin considered that very question. "Probably, it kind of depends on the price," she said. But Terry Cooper, 36, was skeptical, Tiirbune Content Agency

Apples, endive and walnuts are dressed with a sweet viniagrette for a fresh autumn salad.

WalnLits bring a taste of fall to refreshing salad

Wine expert to speak at museum

By DIANE ROSSEN WORTHINGTON

Culinary arts instructor and wine aficionado Tom Bender will be guest speaker Nov. 1 during a program of the Angels Camp Museum. Bender has been an instructor at Columbia College for 38 years and teaches introduction to wines, dining room management and restaurant business planning. He also is a wine buyer and manager of a wine department for a business in Modesto, and writes about wines for various publications. Bender will discuss the history of the Calaveras County and California wine scene, as well as the impact of the recent Butte Fire on this year's harvest. The program will be held in the museum's Carriage House, 753 S. Main St., in Angels Camp. It's free for museum members and $10 for non-members. Call 736-2963 for more information.

The walnut harvest began at the end of August and ends in November, and many are surprised to learn that California walnuts account for 99 percent of the commercial U.S. supply and two-thirds of the world supply. Most of our walnuts are commonly known as the English (or Persian) walnut, and it is nice to know that walnuts are good for us according to numerous studies. Walnuts are the only nuts that contain a significant amount of omega 3 fatty acids. So enjoy them. I like how the crisp, sweet apple flavor in this recipe contrasts with the slightly bitter Belgian endive and the toasty walnut pieces. Dried figs give the vinaigrette body and a fruity richness. The slightly sweet white balsamic vinegar complements the endive. If you don't have white balsamic, use rice wine vinegar instead. This salad is an especially nice beginning to an elegant dinner. It works equally well when served as a delicious ending to your dinner. Salad Tips: 1. When measuring the walnuts, chop them first so you have an accurate amount. 2. Choose crisp, firmly packed Belgian endive heads that are white or pale yellow in color. Red endive should be bright colored with no wrinkled leaves. If the endive is very green, it might be bitter. 3. Store endive in the vegetable drawer of your refrigerator. I like to wrap the stalks in paper towels in a lock-topplastic bag. 4. Wipe the outer leaves with a damp paper towel. Remove any tom or damaged leaves, trim the bottom, and use them as the recipe suggests. 5. Thesalad may be made through Step 2,covered and refrigerated up to two hours ahead. Make sure to cover the salad tightly with plastic wrap so the apples

Tribune Content Agency

won't turn brown. The dressing can be made up to one

day ahead.

FOOD TIPS Phone:588-4535 Email:features@uniondemocrat.corn

See OMEGA-8 / Page B2

Diane Rossen Worthington is an authority on new American cooking.She is the author of18 cookbooks,

including "Seriously Simple Parties," and a James Beard Awardradio show host. You can

winning

contact her at towtuseriouslysimple.corn.

Belgian Endive Salad with Toasted Walnuts,

Apples andFig Vinai rette Serves 6 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts 10 Belgian Endive, sliced vertically into strips 2 Fuji or Pink Lady apples, peeled, cored and sliced into 1/2-inch strips Dressing 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard 1 tablespoon white balsamic vinegar 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar Salt and pepper 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil 1/2 cup dried figs, finely chopped 1. Heat a small skillet over mediumlow heat. Add walnuts and toss gently over the heat until they begin to brown lightly and become fragrant, about 2-3 minutes. Remove from heat and reserve. 2. In a salad bowl combine the endive and apple strips, and sprinkle the walnuts over the top. 3. Make the dressing: ln a small bowl whisk together the mustard, vinegars and salt and pepper. Add the oil slowly until emulsified. Add the dried figs and mix to combine. Taste for seasoning. 4. To serve, pour the dressing over the salad and toss to coat well. Serve on salad plates.

Tiibune Content Agency

Apple salad with salami and marinated mushrooms is both zesty and sweet.

Mario Batali

Apples, salami come together in autumn salad I love a salad with sweet, crunchy apples, such as ginger golds, especially when paired with salami and wine-marinated mushrooms. It's a salad perfect for dining al fresco with my family on early autumn nights. The apples sourced for testing this recipe found in my latest cookbook, "America — Farm to Table," came from Bardenhagen Farms in Suttons Bay, Michigan, because, well, Michigan apples just taste See BATALI / Page B2


B2 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THE UN' DEMO CRAT

Food 8 Drink OMEGA-3

itte ito sausa e oesa on wa in eas taian reci e By GIULIANO IIAZAN Tribune Content Agency

A bit of sausage goes a long way in flavoring the creamy ricotta tomato sauce in this quick, healthy pasta recipe. Serve with a green salad and crustyItalian bread.

Continued from Page Bl

ricotta cheese 10 fresh basil leaves, thinly sliced 1/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggianocheese Put 2 quarts of water on to boil in a large pot.

eicosapentaenoic

Put 2 quarts of water on to boil in a large pot. Meanwhile, combine oil, onion and sausage in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Cook, stirring and crumbling the sausage with a Serves 6 spoon, until the onion is golden, 4 Preparation time: 35 minutes to 5 minutes. Add tomatoes, pepper and 1/8 teaspoon of salt; cook until the tomatoes have reduced 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil and separated from the oil, 5 to 10 6 tablespoons finely minutes. Remove from heat. chopped yellow onion Add the remaining 1 tablespoon 6 ounces mild pork sausage, of salt to the boiling water, stir in casings removed pasta and cook according to pack1 14-ounce can no-salt-added age instructions until just tender. whole peeled tomatoes, Just before the pasta is done, rechopped, with their juice turn the sauce to medium-low heat. 1/4 teaspoon ground pepper Add ricotta and basil, and stir until 1/8 teaspoon salt plus 1 combined.When the pasta is done, tablespoon, divided 12 ounces thin tube-shaped drain well and toss with the sauce Tribune Content Agency and Parmigiano-Reggiano. Serve at Classic tomatoes and basil are combined with mild pork sausage for pasta, such as pasta al ceppo 6 tablespoons part-skim once. a flavorful Italian meal.

Pasta with Sausa e6 Ricotta

BATALI

sponges and subsequently won't brown nicely when Continued from Page Bl full of water. These marinated mushrooms will store better (with the exception well inthe refrigerator for of New York locals and my up toone week. Ifyou want home state of Washington's to can them for longer storfinest!). age, see the USDA website Here is one of a million for canning instructions. reasons why I know farmA variation on regular ers are the true rock stars: Tuscan salami, finocchiona When farmer Jim Barden- is flavored with fennel seeds, hagen heard t ha t l o cal creatingthe perfect sandschools were having trouble wich meat. It also serves as getting students to eat the the perfect protein in my apfruit included in their lunch- ple salad. Italian legend has es, and that schools were it that this salami originated buying apples from outside from a thief near the town of of Michigan, he worked hard Prato, who stole a fresh sato get his local apples in the lami from a fair and hid it in school lunchrooms. In do- a stand of wild fennel. After ing so, he not only taught returning for his prized posthe students a lesson in the session,the thiefdiscovered importance of eating locally his salami had absorbed the grown produce, but the stu- fennel's aromas while stordents actuallyenjoyed eat- ing in its hiding place. He ing a healthier option. declared finocchiona fit for The earthy addition of the gods, and the rest is in mushrooms in the vinai- Italian history books. You grettereally takes this ap- can substitute any cured ple salad to a different field meat for the finocchiona, but of fl avor.When prepping the make sure you get it f r om mushrooms, you don't want my sister Gina's Salumi them to soak in water be- Artisan Cured Meats in Secause they absorb liquid like attle, Wash.!

AppleSalad with Salami and Wine Marinated Mush rooms Serves 4 For the Marinated Mushrooms: 1/2 pound shiitake mushrooms 1/2 pound cremini mushrooms 1 cup dry red wine 1/4 cup red wine vinegar 2 tablespoons whole black peppercoms 2 tablespoons kosher salt 1 sprig fresh rosemary Pinch of red pepper flakes For the Apple Salad: 1 Ginger Gold apple, peeled and cored, (may sub any tart, crunchy

apple like Granny Smith or Honey Crisp) 1 small head radicchio 1/4 teaspoon caraway seeds 1/4 cup red wine vinegar 1 teaspoon kosher salt Freshly ground black pepper 1/4 pound finocchiona or any firm salami, cut into julienne 1/4 cup extravirgin olive oil Clean any dirt from the mushrooms with a brush; do notwash them. Halve the creminis and remove the tough stems from the shiitakes. Break or cut the shiitakes into 1-inch pieces. Pour the wine and vinegar into an 8-quart saucepan and add 6 cups water, the peppercorns and the salt. Bring to a boil. Add the rosemary sprig to the pot. Then, add the mushrooms all at once (leave any loose bits on the

cutting board). Add the red pepper flakes and stir. Return the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat to maintain a simmer, cover, and cook for 20 minutes. Ladle the mushrooms into storage containers, top off with the cooking liquid, and let cool. When you are ready to assemble the salad, drain 1 1/2 cups of the marinated mushrooms and place them in a salad bowl. Cut the apple into 1/8inch julienne and toss it in with the mushrooms. Add the radicchio, caraway, vinegar, salt and pepper to taste. Add the salami pieces and olive oil, toss well to mix, and serve. Mario Batali is the awardwinning chefbehind twenty/tve restaurants including Eataly, Del Posto, and his

flagship Greenwich Village enoteca, Babbo.

Applesauce simple in a slow cooker Tribune Content Agency

THIS WEEKEHD'5 ISSUE

h

adding that the university might have an "uphill battle" persuading people to eat more beef. "The reality is we all eat more junk food ... but we think we should eat healthy," Cooper said. Algae contains the omega-3 type fatty acids known as acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), which nutrition experts say people should consume at least 250 mg per day of both because of their protectiveeffects on the heart; DHA is also associated with infant brain development. A third omega-3 type is alpha-linoleic acid (ALA), which is abundant in flaxseed. Ground beef from cattle that eat grass, a natural source of omega-3s, contains about 20 to 30 mg in a 5-ounce serving. That increasesto at least 200 mg per 5-ounce serving when cattleare fed algae or flaxseed rations, Kansas State researcher Jim Drouillard

know that you only need a few ingredients, and turning

While there are certain apple varieties that lend themIf you' re new t o m a k - th e m i nt o a sauce is much selves to being eaten out of ing homemade applesauce, easier than you might think. hand or baking, everything is fair game when it comes to applesauce. There's no right or wrong here. Use a medley of your favorite varieties. I love a mix of Empires and Cortlands, but sometimes I toss in a tart Granny Smith or some small, sweet McIntosh apples to change things up. Older applesthat taste mealy and aren't so great eaten on their own are actu-

Get Wafer Wise UpNaies and |nformafiee

These free informative meetings will help you learn about TUD's planned water and sewer improvements, their related costs and potential rate changes. Community Meeting Dates & Locat ions Tues., Oct. 13, 6-8pm, Columbia Columbia College, Sugar Pine 126 11600 Columbia Co//ege Drive, Columbia Thurs., Oct. 15, 6-8pm, Soulsbyville Soulsbyville School, Old Gym 20300 Soulsbyville Road, Soulsbyville

allyperfect for applesauce. Since the fruit gets cooked down so much, you'd never know those apples started off mealy. The beauty of applesauce See SAUCE/Page B8

said.

Other omega-3 fortified foods are commercially available — such as eggs, bacon and c hicken. Yet salmon is king, providing 10 times the amount of omega3s than enriched beef products — at least 2,000 mg in a 5-ounce serving.

C ost comes int o p l ay when m a k in g o m ega-3 fortified beef more widely available. Researchers are examining whether algae is an economically feasible feed, given that commercial sources are scarce. Beef produced from cattlethat eat algae contains more of the EPA and DHA fatty acids than cattle fed only flaxseed, Drouillard said. All told, it may not raise consumer prices more than 15 to 20 cents a pound ex-

tra according to Bernie Hansen, founder of GreatO Premium Foods. He said the addedcostsoffattening livestockon fl axseed-based rations would be mostly offset by the lower costs of raising animals which ar e

healthier and need fewer antibiotics. The Manhattan, Kansasbased company, which for 14 years has researched how to produce omega-3 enhanced beef using flaxseed at an economically viable price, is test-marketing its fortified ground beef in 50 HEB supermarkets in Texas. When the trial began almost seven

months ago, HEB was ordering about 100 cases every two weeks, each containing a dozen 1-pound packages of the omega-3 enriched beef. The response from shoppers was so good that within six months HEB increased its order to 400 cases, Hansen said. GreatO also sells its flaxseed-fattenedbeef to Timber Ridge Cattle, an Iowa company that makes beef sticks and supplies omega-3 enriched steaks to some restaurants, including HoQ Restaurant in Des Moines, Iowa. Restaurant owner Suman

Hoque says the omega-3 steaks have more marbling and are more tender and flavorful than leaner grassfed beef. His patrons noticed, and have been coming back for it, said Hoque, who is selling about 200 steaks a week and buying about I'/2

times more enriched beef this year than he did a year ago ofjustgrass-fed beef. "People love these....I sell more meat than anything else," Hoque said.

Hl Il

Tues., Oct. 20,6-8pm, Tuolumne Summerville High Auditorium 17555 Tuolumne Road, Tuolumne

Mon.,Oct. 26,6-8pm, Sonora TUD Board Room, Tuolumne Road 18885 Nugget Boulevard, Sonora THE MOTHER LODE'SLEADING INFORMATION SOURCE

Door prizes for first 25 attendees each night Refreshments provided For more information 209.532.5536 or tudwater.corn

Flooring & Home +>+<~<pp<i@„<< 2424 McHenry Ave.,M odesto = 209-238-3000 www.directappliance.corn x


Tuesday, October 13, 2015 •

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HOMES FOR SALE OR RENT CATEGORY 101-250 FOR SALE 101- Homes 105 - Ranches IIO-Lots/Acreage 115 - Commercial 120 - IncomeProperty 125 - Mobile Homes 130 - Mobile Homeson Land 135 - Resort Property 140 - RealEstateWanted

RENTALS 201- Rentals/Homes 205 - Rentals/Apartments 210 - Condos/Townhouses 215-Rooms to Rent 220 -Duplexes 225 - Mobile/RV Spaces 230 - Storage 235 - Vacation 240 - RoommateWanted 245 - Commercial 250 - Rentals Wanted

101

Homes ARNOLD CUTE 1BDR. COTTAGE:1110 Fir St. $95k Bambiland.corn -Or- (209) 785-1491 BEST NAME IN THE BUSINESS! REAL LIVING. SUGAR PINE REALTY 209-533-4242 wvvw.sugarpinerealcy.corn

Get paid to clean your garage... sell your stuff In The Union Democrat Classified Section 588-4515

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The real estate advertised herein is subject to the State and Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin or source of income, or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination'. We will not knowingly accept any advertisement for real estate that is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. 110 Lots/Acreage

CRYSTAL FALLS 3/3 1900sf home; refurbished:no pets/smk & no garage. $990/mo+ dep. 650-646-1945

TWENTY HAPPY ACRES Angels Camp, 4394 Appaloosa Way, 4.9 miles So. of Hwy 4. Pvd Rd. pwr, phone and spring. Dr. and pad cut in. $95k, $19k dn. Seller finance at 5% APR, 15 yrs, $601/mo. 785-1491 www.bambiland.corn 115

Commercial SONORA OFFICE Building on Mono Way. Unique! 4700 sf. Purchase, Lease or Lease Option. Only $695,000! Agent: 209.962.0718 125 Mobile Homes JAMESTOWN SENIOR PARK- 2/2, Reduced! $13,900. Discount Realty Group, 532-0668 201 Rentals/Homes

COLDWELL BANKER SEGERSTROM - Your Home is Our Business (209) 532-7400 IN SONORA 2BD 1'/aBA w/office, shop, plus addit'I sleeping area. Recently updated. $239,500 Tuolumne County Realty 532-7464

If It's Not Here It May Not Exist! The Union Democrat C/ass/f/ed Section.

588-4515

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EASTTWAIN HARTE Large Home. 3bd/5ba Many amenities! $1,995 /month. 209-605-3176 LUXURY HOME NEAR Downtown. 2800 sq. ft. 4b/4 full baths. 2 Ig deck & terrace; fab landscaping $1995/mo. 352-7240

MOTHER LODE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT FOR A LIST OF RENTAL PROPERTIES..... MLPMRentals.corn SIERRA T.H. MHP: 2/1 $625/mo. Water/sewer incl. centeral H/A. 586-5090 or 768-9050

Find your Future Home in The Union Democrat Classifieds SMALL RANCH COTTAGE on acreage1 Bdrm. Available now! $900/mo+dp. 768-4119 TUOLUMNE 3/2 HOME Gorgeous Newer Home Madrone St. $900/mo. A/C. No pets/smk! No garage. (650)646-1945 205 Rentals/Apartments COLUMBIA UPSTAIRS 1/1 ! Spacious. Quiet. No Drugs! No smk/pet! $500/mo. Ph. 588-8038 LUXURY 2 BDR 1 BA CHBA, fridge, hookups. View, deck, quiet neighborhood $995 532-5857 MARK TWAIN APTS. Newly Remodelled 1 & 2 bdrms. CURRENTLY FULL! (209) 984-1097

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301- Employment 305 - Instruction/Lessons Classes 310 - Domestic &Cfuidcare 315 - Looking for Employment 320 - BusinessOpportunities 325 - Financing 330 - MoneyWanted

301 Employment

Bret Harte UHSD is accepting apps for DIST. MECHANIC/ BUS DRIVER, 8 hrs p/day, $18.26 - $20.08 p/hr. DOE. Closing date: Oct. 21, 2015. Apply online: www.bhuhsd-ca.schoolo ~o.corn or call (209) 736-8340, email: l~orovich ehhhhsd.k12.ca.us We are an "Equal Opportunity Employer." Ask your classified representative about ATTENTION GETTERS

301 Employment CURTIS CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT is accepting apps for Substitute Maintenance/ Groundskeeper ($14.72/hr) & Substitute Custodian ($14.37/hr). Applications available at 18755 Standard Road, 8am-3pm. Nodeadline; ongoing pools. CURTIS CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT is accepting apps for Food Service Assist. 2 hrs/day, 5 days/week, 180 days/year, salary: $12.66 - 17.25/hour. Valid ServSafe Cert. & food service experience preferred. Applications are available at 18755 Standard Road. Apply by 10/21/1 5, 3:00pm. Get your business

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Manufacturing Services

INSIGHT MANUFACTURING SERVICES is a precision manufacturing company in Murphys. We offer a competitive salary and benefit package. We are currently accepting applications for a Shipping Receiving Specialist; performs a wide variety of tasks: assembly, inspection, verification, record keeping and preparation of items for outgoing shipments. Verify, count and keep records on incoming shipments.Fax resume to: 209.729-4194, or h-mail jhhhheihe himanufacturin .corn InSight Manufacturing Services is an EOE/ Affirmation Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, national origin, age, disability, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

GROWING SPA AND SALON seeks Visit us on the web: stylist/manicurist. 215 www.co.calaveras.ca.us Commision. Send Rooms to Rent resume or call 533-5326 JANITORIAL F/T CAREGIVER NEEDED info sereni sonora.corn Swing Shift: WATCH JAMESTOWN BEDRM, in Tuolumne City for Resources is seeking Bath w/utils. pd. No alyoung man. Evenings & HANDYMAN NEEDED candidates w/Janitorial cohol/drugs/smk in hse. wknds. Call 352-5757 Need truck, some skills, exp to supervise/train No pets. $550 984-4341 tools, heavy lifting req'd. adults with intellectual CAREGIVERSP/T, F/T, Part-Time. 532-5857 disabilities to complete JAMESTOWN ROOMS Varied shifts. Must pass For Rent. All util's paid HIRING CAREGIVERS! janitorial contracts at a DOJ/ FBI fingerprintsl variety of worksites in except TV 8 ph. 1 RmCasa Viejos - 984-5124 Men and women; must our community. Comp $350/mo; 1 Rm-$500/ be a compassionate, skills and flex schedule month. Call: 206-1670 loving person that perChild Care Center req. $9.27/ hr. + exc. haps has taken care of Teacher Senior Youth 225 a family member/friend. benefits. See website Partnership/ PM Club Mobile/RV Spaces Experience req'd. Must for application/details at are seeking anAFTER have transportation and watchresources.or or SCHOOL TEACHER fax resume: 593-2339. COLUMBIA AREA RV insurance. All shifts FOR THE SOULSBYSite-3 mi from College available. 209.772.2157 JOB FAIR VILLE PM CLUB on 1 acre among trees; PROGRAM 11 AMat Skyline Place Senior IF YOU ENJOY $450/mo. pH. 768-9950 5.30/6PM, Mon - Fri. Living! Friday, 10/16/15 HELPING SENIORS, Preferred AA in Early SIERRA VILLAGE RV 10:OOAM to 12:OOPM. contact SENIORITY Childhood Education Space on nice wooded LIFECARE about being Interested in a job at Childhood Developlot + storage. $375/mo. paid as a CAREGIVER. Skyline Place Senior +dep. & util's. 568-7009 ment OR 12 ECE units, Not just a job; a perfect Living or Oak Terrace plus child care center Memory Care? Come to career for a compaswork exp. Exp in cur230 sionate, dedicated team our Job Fair prepared to riculum development complete an application Storage player. We provide and oversight of child and you will be intersupport, training and care center based QUAIL HOLLOW viewed on the spot! benefits! P/T and Flex. operations required. MINI STORAGE Candidatesmust pass a Please see our website, Open 7 days, 8am-6pm Must hold a current pre-employment backvvwvv.seniorilifecare.corn CDL. ROP based on Greenley Road to ground check and drug or visit us on Facebook! qualifications and exp. Cabezut across from screen. E.O.E. (209) 532-4500 Please E-mail resume Quail Hollow Apts., ih: ~he ml hue. ham Sonora. 533-2214 Ask your classified PLACE AN AD ONLINE CHURCH CHOIR/ representative about www.uniondemocrat.corn Turn clutter MUSIC DIRECTOR ATTENTION GETTERS into cash. 20 hrs/wk; $16-20K DOE. Visit: www.fccAdvertise in ~mur h.hr far info. The Union Democrat Submit resume to: ~nuetofccmur h.or by Classified Section 10/30. 588-4515

CALAVERAS CO

QuailH ollow1 .corn 245 Commercial CAMAGE AVE Industrial space up to 21,000 s.f. for lease. Call for info 533-8962 COMMERCIAL LEASE Murphys-1,026 sf. End unit. Excellent location! $950/mo. 209-743-7033

Amsresumemail© mail. corn or apply in person at: Adult Med. Specialist 690 Guzzi Ln. Ste C. MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS CONTRACTOR Eves, wkends, holidays; Exp w/5150 psychiatric evals; 30-45 min response time to Mark Twain ER San Andreas; $35.00/hr callout; Calaveras County Mental Health. Masters Level preferred. 209-754-6525 Now you can include a picture to your ad! Call 588-4515

P L A C E • SBN I O R L I V I N G •

COMMUNITY RELATIONS P/T Move In Coordinator at Skyline Place Senior Living. Sales experience preferred. Please send resumes to brie © milestoneretirement.corn COMMUNITY SERVICES COORDF/T w/benefits. Oversee Community Service & Education programs. EOE. Center For A Non Violent Community. For job description & appl: rece tion nonviolent-

HISTORIC BUILDING 24 S. Washington St. Sonora- Can be used for office or retail. 2K sq. ~C Omm hi .Or o r h h i i (209) 588-9305 ft. Ph. (209) 586-6514 NEW COMMERCIAL BLDG. Sonora off Hwy. 108. 1000 sf & 2000 sf Bernie (209) 586-6514

KAMPS PROPANE is seeking a full-time Route Driverand Service Tech. Must have: Class B Lic; be able to work independently; mechanically minded; & have clean DMV. Good wage and benefits. Apply in person with resume at 18877 Microtronics Way in Sonora, CA. E.O.E. LIKE TO CLEAN? We are hiring! For more info: Call 586-3314 LITTLE CAESARS PIZZA will hold open interviews Sat. the 17th from 9am-10am. 13778 Mono Way Sonora. LOCAL PROPANE COMPANY seeking OFFICE MANAGER. Reporting directly to the General Manager, this position is responsible for running daily administrative duties of the propane office and supervising office staff. Our ideal candidate will have phone skills that are friendly and professional, fast paced work ethic, excellent leadership, accounting/bookkeeping skills, computer literacy with a proficiency in Microsoft Word and Excel time management, and ability to delegate tasks. Prior propane experience preferred. Please bring resume to 564 W Stockton Rd., Sonora, CA. No phone calls! MEDICAL ASSISTANT F/T Opening for new provider in busy internal medoff ice.Must be flex., self motivated, good work ethic/ attendance. EMR exp. preferred. Benefit pkg./ 401k offered. E-mail resume w/references to:

Today's Newest!

235

Vacation VACATION RENTALS Daily/Weekly/Monthly, starting at $75/night. 209-533-1 310

301 Employment

COOK WANTED! Varied Shifts, Full-Time. Apply at Casa Viejos in Jamestown. 984-5124

TOYOTA '90 EXT. CAB P.U. Everything works, needs engine work. $2,800. 586-4397 If It's Not Here It May Not Exist!

The Union Democrat C/ass/ fed Section.

HAULMARK CAR

FORD RANGER Only 48k miles! Camper shell, ladder rack & tow hitch. $8,500 768-4820

588-4515 BUYING JUNK, Unwanted or wrecked cars, Cash paid! Free P/U Mike 209-602-4997

Sell/t fast with a Union Democratc/ass///ed ad. 588-4515

TRAILER-24 FT Customizedenclosed. Locking cabinets, winch, pwr converter, kill switch,

elec landing gear, & new tires. Used only 8X! Always garaged. 15,000 obo (209) 533-2035

... featuresclassifiedadsappearing for thetirst timeTODAY%r 92( perline, your A'5NEWEST!" In additiOn tOyOur regular ClaSSified ad. Call ad Can appearin nTODY your ClassitiedRePresentative at588-45t5 beforenoon,Mondaythrf/Friday.


64 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THE UMO jtjDEMOC RAT

IIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII i CLASSIFIED HOURS:

RATES -4 LINE MINIMUM

Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. You may place your ad by phone at: 588-4515 or 1-800-786-6466 Fax: 532-5139

• I I

I

3 Days ..........................51.80/per line/per day 5 0Days ..........................5 5I 40/ I 40/per I line/per / dday 10 Days........................51.35/per line/per day 20 Days........................51.1 5/per line/per day Foothill Shopper......51.05/per line/per day

AD PLA(EMENTDEADLINES

ADDED DISTRIBUTION

Tuesday...........................Noon Mon . Noon Tues Thu rsda ..Noon Wed Friday............................. F d Noon Thurs Saturday.............................. Noon Fri

Ads ordered for The Union Democrat may also be placed in the Wednesday Foothil I Shopper at a special discounted rate. Shoppers are distributed to various locations throughout Tuolumne andCalaveras counties — a total of 10,400 copies, over 26,000 readers!

• •

• • CONDITIONS

EDI TING The —Union Democrat reservesthe right to edit any and all ads as to conform to standard acceptance. CR EDIT — Classiads Tiedaccepted by phone may be subjec t to credit approval before publication. Master Card, Dis coveryandVisa accepted. P A YMENT Paym — ent for classified ads isdue upon completio n of the order. However, some classifications must be paid for in advance.Somerestrictions apply.

IIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PLEASENOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason.

301

301

301

Employment

Employment

Employment

RN -RELIEF POSITION Supportive team seeking RN with excellent nursing and patient relations skills to work flexible part-time and provide relief coverage Need a helping hand? in accredited eye surCheck out the Call an Expert gery center. Exp in OR & Recovery preferred. section in the Classifieds No weekends; no onNETWORK ENGINEER call. Fax resume to: 209-532-1687 or email Tech job in Sonora! 5+ desireet sonorae esuryrs networking exp. & CCNA or equivalent req. CCNP+ pref. Provide SEPTIC INSTALLERpre-sale, deployment & Experience preferred. maintenance support. Labor intensive position. Some travel req. Must Pre- employment drug maintain current passscreen. Please submit port. Full benefits incl. resume to P.O. Box 488 medical, dental, vision 8 Soulsbyville, CA 95372 401k. For full job description & apply at: Call 533-3614 to Subscribe www.front orch.corn/ to The Union Democrat or careers www.uniondemocrat.corn MT. SPRINGS GOLF SHOP - P/T position avail. AM & PM shifts. No exp necessary! Applications available at 17566 Lime Kiln Road.

CATEGORY 401-415 401 - Announcements 405 - Personals

410 - Lien Sales 415 - Community

TAX TECHNICIAN II ($16.64 - $20.19 /hr.) needed 32 hours per week to perform clerical accounting/ auditing duties of varying complexity. Equivalent to graduation from high school and three years of general clerical accounting/ auditing experience. For detailed job flyer and specific app process please visit htt :/ /hr.calaveras ov.us

The GEO ssroup, Ine.e

NOW HIRING! The GEO Group, Inc., is seeking a CASE MANAGER in Sonora. Candidates will have one to two (1-2) years' experience providing services to adult treatment populations. H. S. Diploma or GED req. Bachelor's Degree or equivalent experience preferred. To apply, visit 'obs. eo rou .corn E.O.E. AA M/F/Vet/ Disability OAK TERRACE MEMORY CARE now hiringCAREGIVERSHoursand shifts vary. On-Call P/T & F/T. Bring in resume and fill out application on-site at 20420 Rafferty Ct. Soulsbyville, 533-4822 OPENINGS: HAIR STYLIST and NAIL TECHNICIAN. Very busy salon! Clientele helpful but not mandatory. Please call us at (209) 588-8833. PINE MOUNTAIN LAKE ASSOCIATION is looking to hire a full-time Department of Safety Officer. Hourly pay range $14.41-$14.97 with Union pension and benefits pkg. Detailed job description and application available at: inemountainlake.corn PRE-SCHOOL TEACHER - PT/FT, 12 or more ECE Infanttoddler/preschool units / exp. Lic.¹'s 553601541 & 553601540. Janeen Sarina, 209-532-1913.

SEPTIC TRUCK DRIVER-Heavy digging and labor intensive. Valid Class A / B Lic. and clean record req'd. Pre-employment drug screen. Submit resume to P.O. Box 488, Soulsbyville, CA 95372 Sell it in the Classifieds 588-4515 SIERRA BUSINESS COUNCIL is a regional

non-profit business advocacy organization seeking anEnergy Efficiencystaff person. For full job description and qualifications please visit sierrabusi~ness.or or email us at info © sierrabusiness.or If It's Not Here It May Not Exist! The Union Democrat C/assi f/ed Section.

588-4515 SONORA & CALAVERAS EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Call (209) 532-1176

sonoraemployment.corn

TABLE MOUNTAIN RANCHES is seeking Direct Care Staff to work in a group home setting w/ developmentally delayed & autistic children. Will train. Must be able to pass DOJ/ FBI background check. (209) 984-3188 Sell/1fast with a Union Democrat c/assi//ed ad. 588%515

WEATHER WATCHERS NEEDED The Union Democrat has a dedicated team of volunteer weather watchers who keep track of high-low temperatures and precipitation. They call the newspaper with fresh numbers early every morning for that day's weather page, on the back of the sports section. The only pay is an annual gathering - sometimes a picnic hosted by the newspaper, sometimes dinner at an area restaurant - where they are honored and thanked. Necessary equipment, which the volunteers must provide themselves, are a thermometer that records the high and low temperatures of the day and a rain gauge. They must also submit snow depths and melt snow, when they get it, to include its water content with their precipitation. Volunteers are needed right now in, Tuolumne, Pinecrest and San Andreas. Anyone interested in becoming a volunteer may callPam Orebaugh 588-4546 or e-mail orebau hOuniondemocrat.corn

THEUNIONDEMOCihT THE MOTHER LODE'5LEADING INFORMATION SOURCE SINCE 1854

NOTICES

F D: 10/1 6/2015 by 5:00 p.m. EOE UD BOX REPLIES for accurate delivery, proper addressing is as follows: UD BOX¹ c/o The Union Democrat 84 S. Washington St. Sonora, CA 95370

Get paid to clean your garage... sell your stuff In The Union Democrat Classified Section 588-4515 315 Looking For Employment A NOTICE California State Law

requires licensed contractors to have their license number in all advertisements. KRISTIN'SCOMPLETE CLEANING. 28 yrs exp! Residential Ref's avail. Please call 770-3912. YARD CARE & MASONRY

Walkways, patios, retain-

ing walls, fences, steps. No lic. Mario 591-3937

MERCHANDISE CATEGORY 501-640 GENERAL MERCHANDISE 501- Lost 502 - Found 515 - HomeFurnishings 520 - HomeAppliances 525 - Home Eledronics 530 - Sports/Recreation 535 - Musical Instruments 540 - Crafts 545 - FoodProducts 550 - Antiques/Collectibles 555 -Firewood/Heating 560 - OtficeProducts 565-Tools/Machinery 570- Building Materials 575 -Auctions 580 - Miscellaneous 585 - Miscellaneous Wanted 590 - GarageSales 595 - Commercial

Garage/YardSales

FARM ANIMALS nnd PETS 601- HouseholdPets 605 - PetSupply/Services 610 - PetsWanted 615 - Livestock 620 - Feed/Tack 625 - BoardingandCare 630 - Training/Lessons 635 - Pasture 640 - FarmEquipment

501 Lost

MAINE COON (FEM) Pradera Real nr Campo Seco 8/29th. Trimmed fur. Multi-Color; Reward! 532-6964 or 586-7632 Turn clutter

into cash. Advertise in The Union Democrat Classified Section 588-4515

320 Business Opportunityi

515

SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME by becoming an Independent Contractor for The Union Democrat delivering newspapers to subscribers' homes and businesses. Routes only take a couple of hours in the early morning, Tuesday through Saturday. Must be 18 years of age with reliable transportation, proof of insurance and have a current CA drivers license. Fill out a Carrier Interest form at our Distribution Center 14989 Carnage Ave.,

THE UMON

EMOCRA T Sonora, CA 95370.

Sell Your Item Through The Union Democrat CLASSIFIED ADS

"Quick Cash" $8.00 Ad Package Items total less than $250 4 Lines for 5 Days, Private Party Only, Price must be in the ad. Call 588-4515 or submit your ad online at uniondemocrat.corn SOFA CHAISE LOUNGE, brown, w/pillows. Good Cond. $100. Call 206-5228 520 Home Appliances MONITOR KEROSENE HEATER. Excellent condition. $100, Call Gil: (925) 625-1595 REFRIGERATORS All New 50% off!

One year warranty.

Direct Outlet, 238-3000

directappliance.corn

530 Sports/Recreation

It is illegal under California law to transfer ownership of a firearm except through a licensed firearms dealer. 540 Crafts gi

Find your Future Home in The Union Democrat Classifieds

INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS WANTED

515 Home Furnishings

Home Furnishings BASSETT BEDROOM set, exc. cond. Q-size mattress w/topper. Matching dressers, one w/mirror. $800 obo. Call 533-4334 for more info.

DINING ROOM TABLE w/ four chairs. Very gd. condition Solid maple. $175. (209) 532-5993 HEUSER'S FURNITURE Mattress & Design Center. Best selection & service. Call 536-9834 NEED QUICK CASH?

Sell any item for $250 or less for just $8.00

I

Do you have a collection, hobby, or unusual skill you would be willing to share with readers of The Union Democrat? Do you know someone who does? If you live in our circulation area, we want to hear from you. Please call (209) 588-4535 or email featuresO uniondemocrat.corn 555 Firewood/Heating ALMOND FIREWOOD Garcia's Almond Firewood, Seasoned! FREE Delivery! 676-0179 SAL'S •ALMOND FIREWOOD 0 Dry, 16", $280/cord. 386-3684 -or- 358-3697

I-COMFORT MATTRESS SETS, adjustable beds & more. Call 588-8080

SEASONED OAK $300/ CORD. Half cords also avail. PINE- $185/cord. Splitting avail. 588-0857 580 Miscellaneous CHECK OUT OUR CLEARANCE RACK AT 50 CENTS EACH! Community Thrift Shop 797 W. Stockton Road Mon-Sat 10-5. 532-5280 DINING SET WITH 8 Chairs-Expands to 10ft! MLCS Thrift Store Too 14705 Mono Way, MonSat. 10-Spm 536-9385

FREE ADS! I! For merchandise under $100Call The Union Democrat Classified Advertising Dept. at 588-4515 It's as simple as that! (price of item must appear in the ad, one item, one ad at a time

per customer)

605 Pet Supply/Services I

705 4-Wh eel Drive

R

XXL DOG / ANIMAL CHEV Y '03 Z 71 HOUSE-All wood, comp 162K mi, tow pkg, shell, roof, built well! $90. clean, runs exc. $7000 Call 984-4419 Call: 984-0231

CARS AND TRUCKS CATEGORY 701-840 701 - Automobiles 705 - 4 Wheel Drive 710 - Truchs 715 - Vans 720 - SUV's 725 - Antiques/Classics 730 - Misc. Auto 735 - Autos Wanted

KIA '01 SPORTAGE 4x4; Runs Good. Smogged! $1,995. Call Dave, 928-1626 TOYOTA 4x4 WANTED '00-'04 Tundra. Good or better condition! Ph. Bob, 532-5822 =

IN~

,

I

RECREATIONAL 801 - Motorcydes 805 - RV's/Travd Trailers 810 - Boats 815 - Camper Shells 820 - Utility Trailers 825 - Leasing/Rentals 830 - Heavy Equipment 835 - Parts/Accessories 840 - Airplanes

701

Automobiles

THE UMO N DEMOCRA T

TOYOTA '86 X CAB Engine needs a little work. Clean title. $2,500 Call 831-345-2711 TOYOTA '90 EXT. CAB P.U. Everything works, needs engine work. $2,800. 586-4397 710 Trucks FORD '99 F250 DIESEL 7.3 XLT, 98k mi. Too many accessones to list $9,500. 209-275-9211

FREE PALLETS

Pick up behind The Union Democrat Production Facility, 14989 Carnage Ave., Sonora.

CHEVY '06 EQUINOX AWD, Clean! 146k mi, metallic gray A/C & CD. $6975. Ph. 728-1369

GARAGE SALES GARAGE SALES GARAGE SALES

CONSIGNMENTS WANTED! Looking for a

Find them in The Union Democrat Classifieds 209-588-4515

THEUNION EMOCRA T

professional to sell your car at no charge? WE ALSO BUY CARS! Call us today! 533-8777 MAZDA '98 PROTEGE LX. Auto., P/S, P/B, 4-door, A/C, runs great! $2,000, firm. 770-3371

LEATHER SADDLEBAGS for motorcycle or horse. Large capacity. $20. 588-9683 eves. OVERLOCK SERGER New condition, missing power cord.$100. Call: 209-532-1064 601 Household Pets

DACHSHUND PUPS 3-Males. 10 wks. Short hair- 2 brindle,1 red. shots. $400. 988-7407

Garage Sale Here! Gara e Sale Packa e: • Ad included in The Union Democrat Garage Sale Section & Online • 6linesfor1,2, or3days • Includes 2 free signs& pricing stickers

FORD RANGER Only 48k milesi Camper shell, ladder rack & tow hitch. $8,500 768-4820

NISSAN '95 XE - V6. 5 spd, new tires, 138k

mi. Smogged! Gd cond. $3,600. OBO 743-8584

Sell your car or truck faster with a photo.

HYDROPONICS: Lots of Lights, trays, fans and More!! $250 takes all. Call 694-6702

Advertise Your

VOLKSWAGEN '67BUG

1

Runs good, recent work done. $4,800 OBO. Call 928-1160 VW '06 BEETLE

Convertible. 2Dr. 4 cyl. Mellow Yellow. Fully loaded! Exc condition. $7200. Call 352-7161

It works! Call 588-4515 for more info

Quick Cash Package • Advertise any item under

$250 for only $8!

LDOII-'I MISS iIIIS • 4 lines for 5 days,

Only $18.00

price must appear in ad.

All garage sale ads require prepayment. (Private Party Advertisers Only)

(Private Party Customers Only)

Call Classified Advertising 209-588-4515

Call Classified Advertising, 209-588-4515

Call Classifieds At 588-4515

555 Firewood/Heating

www.sonorasleepworks.corn

RECLINERS, DARK

GREEN (2), exc. cond. $400/each or $700/both.

THE UMOjDEM tj OCRAT THE UNION DEMOCRAT THE MOTHER LODE'sLEADING INFORMATION SOURCE SINCE 1854

Call 533-4334.

Business Of The Week Summertimeis coming to anendffnd wenowshould bePreParing for the winter months.

Ili

Don't procrastinate! Nowis the time for repairs to the erterior deckffnd stairs...ffnd making a list of areas that need serf ling ffnd Painting to Protect your home through long I/et winter days! We are 8familyownedand operatedlocalbusinessandhavebeenseeingtotheneedsofTuolumneCountyfor48years.Wetake

care of8variety ofjobsincluding interior/exterior,commercial orresidential, remodelsornewconstruction andinsurancework.

"Above all, we promise 100% satisfaction." Call Chris MacDonald, [Lic.¹735177] to schedule an appointment Sonora: 532-9677 (ell: 770-0278 Alarm Systems MOUNTAIN ALARM

Thanks for voting us Best Alarm Company 7 years in a row! 532-9662 ACO¹3058 Boat Covers SEASPRAY AWNINGS & BOAT COVERS Custom awnings bimini tops & upholstery 533-4315 Lic¹981187

Computers & Service

Decks/Patios/Gazebos

Hauling

Painting

Storage

COMPUTER SICK? CALL Me! House Calls, PC Set

QUALITY INSTALLATION

Decks Concrete Windows

U-CALL - WE HAUL!

Up, Repair, Networking, & more. Mark 962-5629

694-8508 Lic.¹B493742

CHRIS MACDONALD PAINTING Resident or Commercial Interior or Exterior Lic. ¹735177 532-9677

MOOREROOM.COM Quality Steel Sheds, Garages & RVports On Site Bid 984-3462

Construction

Flooring

GENERAL ENGINEERING GENERAL BUILDING

Excavation/Grading Asphalt/Concrete Simunaci Construction Lic. ¹619757 532-8718

Chimney Sweep

Contractors

Winters Cleaning Svcs Chimney Sweep/ Repairs Certified 8 Insured

SONORA CONSTRUCTION Remodels, additions &

(209) 532-5700

decks. 533-0185 ¹40123 1

Jim Brosnan Const.

HIGH SIERRA HARDWOODS Refinish/ Prefinish/ Showroom. 588-2779 14741 Mono. ¹887275 Hi s ierrahardwood.corn

Handyman HANDYMAN Small jobs O.K. No lic., 768-6315

Pine needles, brush, cleanup, chainsaw work (209) 586-9247 AA Brush Burning, Hauling, Weedeating, Pine Needles [no lic.] 770-1403 or 586-9635

CLARK & SON Ret. Contractor-Small job specialist-done right

Sell if fast with a Union Democrat c/ass/fed ad. 588-4515

1st time! 288-9019!no Iic]

House Cleaning

ANDERSON'S PLUMBING & DRAIN

KATHY'S CLEANING SERVICE-Residential

Quality plumbing, sewer drain cleaning. Modular specialist. 20 yrs. exp.

& Comm'I. [Bonded/Ins'd] 209.928.5645

Tile TRADITIONAL TILE A Family tradition since 1923. Granite/Tile/ Marble. Lic. ¹421264 Free est. Call 754-9003

Plumbing

Lic.¹ 739224 536-9557

Well Drilling

W ATE R

TANKO BROS., INC. Wells & Pumps 532-7797 Lic. ¹395633

NOTICE TO READERS: California law requires that contractors taking THUMBS UP Would love to come & jobs that total $500 or more (labor and/or mahelp you w/your yard. terials) be licensed by We offer basic yard care & more! City Lic., the Contractors State License Board. State bonded, insured. [no lic] law also requires that Free est. 536-1660 contractors include their license numbers on all advertising. Check your Classified Ads contractor's status at Work For You! www.cslb.ca.gov 588-4515 or 800-321-CSLB (2752).Unlicensed persons taking jobs that total less than $500 SCOTTY'S YARD must state in their SERVICE advertisements that All Tree Trimming Leaf they are not licensed by rakinga Gutter cleaning the Contractors State Bonded 768-8383[no lic.] License Board.

Yard Maintenance


Sonora, California

810 Boats

Bizarro

Qg.

THE AIIIACIIAIKDIET

I

BAYLINER '88

IOW I5

20 Ft. 350 Chevy; New Interior, Rebuilt Outdrive, New tire/rims. Excellent Condition! Extras! $3950.00 VERY FAST ..! (209) 559-5446

I

u

Looking For A New Family Pet For YourHome?

l I l I llll

I(I I I I IIlt I Q ill tjl

I(

Check our classified section 588-451 5

I

IIHIr u > u t l I )l~ IIi r 'III ilt(II"I t t n lll ll 0 IH I 'll I II il

«I<I

( Ill lll I Ill, CHAPARRAL H20

AFT'

KFOK

Ditt. 4 Nrifillteas

8(ZAI(O.CON •

720 SUVs

801 Motorcycles

Advertise Your Car! Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers!! Call 209-588-4515 Classified Advertising

THEUNION EMO(,"RAT 735 Autos Wanted

YAMAHA '01 VSTAR 1100

Excellent Bike. Very well taken care of. Very Cleanalways garaged. Removable windshield. Runs like new!! $3,850. OBO Call (209) 768-3413 805 RVs/Travel Trailers

BUYING JUNK, Unwanted or wrecked cars, Cash paid! Free P/U Mike 209-602-4997 •

801 Moto rcycles

GOLD WING HONDA$900. Runs Good! ~ATV Quad w/tags (good until 2016) -$600. Almond Dump Trailer$700; «More bicycles, tools and motorcycles! Call (209) 928-1555

AERBUS'98 MOTOR HOME 29 ft. Wide Body Chevy Vortex eng. 47K mi, awnings, Dual A/C's, Onan Generator, All oak interior, exc condition. Tow Pkg. & brake buddy inch. $25,000 (209) 533-2731

Need to sell a car? Sell it in the classifieds 588-4515

HONDA '03 CBR600RR Very Nice! w/Extras. Runs & Rides Great! $3895. Call 588-9095

SUZUKI '02 650 SAVAGE - 2K mi, Great cond. Orig tires, $3,500. Call Dave: 532-2276

SUZUKI '07 BURGMAN Like new 400CC scooter. New battery, tires & drive belt. 35,000 miles. Asking $2800 Call: 209-694-3161

805 RVs/Travel Trailers

JAYCO '02 EAGLE 5th Wheel, 31 ft. 2-slideouts. Central Heat & Air. Sleeps 4, Queen bed, Irg. tub 8 shower. Microwave, 3-way fridge/freezer. Good condition! $11,500 obo (209) 770-5287

Sell your Car, Truck, RV or boat for $1.00 per day! 4-lines/20 days. If it doesn't sell, call us and we will run your ad for another 20 days at no charge. MONTANA '13 BIG SKY 3402 RL

4 slides, 6 pt. auto leveling, 4-season rating, dual a/c, double refrigerator, low mileage 8 great conditionl $58,000. (209) 694-3982 NOMAD '87 27FT 5TH WHEEL, All systems work +A/C. Good cond! $3,500. obo 588-1496

DENALI '06 5TH WHL 31ft. 2 slide-outs, sleeps 4+, separate shower. $13,000 OBO 785-4178

HONDA '85 CMX250C 16k mi, saddle bags & details. Exc condition. $1,000. Ph. 795-5042

Tuesday, October 13, 2015 — B5

t(DEMOCR AT THE UMoj

FLEETWOOD '05 Tent Trailer. Full kitchen 8 bath. (2) King beds, awning, Yakima racks, Exc! $6500. 559-0590 HAULMARK CAR

TRAILER-24 FT Customized-

enclosed. Locking cabinets, winch, pwr converter, kill switch, elec landing gear, & new tires. Used only 8X! Always garaged. 15,000 obo (209) 533-2035 NEED QUICK CASH? Sell any item for $250 or less for just $8.00

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SOUTHWIND '86 27 ft Motorhome Class A, Low Miles. Clean! New tires/ batteries, leveling jacks, roof storage, 2 ACls, sleeps 6 or ranchers use for caretakers housing. $7,500. Call 533-8323 SOUTHWIND '99 STORM

Class A 32 ft. Ford V10, 51K mi, 1 slide-out, sleeps 6, Shower & Tub, TV, VCR, DVD & CB radio; satellite dish

on roof. Dual Duct A/C, New Roof! $23,000. (209) 962-7616

SELLING YOUR CAR, TRUCK, RV OR BOAT? TRY OUR NEW AUTO PACKAGE!! ONLY $42.50

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(your ad will appear in the paper, online as a featured classified ad and in the Foothill Shopper) Package includes: a bold headline. the photo or attention-getter, up to 10 lines of

copy and border. Ads must be pre-paid

Call Classified Advertising at: 588-4515 No changes or refunds after publication of ad. Private party advertisers only.

'12 SPORT 19FT Merc 4.3 Ltr V6 Max HP 220-Immaculate! Only 31 hrs! Incl's Bimini cvr, built-in ice chest, ski locker, sound sys, new in 2013. $25,000. Call or text 770-2387

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jackets, generator and 3 coats bottom paint. Trailer: sandblasted & painted; new bearings, wench, lights/wiring. $2,950 obo 962-0445 Need to sell a car? Sell it in the Classifieds 588-4515 SEA RAY '83 26 FT.

PUBLIC NOTICE ABANDONMENT OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 SOUTH GREEN STREET SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO.2015000337 FILED: 9/17/2015 12:08 P STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME THE FOLLOWING PERSON(S) HAS/HAVE ABANDONED THE USE OF THE FOLLOWING FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME(S): BY HAND YARN 106 W. Washington Street Sonora, CA 95370 Name of Registrant (person, corporation or LLC Name): West, Frankie 8850 Fraguero Rd. Sonora, CA 95370 The fictitious business name referred to above was was filed on 01/27/2015 in the County of Tuolumne. Original File ¹ 2015000037 This business is conducted by: an individual. s/ Frankie West CERTIFICATION; I hereby certify that the foregoing is a correct copy of the original on file in my office. Deborah Russell, County Clerk & Auditor-Controller BY; Trina Nelson, DEPUTY Publications Dates: September 22, 29 & October 6, 13, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 S. GREEN ST. SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO. 2015000363 Date: 10/8/2015 01:41P DEBORAH BAUTISTA, CLERK & AUDITORCONTROLLER The following Person is doing business as: Fictitious Business Name: PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE FALLON HOUSE ICE CREAM PARLOR Street address of principal place of business: 11175 Washington Street Columbia, CA 95310 Name of Registrant: Sadie Brown, Inc. Residence Address: 22760 Main Street Columbia, CA 95310 Articles of Incorporation ¹3826682 CA The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 10/01/2015 This Business is conducted by: a corporation. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) Sadie Brown, Inc. s/ Angela Matulich President NOTICE: This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new FBN statement must be filed no more than 40 days from expiration. This filing does not of itself authorize the use of this name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state or common law. (B & P Code 14411 et seq.) CERTIFICATION: I hereby certify that the foregoing is a correct copy of the original on file in my office. DEBORAH BAUTISTA, County Clerk & Auditor-Controller, By: Theresa K Badgett, Deputy Publication Dates: October 13, 20, 27, & November 3, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370

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PUBLIC NOTICE

SUNDANCE10 hrs. on rebuilt motor & outdrive. New upholstery. Full kitchen 8 bath. Sleeps 6-lots of xtras. Excellent Condition! $6,500. (209) 559-5446

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«I 3- Horse slant trailer. 16 foot. Includes separate tack and storage area. Excellent condition. Asking $6,500. For more information please call 209-559-3428

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FORD '76 DUMP TRUCK. Big cam 4, 13 speed, 16lb freight, runs great, $10k. 533-2917

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This Newspaper Can Move A House. The Union Democrat Classified Section 588-4575

KEYSTONE RIFLE RANGE MILITARY MUNITIONS RESPONSE PROGRAM ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD FILE The California Army National Guard (CAARNG) has established an Administrative Record File location for the Military Munitions Response Program at Keystone Rifle Range, in Tuolumne County, California. The purpose of the file is to hold all relevant documentation to support an appropriate response action. Under Section 113(k) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), as amended by the Superfund Amendment and Reauthorization Art (SARA), 42 USC 9601et. seq., the Army is required to establish an Administrative Record File for every response action and to make a copy of the file available at or near the project. Under the U.S. Department of Defense Military Munitions Response Program (MMRP), the CAARNG is conducting a Remedial investigation at the Keystone Rifle Range Munitions Response Site located within a privately owned parcel of land located just east of State Highway 108/1 20 (post mile 9) and the Sierra Railroad, and 12 miles southwest of Sonora. Fieldwork is scheduled to begin on or about 26 October 2015. The Administrative Record File has been established at the following location: California Army National Guard Military Department 3900 Roseville Road North Highlands CA 95660

The California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) will also maintain the Administrative Record File at: Cal EPA/DTSC 8800 Cal Center Drive Sacramento, CA. 95826 Information Repository An information repository contains current and historical information, technical reports, and reference documents concerning a response action. The Keystone Rifle Range MMRP information repository is located at the following location:

Sonora Public Library 480 Greenley Road Sonora, CA 95370 The public is invited to visit the library to review the contents of the Administrative Record File and information repository. If you have any questions about the Keystone Rifle Range Military Munitions Response Program, Administrative Record File, or information repository contact Patrick Shaw, Army National Guard, at (703) 607-7199 or e-mail to atrick. .shaw2.civO mail.mil. Restoration Advisory Board Part of the U.S. Army's environmental program is to ensure that the community is involved in all aspects of the munitions investigation at the Keystone Rifle Range MRS. Community involvement is achieved through, but not limited to, public notices published in local newspapers, maintaining an administrative record file, and community participation in a Restoration Advisory Board (RAB). The purpose of a RAB is to provide a forum for community members who may be interested or affected by the investigation and clean-up activities at former U.S. Army training areas. RAB members meet on a regular basis to review and comment on contamination data and plans related to the clean-up activities. In keeping with the U.S. Army's policy to seek community involvement in the investigation processes, the U.S. Army is seeking input from the community to determine if there is sufficient community interest in establishing a RAB for the Keystone Rifle Range MRS. If there is sufficient interest in establishing a RAB, one will be established. Typically sufficient interest is indicated by 50 or more individuals who are interested and/or available to be involved in RAB activities. For more information about RABs, please access the following website: htt://www.denix.osd.mil/rab/u load/RAB-Rule-H andbook Final. df

If you are interested in establishing a RAB for the Keystone Rifle Range MRS, please contact Patrick Shaw, Army National Guard, at (703) 607-7199 or e-mail to: atrick. .shaw2.civO mail.mil Publication Date: October 13, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE T.S. No.: 14-13603 A.P.N.: 092-270-380-0 NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE Section 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED TO ABOVE IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 2/26/2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IFYOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest

bidder for cash, cashier's check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. BENEFICIARY MAY ELECT TO BIDLESS THAN THE TOTAL AMOUNT DUE. Trustor: Margaret Robinson Brodowski and Richard Brodowski, wife and husband, as joint tenants Duly Appointed Trustee: Carrington Foreclosure Services, LLC Recorded 3/2/2007 as Instrument No. 2007003783 in book, page of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of Tuolumne County, California, Described as follows: as more fully described in said deed of trust Date of Sale: 10/20/2015 at 3:30 PM Place of Sale: At the front entrance to the Administration Building, at the County Courthouse Complex, 2 South Green Street, Sonora, CA 95370 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $244,359.04 (Estimated) Street Address or other common designation of real property: 20831 BIG FOOT CIR GROVELAND, CA 95321 A.P.N.: 092-270-380-0 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability

for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee's Attorney. If you have previously been dischargedthrough bankruptcy,you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holder's rights against the real property only. THIS NOTICE IS SENT FOR THE PURPOSE OF COLLECTING A DEBT. THIS FIRM ISATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT ON BEHALF OF THE HOLDER AND OWNER OF THE NOTE. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED BY OR PROVIDED TO THIS FIRM OR THE CREDITOR WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on

your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder's office or a title insurance company,either ofw hich may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (714) 730-2727 or visit this Internet Web site www.servicelinkASAP.corn, using the file number assigned to this case 14-13603. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 09/23/2015 Carrington Foreclosure Services, LLC 1610 E. Saint Andrew Pl., Suite 150F Santa Ana, CA 92705 Automated Sale Information: (714) 730-2727 or www.l sasa .corn for NON-SALE information: 888-313-1969 Shirley Best, Trustee Sale Specialist A-4544317 Publication Dates: September 29 & October 6, 13, 2015

The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370

Looking for bargains? You' ll find them in the classifiedsi

588-4515

THEUNI0NDEMocRAT


B6 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 S. GREEN ST. SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO. 2015000347 Date: 9/24/2015 01:44P DEBORAH BAUTISTA, CLERK & AUDITORCONTROLLER

The following Person(s) is (are) doing business

Sonora, California

THE UMONDEMOCRAT

PUBLIC NOTICE as: Fictitious Business Name (s): YOSEMITE ADVENTURE SUPPLIES Street address of principal place of business: 18911 Ferretti Road Bldg. A Groveland, CA 95321 Name of Registrant: Turney, Robert 20862 Big Foot Circle Groveland, CA 95321

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THEUMO NDEMocRAT

PUBLIC NOTICE The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: not applicable This Business is conducted by: an individual. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) s/ Robert W Turney NOTICE: This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new FBN statement must be filed no more than 40 days from expiration. This filing does not of itself authorize the use of this name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state or common law. (B 8 P Code 14411 et seq.) CERTIFICATION: I hereby certify that the

THE MOTHER LODE'S LEADING INFORMATION SOURCE SINCE 1854

PUBLIC NOTICE foregoing is a correct copy of the original on file in my office. DEBORAH BAUTISTA, County Clerk & Auditor-Controller, By: Theresa K Badgett, Deputy Publication Dates: September 29 & October 6, 13, 20, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 S. GREEN ST. SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO. 2015000362 Date: 10/8/2015 01:22P DEBORAH BAUTISTA, CLERK & AUDITORCONTROLLER The following Person(s) is (are) doing business as: Fictitious Business Name (s): MONTEZUMA RANCH Street address of principal place of business: 8931 Montezuma Road Jamestown, CA 95327 Name of Registrant: Montezuma Ranch, Inc. 8931 Montezuma Road Jamestown, CA 95327 Articles of Incorporation ¹3826744 CA

PUBLIC NOTICE The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 10/01/2015 This Business is conducted by: a corporation. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) Montezuma Ranch, lnc. s/ John J. Gardella, III President NOTICE: This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new FBN statement must be filed no more than 40 days from expiration. This filing does not of itself authorize the use of this name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state or common law. (B & P Code 14411 et seq.) CERTIFICATION:

PUBLIC NOTICE I hereby certify that the foregoing is a correct copy of the original on file in my office. DEBORAH BAUTISTA, County Clerk 8 Auditor-Controller, By: Theresa K Badgett, Deputy Publication Dates: October 13, 20, 27 & November 3, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 S. GREEN ST. SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO. 2015000336 Date: 9/1 8/2015 10:52A DEBORAH BAUTISTA, CLERK & AUDITORCONTROLLER The following Person(s) is (are) doing business as: Fictitious Business Name (s): A) ALL CAL ATTORNEY SERVICE B) ALL CAL PROCESS SERVICE Street address of principal place of business: H45 N. Washington St. Sonora, CA 95370 Name of Registrant: A) Bland, Tyler 45 N. Washington St.

PUBLIC NOTICE

BUY IT

SELL IT

FIND IT

Ungrateful daughter causes grief for parents DEAR ANNIE: My wife and I are in our early 70s and have two daughters. The younger one lives nearby, is married and has a 2-year-old. The olderone,"Deirdre,"is divorced from a verbally and emotionally abusive husband. We had warned Deirdre against marrying this man because they seemed incompatible, but we were supportive when she insisted she loved him. They moved 2,500 miles away, and we traveled as often as possible to see her and show that we cared. When she called at 3 a.m., crying and begging me to talk to her husband,Itraveled alone to comply. We suggested they seek counseling, which they did, but it didn't help. When Deirdre filed for divorce, we paid for her lawyer. When her ex left her high anII dry, we paid for a new car so she could get to work and drive her daughter to school. We pay their airfare to come here for summers and

holidays. Annie,we are on a fi xed income

wife, and I wonder whether there is a bettersolution.— UP THE CREEK WITHOUT A PADDLE DEAR CREEK Yes. Let go. Deirdre is dif6cult and her life with an abuser didn't help. Her and it takes a lot of sacrificing to pay daughter is a combination of her for all of these expenses. When we parents, so you cannot expect visit, my wife cooks and helps our sweetness and light from the granddaughterwith her homework, girl. What yOu Can dO iS aCCePt while I clean house and take her to them as theyare.You are equatand from school. Meanwhile, she has ing your financial sacrifices with become just as confrontational as her your treatment, but it won't almother. The girl never says thank ways match up.Do what you feel you, is not afFectionate toward us and comfortable doing, but without has no respect for our authority. expecting an emotional rewarcL Recently, Deirdre became angry Deirdre and her daughter could when our granddaughter called her bene6t from counseling, and you at work in tears over a broken neck- can suggest it, but again, keep lace. We were partly blamed for the your expectations in check. It incidentand we fl ew back home up- will save you a lot of grief in the set and are currently not on speaking long run. terms with Deirdre. I recently sent DEAR ANNIE: Oct. 13 is Metaher a birthday card with a check, tell- static Breast Cancer Awareness Day. ing her that I will always love her. I Metastatic breast cancer is cancer don't want to sever relations, but this that has spread &om the breast to relationship negatively affects my other organs in the body, most com-

Annie's Mailbox ™~>

monly the bones, liver, lungs or brain. Unfortunately, most of us diagnosed with MBC will eventually die from the disease. Additional research and treatment development will help a great many patients in the future. Please urge your readers to get informed. NEW YORK DEAR NEW YORK Thank you for the timely reminder. Anyone who is interested in more information can contact the Metastatic Breast Cancer Network at mbcn.org orthe National Cancer Institute at cancer.gov.We' ll be thinking of you. Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy -

Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime

editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@creatoracom, or t //rite to:

Annie's Mailbox, cl o Creators Syndi; cate, 787 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach,

CA 90254. Youcan also find Annie on Facebook at Facebook,.corn/AskAnniea

Meniere's disease can cause recurring vertigo DEAR DR. ROACH: My wife is suffering Rom Meniere's disease, a condi-

To Your Good Health

tion that causes, at times, severe ver-

tigo and disorientation. Although she' s never actually been diagnosed with the condition, after several months of numerous tests on her heart, brain, ears, eyes and balance, the doctors "think" it's Meniere's disease. It came upon her rather suddenly, which is another puzzlingaspectofhercondition. Most times, she can control it by sitting still or with focus techniques or motion-si cknessdrugs.Sheisabletodrive, but otheractivities cause her distress. She is seeing a physical therapist and using relaxation techniques suggested by the therapist to help relieve tension in her shoulders, neck and head. Sometimes she wakes from sleep and will have to walk around the room to "collect" herself &om spinning in bed during sleep. This condition is affecting many aspects of her and my life, including diet, ability to eat, movement and intimacy. Is there anything other than what she

Keith Roach, M.D. is currently doing that will help her find a more normal daily life? Most of what we' ve read online suggests there' s no curefor Meniere'sdisease but that it can be controlled. As of this writing, none of the "controls" have been efFective. Thank you.— G.S. ANSWER: Meniere's disease is a cause ofrecurrent vertigo,the sensation of dizziness, often with a feeling that the room is spinning or that the person is spinning. Meniere's disease also may include tinnitus, a ringing in the ears, and hearing loss, although not allcasesfeaturethesesymptoms. There are some things I would recommend immediately for your wife. The first is to stop taking all motion-

sicknessdrugs,since long-term use of these tend to prevent the body &om ever getting completely better. Secondly, she should find a physical or occupational therapist who's familiar with vestibular rehabilitation, a type of therapy intended to use the body's own systems to retrain the affected organ of balance. Finally, she needs a doctor experienced enough in Meniere's disease to determine whether she would benefit Rom sodium restriction or a diuretic. By finding and avoiding triggers for symptoms, in addition to stopping any problem medicines and getting vestibular rehabifneeded,90percentofM eniere's disease sufferers can maintain normal activities. DEAR DR. ROACH:I have severe halitosis. I have had my sinuses, teeth and gums checked to see if they are the cause of the odor, but the dentist and ENT found nothing. I was referred by my primary doctor to a G.I.specialist, who found I had a sliding hiatal hernia, which was causing acid reflux. He recommended surgery to push the stom-

IIISCSPE Birthday for October 13. Personal discoveries illuminate this year. Suddenly you see things from a new perspective. Talk about what you want for the world. Professional opportunities lead to a personal turning point this spring. Look deeper to generate greater balance with work and health next autumn. Prioritize love.

market. You' re especially clever today and tomorrow. Come up with a powerful spin. Get into an intensive research phase. Write up what you learn. Friends help you get the word out. Send thank-you notes. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Today is a 9 — Focus on making money. Cash flow improves over the next few days. Don't try to bend the rules. Quantify results in practical To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the terms. Write up your conclusions. Disciplined attention to easiest day, 0 the most challenging. the budget wins a bonus. Aries (March 21-April 19): Today is a 9 — Attend to Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Today is a 7 — No more finances today and tomorrow. Study money, and review procrastination. Use your power responsibly. Begin a two-day self-confident phase. Make an important choice. your resources. Changes necessitate budget revisions, You' re gaining a distinct advantage. Talk about the practiand favoring strategists. Heed a call to action for something you feel passionate about. Push beyond old limits. cal demands of your plan. Trust a sibling's advice. Invest Negotiate carefully. in your career. Taurus (April 20-May 20): Today is a 9 — Work with Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Today is an 8 — Conpartners over the next few days. Share results. Collabocentrate on clean-up today and tomorrow. Finish old rate and brainstorm. Carefully consider your decisions. projects. Re-evaluate what you have and want. Let go You have what you need. Share the load. Strengthen of an old habit. Set long-range goals. Gather advice and your infrastructure. Get bids for the tasks you least enjoy. then think it over. Follow a strong recommendation. Gemini (May 21 June 20): Today is an 8 — The workCapricorn (Dec. 22 Jan. 19): Today is an 8 — Confer load could get intense over the next few days. Hop into with allies. Your friends are your inspiration. Commitaction and go. Keep efforts practical. Postpone what you tees are especially effective today and tomorrow. Enjoy can, and get help if necessary. Discuss the game plan and a party phase. One game folds and another begins. Remake sure everyone knows their part. affirm a partnership. Offer your experience and comfort Cancer (June 21 July 22): Today is a 7 — The next to someone feeling sad. two days are reserved for fun. Love blossoms. You' re Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Today is a 9 — You can developing a new perspective. Complete old projects advance your career over the next few days. Complete old projects to make space for new. Friends help you and adventures to create space for the new. Things fall together for you. Bonds get renewed. Go play. make an important connection. There may be a test or Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): Today is an 8 — The gentle challenge involved. Provide excellence. approach works best now. Take care of home and family Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): Today is an 8 — Get into forthenextfew days.M akea change.Logicsuggests alan adventurous phase. Conditions are better for travel ternatives. Love is all that matters. Get into the planning. for the next two days. New opportunities to expand Do what you promised. your territory arise. Share what you' re learning. Listen to Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Today is a 9 — Study the someone who'sbeen there.Getexperienced feedback.

PUBLIC NOTICE

Sonora, CA 95370 common law. (B & P B) Martinez, Diego Code 14411 et seq.) 45 N. Washington St. CERTIFICATION: Sonora, CA 95370 I hereby certify that the The registrant comforegoing is a correct menced to transact copy of the original on business under the ficti- file in my office. tious business name or DEBORAH BAUTISTA, names listed above County Clerk & on: not applicable Auditor-Controller, By: This Business is conTheresa K. Badgett, ducted by: Deputy co-partners. Publication Dates: I declare that all inforSeptember 22, 29 & mation in this statement October 6, 13, 2015 is true and correct. (A The Union Democrat, registrant who declares Sonora, CA 95370 as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) s/ Tyler Bland s/ Diego Martinez NOTICE: This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new FBN statement must be filed no more than 40 days from expiration. THE UNI0N DEMocRAT This filing does not of itself authorize the use of this name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state or

ach back into its normal position below the diaphragm.Idecidedto passonthe surgery. He recommended taking overthe-counter medications such as Nex-

ium, but a&sr several days my lower backstartedtohurt,soIstopped taking them. I am reconsidering the surgery and was wondering if this is a good idea. Is it possible that the hernia has nothing to do with the halitosis? — E.H. ANSWER: Experts believe that 90 percentof the time, halitosis comes from the mouth. What your gastroenterologis t is suggesting as the cause of the halitosis is plausible. I found several anecdotal cases where surgery

cured the halitosis. However, it's not only possible that the hiatal hernia has nothing to do with the halitosis, I think it is unlikely that it does. Since surgery would not otherwise be recommended for a sliding hiatal hernia, I can't recommend surgery. Readers may write Dr. Roach, MD.,

at 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803 or email ToYourGoodHealtII@med.cornell.edu with medical questions.

Today in history Today is Tuesday, October 13, the 286th day of 2015. There are 79 days left in the year. Today's Highlight in History: On October 13, 1775, the United States Navy had its origins as the Continental Congress ordered the construction of a naval fleet. On this date: In 1792, the cornerstone of the executive mansion, later known as the White House, was laid during a ceremony in the District of

Columbia. In 1843, the Jewish organization B'nai B'rith (buhNAY' brith) was founded in New York City. In 1932, President Herbert Hoover and Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes laid the cornerstone for the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington. In 1944, during World War II, American troops entered Aachen, Germany. In 1957, CBS-TV broadcast "The Edsel Show," a one-hour live special starring Bing Crosby designed to promote the new, illfated Ford automobile. (It was the first special to use videotape technology to delay the broadcast to the West Coast.) In 1960, John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon held the third televised debate of their presidential campaign (Nixon was in Los Angeles, Kennedy in New York). In 1962, Edward Albee's four-character drama "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" opened on Broadway. In 1972, a Uruguayan chartered flight carrying 45 people crashed in the Andes; survivors resorted to feeding off the remains of some of the dead in order to stay alive until they were rescued more than two months later.

BRIDGE How might east beat contract?

10-13-15 North 4 AJ 10 4 By PHILLIP ALDER 0 J 105 I 762 Paul Cezanne, who produced a series of paint4 Q54 i ngs featuring card players, said, "The day is Wes t East coming when a single carrot, freshly observed, 4 7 6 3 4 K8 5 will set off a revolution." 7 82 V974 Thatwas quite some claim, but in today's JJ984 t Q103 deal East has a chance to dangle a carrot that y J g(j 9 6 4 AK 8 3 might cause a "revolution" between North and South South. 4 q92 First, though, this week we are wonder7 AK Q 6 3 ing when declarer should ruff and when he I AK 5 should discard. This is another straightforward 472 example. South is in four hearts. West leads the Dealer: South club jack, and the defenders keep playing the Vulnerable: Neither suit. What should declarer do? N ote North's raise to two hearts. With a weak S out h We s t No r t h Ea s t hand, tell partner as quickly as possible. Yes, if 1% Pass 2V Pass South is 4-5 in the majors, spades could bethe 4V Pass Pas s Pas s better trump suit. Then North hopes his partner has enough to bid higher, when South would Opening lead: 4 J rebid two spades. Should declarer discard his inevitable diamond loser at trick three'? Certainly not! That would put his contract on the spade finesse, when he has 10 top tricks: three spades, five hearts and two diamonds. Well, in theory 10 top tricks. After ruffing at trick three and drawing trumps ending in his hand, South runs the spade nine (the lowest card that can win the trick if the finesse is working). Now an East with steely nerves can dangle a tasty-looking carrot. He ducks smoothly. Then when South runs the spade queen, East ducks again! If declarer greedily assumes the finesse is winning, he will take a third finesse, but East will produce the king out of his back pocket, and the contract will go down one.


Sonora, California PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 S. GREEN ST. SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO. 2015000364 Date: 10/8/2015 01:41P DEBORAH BAUTISTA, CLERK & AUDITORCONTROLLER The following Person is doing business as: Fictitious Business Name: BROWN'S COFFEE HOUSE Street address of principal place of business: 22760 Main Street Columbia, CA 95310 Name of Registrant: Sadie Brown, Inc. 22760 Main Street Columbia, CA 95310 Articles of Incorporation ¹3826682 CA The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 10/01/2015 This Business is conducted by: a corporation. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) Sadie Brown, Inc. s/ Angela Matulich President NOTICE: This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new FBN statement must be filed no more than 40 PUBLIC NOTICE

Tuesday, October 13, 2015 — B7

THE UNIONDEMOCRAT PUBLIC NOTICE

days from expiration. This filing does not of itself authorize the use of this name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state or common law. (B & P Code 14411 et seq.) CERTIFICATION: I hereby certify that the foregoing is a correct copy of the original on file in my office. DEBORAH BAUTISTA, County Clerk & Auditor-Controller, By: Theresa K Badgett, Deputy Publication Dates: October 13, 20, 27, & November 3, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TUOLUMNE COUNTY CLERK 2 S. GREEN ST. SONORA, CA 95370 (209) 533-5573 FILE NO. 2015000346 Date: 9/24/2015 12:02P DEBORAH BAUTISTA, CLERK & AUDITORCONTROLLER The following Person(s) is (are) doing business as: Fictitious Business Name (s): GHT MINING & CONSULTING COMPANY Street address of principal place of business: 9010 Friendship Hill Road Jamestown, CA 95327 Name of Registrant: Ploutz, Lloyd G. Residence Address: 9010 Friendship Hill Road Jamestown, CA 95327 The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: not applicable This Business is conducted by: an individual. PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE No. 15-226: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED October 3, 1978. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, ITMAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On OCTOBER 26, 2015 at 3:30 pm of said day, at the front entrance to the Administration Building at the County Courthouse Complex at 2 South Green Street, Sonora, Ca., THE FORECLOSURE CO., INC., as Substituted Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash (payable at the time of sale in lawful money of the United States) the following described property situated in the County of Tuolumne, State of California, described more fully within said Deed of Trust. The street address and other common designation of the real property described above is purported to be: 13087 Wells Fargo Drive, Groveland, Ca. APN: 091-150-31 The undersigned disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation shown here. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a Trustee's Sale (auction). You will be bidding on a lien. Although you will receive title to the property, placing the highest bid at a Trustee auction DOES NOT automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction you will be, or may be, responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority and amount of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the County Recorder's Office or a title insurance company,either ofwhich may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: Thesale date shown on this Notice of Sale may be postponed one or more times, pursuant to California Civil Code Section 2924g. The law requires that information about Trustee Sale postponements be made available to you and the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you would like to know whether your sale date has been postponed, and/or the rescheduled time and date for

the sale of this property, you may call (408) 374-7204 or visit www.foreclosureco.corn and check Trustee's Sale ¹15-226. Information about postponements that are short in duration or that occur close to the scheduled sale time may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or online. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances, to satisfy the obligations secured by and pursuant to the Power of Sale conferred in a certain Deed of Trust executed byRobert A. Jackson and Sadie M. Jackson, husband and wife as joint tenants, as Trustors, Recorded on October 17, 1978 as Instrument No. 15869 in Volume 551 Page 487 in the office of the County Recorder of Tuolumne County. At the time of the initial publication of this Notice, the amount due to satisfy the obligation secured by the subject Deed of Trust, estimated costs, expenses, fees and advances is $185,961.23. To verify the opening bid call (408) 374-7204, before the sale date. The Foreclosure Company, Inc., as Trustee 3001 S. Winchester Blvd., Suite A, Campbell, California 95008 By: Christina Leigh, Foreclosure Officer Date: Sept. 29, 2015 This office is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose; whether that information is obtained verbally or in writing. NPP0259616 Publication Dates: October 6, 13, 20, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) s/ Lloyd G. Ploutz NOTICE: This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new FBN statement must be filed no more than 40 days from expiration. This filing does not of itself authorize the use of this name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state or common law. (B & P Code 14411 et seq.) CERTIFICATION: I hereby certify that the foregoing is a correct copy of the original on file in my office. DEBORAH BAUTISTA, County Clerk & Auditor-Controller, By: Theresa K. Badgett, Deputy Publication Dates: September 29 & October 6, 13, 20, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370

or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for petitioner: JEFFERY D. TROWBRIDGE/BRIAN J TROWBRIDGE TROWBRIDGE LAW OFFICE 180 Grand Avenue, Suite 700 Oakland, CA 94612 510-893-5300 Filed October 02, 2015 By: C. Greenfield, Clerk Publication Dates: October 8, 13, 15, 2015 The Union Democrat, Sonora, CA 95370

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: GRACE ELLEN N JI RICH CASE NUMBER PR-11244 To all heirs,

beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may be otherwise interested in the will or estate, or both, of: GRACE ELLEN NJIRICH, AKA GRACE E. NJIRICH AND GRACE NJIRICH A Petition for Probate has been filed by: RONALD F. NJIRICH

in the Superior Court of California, County of: NOTICE OF PETITION Tuolumne. The Petition for Probate TO ADMINISTER requests that RONALD ESTATE OF: F. NJIRICH be CHRISTY ANNE TORO appointed as personal CASE NUMBER representative to PR-11238 administer the estate of To all heirs, decedent. beneficiaries, creditors, the The petition requests contingent creditors, the decedent's will and and persons who may if any, be be otherwise interested codicils, admitted to probate. in the will or estate, or The will and any codicils both, of: CHRISTY are available for ANNE TORO examination in the file A Petition for Probate kept by the court. has been filed by: PETITION DIANE LEE BROWN in THE requests authority to the Superior Court of administer the estate California, County of: underthe Independent Tuolumne. of The Petition for Probate Administration Estates Act. (This requests that DIANE authority will allow the LEE BROWN be personal representative appointed as personal to take many actions representative to obtaining court administer the estate of without approval. Before taking the decedent. certain very important The petition requests actions, however, the the decedent's will and personal representative codicils, if any, be will be required to give admitted to probate. to interested The will and any codicils notice persons unless they are available for have waived notice or examination in the file consented to the kept by the court. proposed action.) The THE PETITION independent requests authority to administration authority administer the estate will be granted unless underthe Independent an interested person Administration of files an objection to the Estates Act. (This petition and shows good authority will allow the why the court personal representative cause should not grant the to take many actions authority. without obtaining court HEARING on the approval. Before taking A petition will be held in certain very important this court as follows: actions, however, the Date: Nov. 6, 2015 personal representative Time: 8:30 a.m. in Dept. will be required to give 3, at 60 N. Washington notice to interested St., Sonora, CA 95370 persons unless they IF YOU OBJECT to the have waived notice or granting of the petition, consented to the you should appear at proposed action.) The the hearing and state independent your objections or file administration authority written objections with will be granted unless the court before the an interested person hearing. Your files an objection to the may be in petition and shows good appearance person or by your cause why the court attorney. should not grant the IF YOU ARE A authority. CREDITOR or a A HEARING on the contingent creditor of petition will be held in the decedent, you must this court as follows: file your claim with the Date: November 13, court and mail a copy to 2015 personal representTime: 8:30 a.m. in Dept. the ative appointed by the 3, at 41 West Yaney within four months Ave., Sonora, CA 95370 court the date of first IF YOU OBJECT to the from issuance of letters as granting of the petition, provided in section 9100 you should appear at of the California Probate the hearing and state Code. The time for filing your objections or file claims will not expire written objections with before four months from the court before the the hearing date noticed hearing. Your above. appearance may be in YOU MAY EXAMINE person or by your the file kept by the attorney. court. If you are a IF YOU ARE A person interested in the CREDITOR or a estate, you may file with contingent creditor of the court a Request for the decedent, you must Special Notice (form file your claim with the DE-154) of the filing of court and mail a copy to an inventory and the personal represent- appraisal of estate ative appointed by the or of any petition court within four months assets or account as provided from the date of first in Probate Code section issuance of letters as 1250. A Request for provided in section 9100 Special form is of the California Probate availableNotice from the court Code. The time for filing clerk. claims will not expire petitioner: before four months from Attorney for J. COFFILL, the hearing date noticed WILLIAM COFFILL & COFFILL, above. Attorneys at Law YOU MAY EXAMINE 23 N. Washington St the file kept by the Sonora, CA 95370 court. If you are a person interested in the 209-532-4291 October 08, 2015 estate, you may file with Filed By: Mers Sullivan, Clerk the court a Request for Publication Dates: Special Notice (form Oct. 13, 16, 20, 2015 DE-154) of the filing of The Union Democrat, an inventory and Sonora, CA 95370 appraisal of estate assets or of any petition

Tribune Content Agency

The buttery taste of Brie pairs well with sweet fruits like fig and pear.

Versatile Brie the star of watercress and pear salad By SUSAN RUSSO

have them in your market, try them.

Tribune Content Agency

At my house growing up,

Watercress, appetizer,on dishes, after dinner or just for a snack. Pear and Unlike Pa r m igiano-Reggiano and Grana Padano, Brie Salad Brie was not a staple cheese we ate alot of cheese: as an

growing up, but it's a staple in our refrigerator now. In Serves 4 fact, there is currently a wheel of Brie made from Dressing goat's milk i n m y r e frig- 1 shallot, thinly sliced

1 tablespoon, plus 1 teaspoon extra tart flavor. virgin olive OH Though most t y pically 1 tablespoon rice served as an appetizer with wine vinegar crackers and cured meats, 3/4 tablespoon fresh or baked into a puff pastry, lemon juice Brie is quite versatile. It enSalt and a generous livens paninis, enriches paserator. It has a remarkably

silky texture and pleasingly

tas and makes delectable amOunt Of freShly ground black pepper crostini and quesadillas. For a rustic dessert, pair it with nuts and fresh fruit such as Salad

1 small bunch watercress, Although Brie is a French washed, stems removed culinary specialty, it is pop(about 1 1/2-2 cups) ular outside of France and 2 Seckel pears or 1 large grapes, figs, dates and pears.

availableat most supermarkets here in the States. I used Brie to make a seasonal salad of spicy watercress, sweet Seckel pears and chewy Medjool dates. Seckelpears are the tiniest of all pears and one of the tastiest. These pears are so sweet that they have been called"sugar pears."If you are fortunate enough to

BOSCOr O'Anjou Pear,

sliced crosswise 6 Medjool dateS, Pitted and slivered 4 ounces Brie, thinly sliced (the thin rind is edible) 1/4 cup toasted pecans, slivered

place nuts in a single layer in a medium size skillet. Over medium-low heat, Cook PeCanS fOr 5 to 7 min-

utes, stirring occasionally until slightly toasted and fragrant. Al t e rnatively, pre-heat oven to 300 F. Place nuts in a single layer on a baking sheet in oven for about 5 minutes, give them 8 stir, and bake another 3 to 5 minutes or until slightly toasted and fragrant. Saute shallots in 1 teaSPOOn Olive Oil, fOr 3 to 5

minutes until softened. Remove from heat and set aside. For the dressing, whisk all of the ingredients in a small bowl and set aside. To make individual salads, start by placing some WaterCreSS in the Center Of

a plate, then add pear slices, some Brie and some dates. TDP with toasted pecans and drizzle with dressing. Repeat with remaining three dishes. Susan Russo is a

freelance food writer in San Diego,Calif. One for the Table is Amy Ephron's online magazine

that specializes in food, politics and love. www.

To toast the pecans, oneforthetable.corn.

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Sonora, California

THE UN' DEMO CRAT

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Maggie Beck /Union Democrat

Ag in the Classroom, an annual event sponsored by the Tuolumne County Farm Bureau and Calaveras/ Tuolumne Cattlewomen's Association, drew hundreds of third-graders to the Mother Lode Fairgrounds last week, where they learned about farming and agriculture. TuCare Education Coordinator Amber Doescher (above) speaks to students about the forest's endless cycle and the many uses of wood. Columbia Elementary School third-graders (above right photo) Sage Carothers, 8 (left), and Cassie Sartin, 8, pet lambs after learning about the uses of wool. Columbia Elementary School third-grader Brayden McBride, 8 (right photo, at right), bites into a pear after learning about the life process of apples and pears from Ben Cover of Cover's Apple Ranch in Tuolumne.

FAST Continued from Page Bl are, they shouldn't be. Not all meals can be eaten at the most lauded restaurants.

But a craving for fast food doesn't mean you actuallyhave to eatdinner at a fast-food restaurant. Bad playlists, scratchy paper napkins and fluorescent lighting aren't good for anyone. The solution? Make your fast-food favorites at home, and eat them in the comfort of your dimly lighted dining room, listening to NPR with your Labrador curled up under your feet. As an act of public service, we are providing our own recipes for copycat In-N-Out Double Doubles, Taco Bell Crunchwrap Supremes and Panda Express orange chicken. We think there's a high probability these "unoScial" recipes will taste better than the real thing.

Homemade Taco Bell Crunchtvra Su reme Makes 8 wraps Taco meat 1 tablespoon oil 1/? onion, diced 1V2 pounds ground beef (preferably 20 percent fat) 1 teaspoon cumin 1 V2 teaspoon chile powder 1 V2 teaspoons onion powder 1 V2 teaspoons garfic powder 1 V2 teaspoons ancho chile powder 1 V2 teaspoons ground chipotle powder 1 V2 teaspoons salt V2 teaspoon sugar Cheese sauce 10 ounces sharp cheddar cheese, grated 1 tablespoon corn starch 1 (12-ounce) can evaporated milk For the crunch 8 extra-large (12-inch) tortillas Taco meat 8 small (4- to 6-inch) round tostadas Cheese sauce V2 head iceberg lettuce, shredded 2 small Roma tomatoes, diced 1 cup black olives, diced About 34 cup sour cream 1 bottle hot sauce To make the taco meat: Heat a large saute pan over medium heat until hot. Add the oil to the pan, then add the onions. Cook the onions until they are translucent and just start to brown, about 4 minutes. Add the ground beef to the pan. Mix the ground beef with the onions until well mixed. Add the cumin, chile powder, onion powder, garlic powder, ancho chile powder, ground chipotle powder, salt and sugar to the pan and mix well. Cook the meat until it browns, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat and set aside. To make the cheese sauce:Toss the cheese and corn starch together in a medium sauce pan. Add the evaporated milk and stir. Heat over medium heat until the mixture thickens to a sauce, about 5 minutes, stirring frequently. Remove from heat. This makes about 1R cups sauce.

Assembling the crunchwraps: To assemble the crunchwraps, lay out each of the tortillas. Evenly divide the taco meat among the tortillas, spooning a small circle on top of each tortilla. Top each mound of taco meat with a tostada, then evenly divide the shredded lettuce, cheese sauce, tomato and diced olives. Top each with a heaping tablespoon of sour cream. Carefully fold the outer edges of each tortilla toward the center, creating a circular package using five folds. Heat a skillet over medium heat until hot. Toast each crunchwrap until golden brown, about 1 minute on each side. Serve immediately with the hot sauce.

Homemade In N Out Double Double

ingredients to form eight burgers. Serve immediately.

SAUCE

Homemade Panda Ex ress Oran e Chicken

is that all you really need are a few pounds

Makes 4 to 8 servings

-

Makes 8 burgers Sauce V2 cup mayonnaise 3 tablespoonsplus 2 'Q teaspoons ketchup (scant 1/4 cup) 1 teaspoon yellow mustard 2V2 teaspoons sweet pickle relish 2 1i2 teaspoons dill pickle relish 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon white wine vinegar V2 teaspoon salt V2 teaspoon sugar For the Double Double 2 pounds ground beef chuck (80/20 fat ratio if possible) 16 iceberg lettuce leaves 8 slices beefsteak tomato 1 small yellow onion, sliced into rings 16 slices American cheese 8 white hamburger buns Sauce Salt To make the sauce: In a medium bowl, stir together the mayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, sweet and dill pickle relishes, Worcestershire sauce, vinegar, salt and sugar. This m akes about 3/4 cup sauce.The sauce will keep, covered and refrigerated, for up to two weeks. To make the Double Double: Measure out 16 (2-ounce) patties of meat and flatten each patty to a thickness of approximately V4 inch. Season each side of the patty with a pinch of salt and set aside while you heat the griddle. Toast the buns, cut-side down, on the griddle just until the cut sides begin to toast, about 30 seconds. Remove from heat and set aside. Heat a griddle pan over medium heat until hot. Cook the burgers on one side until the patties start to brown, 45 seconds to 1 minute. Flip the burgers, adding a slice of cheese to the browned tops of each one. Continue to cook until the burgers are cooked and the cheese is beginning to melt, about 1 minute more. Remove from heat. To assemble the burgers, slather about 1 tablespoon sauce on the toasted top and bottom of each bun. On the bottom of each bun, layer two lettuce leaves, a slice of tomato, one cheeseburger patty, a few onion rings, another cheeseburger patty and the top burger bun. Repeat with the remaining

Orange Chicken Sauce V4 cup water 2 tablespoons corn starch V2 cup orange juice, freshly squeezed if possible V2 teaspoon orange zest 2 tablespoons orange marmalade 2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon low-sodium soy sauce 1 clove garlic, minced V4 teaspoon ginger, grated 2'L2 teaspoons of sambal chile sauce 2 tablespoons minn 2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar 1 tablespoons white wine vinegar 2 tablespoons honey V4 teaspoon white pepper 1 teaspoon salt -

Fried Chicken 2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breast, diced 1V2 cups corn starch Vegetable oil, for frying Orange Chicken Fried chicken Orange chicken sauce To makethe orange chicken sauce: In a small bowl, stir together the water and corn starch to make a slurry. Set aside. In a small saucepan, combine the orange juice, zest and marmalade along with the soy sauce, garlic, ginger, chile sauce, mirin, rice wine vinegar, white wine vinegar, honey, pepper and salt. Heat over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally until the mixture comes to a simmer, 2 to 3 minutes. Whisk in the corn starch slurry and continue to cook until the saucecomes back to a sim mer,about2 m inutes. Remove from heat and set aside. This makes about 1 cup sauce. To make the fried chicken: Pour the corn starch into a shallow baking dish or bowl. Toss the chicken pieces in with the corn starch to coat, then set aside for a few minutes. Toss the chicken with the corn starch a second time to coat again. Set aside. Add enough oil to a large heavy pot so the oil comes about halfway up the sides. Heat the oil until a thermometer inserted reaches 350 degrees. Fry the chicken pieces, a handful at a time, until the chicken is firm and the fried coating is a pale golden. Drain on a cooling rack lined with paper towels. To makethe orange chicken: Heat a w ok over high heat until hot. Add the orange chickensauce and cook until the sauce starts to bubble, about 1 minute. Add the chicken to the pan and stir until each piece is well coated with the sauce, about 1 to 2 minutes. Serve immediately.

Continued from Page B2

of apples, some water and a touch of lemon

juice. There are a lot of recipes that call for sugar, but you don't need it. There's so much natural sweetness in apples, I guarantee this sauce will be plenty sweet on its own. You can also taste the sauce once it' s cooked and stir in a little sugar, honey or maple syrup if you'd like it to be sweeter. I also like to add a few cinnamon sticks for extra flavor; if you don't have cinnamon sticks, go ahead and substitute about a teaspoon of ground cinnamon. You could also throw in other fall baking spices, like star anise, a clove or two (no more than that — cloves are powerful!) or a few slivers of mesh ginger. Aside from the apples themselves, the most important "ingredient" in making slowcooker applesauce is time. Over the course of four hours, this once-crisp fruit will be cooked down to oblivion. It's helpful to give it a stir once or twice during cooking, but, for the most part, you can set it and forget it. Scoop your sauce into a few containers

and stash them in the fridge for the week to come! Whether you' re eating the sauce on its own or spooning it over ice cream, you' ve got yourself a homemade treat that makes theend ofsummer a littlem orebearable.

Homemade A lesauce Makes just over 4 cups 6 large apples, any vanety (approximately 3 pounds) 2 cinnamon sticks, optional 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1/2 cup water 1/4 teaspoon salt 1. Peel the apples with the vegetable peeler, then cut them into quarters and slice out the cores. Roughly chop apples into 1- to 2-inch pieces, depending on how chunky you prefer your applesauce. 2. Combine all the ingredients in the bowl of the slow cooker, and close the lid. 3. Cook on high for 4 hours, stirring twice during cooking. 4. If you like chunky applesauce, you can skip this step altogether. But it you prefer a more smooth texture, remove the cinnamon stick, then use an immersion blender to puree the applesauce until it reaches the consistency you like. 5. Cool the applesauce, then divide between several containers. Cover and store in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, or freeze for up to 3 months. Recipe notes: If you' re using an Instant Pot to make this slow-cooker applesauce, set the machine to "slow cooker" once theingredients have been added, increase the heat level to "More," adjust the cook time to 4 hours, then seal the lid. Kelli Dunn is an assistant edi tor for TheKitchn.corn, a nationally known blog

for peoplewho love food and home cooking. Submi t any comments or questions to

editori al@thekitchn.corn.


Inside: Comics, puzzles,weather,TV

THEIJNIONDEMOCRAT

Section

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Mcllroy, Land lead 'Cat runners

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BRIEFING

Lode shooterson mark in Coalinga The Mother Lode was well represented Saturday at the State Regional Matches in Coalinga. Rachel Babcock, of Soulsbyville, took High Women's award. Babcock also took second Marksman overall. RobertTaylor, of Columbia, took first High Master as well as a firstplace individual award. Nathaniel Nye, of Twain Harte, was the second Sharpshooter, and also earned an individual first place award. Nye won first Sharpshooter in the club match. Sam Robinson, of Valley Springs, won a first place Marksman award and Hunter Blacksmith, also of Valley Springs, earned second place Marksman award. Bill Kulik, of Mi-Wuk Village, was first Marksman in the club match. Also competing were Scott Nye, Joe Robinson, of Valley Springs, Morgan Owen, of Sonora and Matthew Nelson, of Copperopolis.

Runners strongat Yosemite event A large amount of local runners participated Saturday in the inaugural Yosemite Half Marathon at Bass Lake. Adin Dibble, Sonora, finished first in the 12-14 age group with a time of 1:26.14. Dibble also was 14th overall. Jack Birtwhistle, of Sonora, and Ethan Stuizenacker, of Sonora, finished first and second in the 1-11age group. Birtwhistle finished in 2:08.19 and Sturzenacker in 2:13A8. Christine Dibble, of Sonora, finished fifth overall in the women' s division and 29th overall in 1:30.17. Shawn Smith, of Sonora, came in third in men's 4044 and 72nd overall in 1:3753. Sara Burgess, of Sonora, finished third in women's 35-39 with a 1:38.14. Jacquelyn Davis crossed the finish line in 1:49.23 which was good enough for 9th in women's 20-24. Mary Bautista and Sabine Wahl-Barry, both of Sonora, finished fourth and sixth, respectively, in women's 55-59 in times of 1:56.36 and 1:58.34. Other local runners were: Jenny Hemmlnger; Lauren Mueller; Kim Dasilva; Susan Lawerence; Maria Sullivan; Shelley Wilson; Gini Seibert; Holly Harris; DianaTerrazas; Sarah Killough; Sandra Sturzenacker; Gretchen Birthwhistle; Annika Herz; Stacy Berger; Casey Gruenther; Kerry Williams; Nicole Spinetto; Janelle Williams; Melissa Foiada; Lulu Ramirez; KellyThalman.

Wildcats top Buffaloes; stay in hunt

for postseason

The Sonora cross country team competed Saturday at the Clovis Invitational at Woodward Park in Fresno. In thevarsity boys race, Jackson Mcllroy was the

By GUY DOSSI The Union Democrat

It's homecoming week at Sonora High School, and homecoming is typically all about football. However, the Sonora boys' soccer team didn't get the memo. In a game that the 'Cats needed to win in order to keep their playoff' hopes within reach, they went out and defeated Amador 2-1 Monday night at Dunlavy Field. "As a whole, this win for Sonora High is great," said freshman Jacob Schader. "It is homecoming, but we are still going at it with soccer. We are not just giving it all to football." Any fan who was tardy to the game by 3 minutes, had to askneighboring spectators how the 'Cats got the lead. Slightly over one minute removed from the start of the game, Sean Mackey set the ballon the turfclosest to the Amador bench on the north side of the field for a corner kick. He put foot-to-ball and the kick found the chest of Missael Vazquez. The ball died at the feet of Vazquez, and he made a perfect shot past the outstretched arms of the Amador goalkeeper for a 1-0 Sonora lead. Those fans who were late to the party, had to wait nearly 35 more minutes before another goal was scored. With the 'Cats holding on to a one goallead,both defenses tightened up and didn't allow

to fi ' h was 16th o ve r a l l

out of 237 runners with a time of 16:19.5.Mcllroy had an outstanding average mile time of 5:15.1 and set a personal record for the course. Keiman Kostlivy finished 216th overall with a time of19:38.5 and Gonzalo Pazos finished in 20:09.2 and 225th overall. In the girls division, Cassie Land led the 'Cats with an 18:32.5 finishing time, which put here 26th. Her time was a course per-

sonal record. Victoria French finished in 21:28.5 and in 159th overall.Kaarina Thompson finished in 175th with a 22.29.6, a personal record for the course. Kennedy Bruce finished with a 23:31.4; Natalie Hawks in 24:39.8; and Hannah Dowler in 27:13.8. Sonora will participate on Saturday in the Bronco Invitational. "This is a preview of the section meet course and there are 14 division IV teams entered including our former arch nemesis

Sierra ofManteca," said head coach Glenn Bass. "I realize this is homecoming

See WILDCATS / Page C3

See ROUNDUP / Page C3

Guy Dossi /Union Democrat

49ers find

Sonora goal keeper Anthony Prophet (top) makes a leaping save Monday in the Wildcats' 2-1 victory over Amador at Dunlavy Field. Sonora head coach Lloyd Longeway (right) talks strategy with his team at halftime.

things to build on after loss

-P

By JANIE McCAULEY

Limits aplenty at Delta Sonora Bass Anglers fishing club competed this weekend at the Stockton Delta. Moderate temperatures, light winds and clear skies made for a comfortable day of fishing. 18 teams made the trip and all but three weighed in limits. While the total weights were not what the Delta is capable of, the competition was tough as the difference between first and 10th wasonly 3 pounds and less than 1 pound separated the top four. Topping the field was Josh Parris fishing with his Father, Randy Parris (right). The two had a total weight of 12.16 pounds which included the tournament Big Fish at 6.29 pounds. In second place was the husband-wife team of Bob and Cheryl Harskamp with a total weight of 11.85 pounds. Third place went to Greg Rogers fishing solo, with 11.38 pounds. In fourth place was the husband-wife team of Jerry and Patty McGowan with a total weight of 11.32 pounds. Rounding out the top five were last month's winners, fishing buddies Phil Davis andTom Shores with 10.88 pounds. The next tournament will be Nov. 7 at Lake Don Pedro. Sonora Bass Anglers have room for a few more teams next year and has already selected the lakes for the 2016 season. For more information, go to www.facebook.corn/SonoraBassAnglers.

The Associated Press

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SANTA CLARA (AP)Sure, after that long crosscountry flight, a tired coach Jim Tomsula could still point to some i mp r o v e ments in yet another disappointing defeat. His San Francisco 49ers were in it until the very end this time on the heels of three lopsided losses. Quarterback Colin Kaepernick found a groove in the second half and succeeded several times throwing into traffic to go without an interception, while Anquan Boldin went over 100 yards receiving and Carlos Hyde nearlyran for 100 in a balancedoffensiveattack. "I can't say like my old See 49ERS/Page C3

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C2 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THE UN' DEMO CRAT

Bpwux(; BASEBALL Today 5:00 pm (WTBS)MLB Baseball National League Division Series, Game 4: Teams TBA. (If necessary; time tentative).

BASKETBALL Today 7:30pm (CSBA) NBA Preseason Basketball Denver Nuggets at Golden State Warriors.

HOCKEY Today 4:00 pm(CSN) NHL Hockey San Jose Sharks at Washin ton Ca itals.

BOXING Wednesday 6:00 pm(ESPN) Boxing Premier Boxing Champions. Alexander takes on Martinez in the 10-round main event. From Gila River Arena in Glendale, Ariz.

SOCCER Today 4:00 pm (ESPN) Soccer United States vs Costa Rica. From Harrison, N.J.

FOOTHILLS COLLEGE Wednesday Girls — Volleyball:Columbia vs. Sequoias, Oak Pavilion, 5 p.m. Friday College: Girls —Columbia at West Hills, Coalinga, 7 p.m.

HIGH SCHOOL Today Boys —Water polo: Sonora vs. Kimball, Sonora pool, 7 p.m.; Bret Harte at Central Catholic, Modesto, 5 p.m. Soccer: Bret Harte vs. Calaveras, Dorroh Field, 7 p.m.; Summerville vs. Argonaut, Thorsted Field, 7 p.m. Girls — Volleyball: Sonora vs. Amador, 7 p.m. Bret Harte vs. Calaveras, 6 p.m.; Summerville vs. Argonaut, 6 p.m. Golf: Sonora vs. Modesto Christian, Mountain Springs, 3:30 p.m.; Bret Harte at Escalon, 3 p.m.; Calaveras vs. Linden, La Contesta, 3 p.m. Water polo: Sonora vs. Kimball, Sonora pool, 6 p.m. Bret Harte at Central Catholic, Modesto, 5 p.m. Wednesday Boys —Water polo: Sonora vs. Bret Harte, Angels Camp, 7 p.m. Girls — Water polo:Sonora vs. Bret Harte, Angels Camp, 6 p.m. Thursday Boys — Soccer: Sonora vs. Calaveras, Frank Meyer Field, 7 p.m.; Summerville vs. Bret Harte, Thorsted Field, 7 p.m. Girls — Volleyball: Sonora vs. Calaveras, Mike Flock Gym, 6 p.m. Summerville vs. Bret Harte, 6 p.m. Golf: Sonora vs. Bret Harte, Greenhorn Creek, 3:30 p.m. Friday Boys — Football: Sonora vs. Linden, Dunlavy Field (homecoming), 7:30 p.m. Bret Harte vs. Amador, Dorroh Field, (homecoming) 7:30 p.m. Summerville at Argonaut, 7:30 p.m. Girls — Water polo:Sonora at Western States tournament, Modesto, TBA Coed — Cross country: Bret Harte at Roughrider Invite, Woodward Park, Fresno, 11 a.m.

Leonard bowls high 700 series, his 1st ever This column covers Sept. 27 through

The w omen's high game and series there were still several: Monday Madwere split between Kim Stephens ness — Bobby Papapetrou 259/683, (Monday M a dness) Warren Walker 258/656; High Rollers Curtis Leo n ard who finished the night — Kevin Flanagan 682, Bob Thomas D +I (Jokers Wild) has been with a 588 series and 661; Young at Heart — Dave Rossi bowling locally since Abl"e P Aman d a Kl a ahsen671, Billy Oliver 663; Jokers Wild2002-03 and has not (Umchu Full House) Curtis Leonard 274, Roger Brown 656 recorded a 700 sewith a 254 game. and Umchu Full House — Amanda BOWLERS TRIVIA until now Leon The other 700 club Klaahsen 576, Mike Silva 268, Kevin ard finished with an members were Rob- Flanagan 256/653, Dave Rossi 255 whopping 768, which Whatisthehtghestaverageforamaleert Porovich (Monday and Jim Simmons 680. The "I can't believe I beat myself is 177 pins over his or f e male on a four player team? Mad n ess ) 717 a nd average series. Answer at end. Warren Walker (Jok- club" had the following inductees: JokEdging Leonard for ers Wild) 704. ers Wild — Curtis Leonard, 77 pins the men's high game was Robert PorovT h i s week did not have the numberover 274; and Mike Silva (Umchu Full ich(MondayMadness)whorolleda277. of notablescores as last report but House) 93 pins over with 268. Oct. 1.

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NY puts lA on brink of elimination in NLDS NEW YORK (AP) — With big hits rather than beanballs, the New York Mets wiped out the Los Angeles Dodgers and tookcontroloftheirtestyDivision Series. Curtis Granderson drove in five runs with two doubles off the wall, Travis d'Arnaud and Yoenis Cespedes homered, and New York's dangerous bats bustedloose for a 13-7 victory Monday night that gave the Mets a 2-1 advantage in the best-of-five NL playoff Beforea bloodthirsty crowd of 44,276in the fi rstpostseason game at Citi Field, the

Mets broketheir postseason alsrealized they needed more scoring record. New York than a big home run. quickly erased an early threeThey needed a lot of hitsrun deficit and made a winner a maybe a little help, too. of a mediocre Matt Harvey in The defendingAL champihis playoff debut. ons saved their season MonBack in the postseason for day. They took advantage the first time in nine years, when Astros shortstop Carlos New York can reach the NL Correa couldn't handle a deChampionship Series with flected grounder that might another win today at home. have been a double-play ball, rallying for five runs in the inning to beat Houston Royals rally on Correa's eighth 9-6,forcing their playoff seerror, beat Astros 9-6 riesto a decisiveGame 5. HOUSTON (AP) — Almost Correa homered t wice, o ut of time and out of t h e doubled, singled and drove in playoffs, the Kansas City Roy- four runs in Game 4 of the AL

Greenhorn Creek Ladies 9-hole (Sept. 22) Bingo, Bango, Bongo: 1. Hanneke Elings 11; 2. Sue Rivera 10; 3. Marsha Schneider 9. Closest to Pin: No. 13, Elings g-feet, 6-inches; No. 15, Diane Chaisson

King, 9-6; September Ace of the Month: Cathy Muller 65. (Oct 6) One Best Ball Plus Low Putts: 1. Pam Williams, Carole King, Carole DePaoli, June Shiver 79; 2. Sharon Poff, Connie Bowser, Betty Haslouer, Blind Draw 63; Closest to Pin: No. 3, Karen Taylor, 2-1; No. 15. Pat Barsamian

11-9.

(Sept 29) Low Gross and Low Net — Low Gross: Linda Tolerton; Low Net: Catherine Holt: Closest to Pin: No. 3, Linda Tolerton, 39-0. (Oct. 6) Low Net — First Flight: 1. Nancy Sergent 64; 2. Barbara Pryor 73; Second Flight: 1. Val Anderson 61; 2. Ann Hufford 70. (Oct 6-7) Ladies 9-hole championship:Club Champion: Dianne Weygandt 36 hole gross score, 177; Club Champion runner up: Pam Williams 165; Net Club Champion: Karen Beeding 149; Net Club Champion runner up: Carolyn Butler 153; First Flight net winner: Roz Cathcart 156; Second Flight net winner: Carole King 154.

Greenhorn Creek Women (Sept 29) Cha Cha Cha with a twist: 1. Theresa Locke, Roz Cathcart, Carolyn Butler, Blind Draw, 116; 2. Karen Beeding, Karen Taylor, Kathy Archer, Betty Haslouer, 123; Closest to Pin: No. 6, Carole

Division Series. Houston took a 6-2 lead into the eighth, but a tough error charged to the 21-year-old rookie keyed the Royals' comeback to even the matchup at two games apiece. Game 5 will be back in Kansas City on Wednesday night.

Arrieta, the Windy City kids bashed their way to the brink of the NL Championship Series — and a spot in the record book. Jorge Soler, Kris Bryant and Kyle Schwarber connected as the Cubs set a postseason mark with six home runs and beat the St. Louis 8-6 on Monday for Cubs hit 6 home runs, Cardinals a 2-1 lead in the NL Division top Cardinals 8-6 Series. CHICAGO (AP) — The A third straight win for the young sluggers of the Chicago Cubs today afternoon, and the Cubs are making themselves franchise will advance to the at home in the playoffs. NLCS for the first time in 12 On a rare off night for Jake years.

16-5.

Forest Meadows Ladies 16-Hole (Sept 23) Low Net: 1. Pam Warren 63; 2. Diane Lowery 66; 3. Carol Renner 67. Closest to Pin: No. 2, Pam LaVine, 2-9;Money Hole:No. 15 Diane Winsby 11-6. (Sept 30) Low Net: 1. Sue Lyon,66; 2. Pam Warren 67; 3. (tie) Joan Anderson, Gloria Jacques, Diane Winsby 70; Money Hole: No. 15, Kathy Ganley, 7-6; Closest to Pin: Diane Lowery 6-4. (Oct 7) Low Net: 1. Pam Warren 59; 2. Liz Ritchie 61; No. 3 Pam LaVine 63. Closest to Pin: No. 2, Joan Andersen 22-1. Forest Meadows Swingin' Niners (Sept 29) Low Net: 1. MJ Davis, 32; 2. Audrey Hurtibus, 33; 3. Nikki Lorge, 35; 4. Laurie Plautz; Money

Courtesy photo

The Greenhorn Creek men's club winning team during its Low Net event on Oct. 7 were (from left) Steve Chaviel, Tim Miller, Lance Reinke and Stephan Archer. Hole: No. 2, Audrey Hurtibus.

Greenhorn Creek Men (Sept 25-26) 2015 Club Championship: Champion - Mitch McDaniel; Championship flight: No. 1. Tim

Nelson; No. 2. Bill Gideon; No. 3. Chris Niehuis; No. 4. Rory Erbeck; No. 5. Mark Weinheimer; First Flight: No. 1. Rich Butler; No. 2. Conrad Boisvert; No. 3. Ken Helmbacher; No. 4. Randy Tonascia; No.

5. Fred Russell. (Oct 7) Yellow Ball: No. 1. Stave Chaviel, Tim Miller, Lance Reinke, Stephan Archer; Closest To Pin: No. 6 Stephan Archer; Pete Pesonen.

STANDINGS RS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL MOTHER LODE LEAGUE Team League Overall 3-0 6-1 Sonora 2-1 4-3 Calaveras 2-1 3-3 Bret Harte 1-1 4-2 Amador 1-2 3-4 Summerville 0-2 2- 4 Argonaut 0-2 1-5 Linden Friday, Oct. 9 Brat Harte 21, Linden 13

Sonora 48, Summerville 26 Calaveras 26, Argonaut 7 Amador 55, Riverbank 7 Friday's games Linden at Sonora Amador at Brat Harte Summerville at Argonaut SAC-JOAQUIN SECllON DMSION III/IV/V CONFERENCES TRANS VALLEY LEAGUE Team League Overall 1-0 6-0 Hug hson

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The monthly Black Oak Senior Tournament was held recently with the following results: men — Dave Rossi 822 (he gets no handicap and also had the only 300 game). Lennie Andersonfi nished 813 and Dave Hunter 812. For the women — Debra Silva 830; Sharon Gomes 812; and Sonja Newell 792.

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1-0 3-3 Ripon 2-4 M odesto Christian 1 - 0 0-1 3-3 Escalon 0-1 3-3 Hilmar 0-6 Mountain House 0-1 Friday, Oct. 9 Ripon 52, Hilmar 35 Modesto60,Mountain House 7 Hughson 26, Escalon 14 Friday's games Escalon at Hilmar Hughson at Modesto Chr. Ripon at Mountain House

PIONEER VALLEY LEAGUE Team League Overall 1-0 6-0 Placer 1-0 6-0 Bear River 1-0 4-2 Lincoln 0-1 4-2 Center 0-1 2X Colfax 0-1 1-5 Foothill Friday, Oct. 9 Placer 33, Center 7 Lincoln 55, Colfax 21 Bear River 20, Foothill 7 Friday's games Center at Lincoln Colfax at Bear River Placer at Foothill SIERRA VALLEY CONFERENCE Team League Overall 1-0 4-2 Cordova 1-0 4-2 Union Mine 1-0 2-4 Liberty Ranch 0-1 4-2 El Dorado 0-1 3-3 Rosemont 0-1 3-3 Gait Friday, Oct. 9 Union Mine 31, Rosemont 14 Cordova 48, Gait 47 Liberty Ranch 34, El Dorado 25 Friday's games Union Mine at Gait Liberty Ranch at Cordova El Dorado at Rosemont SOUTHERN LEAGUE Team League Overall 3-0 6-0 Orestimba 3-0 6-0 Gustine Ripon Christian 2-1 5-1 2-1 3-2 Mariposa 1-2 4-2 Delhi 1-2 2-4 Denair 0-3 2X Waterford 0-3 0-6 LeG rand Friday, Oct. 9 Delhi 51, Le Grand 24 Ripon Chr. 59, Waterford 0 Gustine 44, Denair 0

Orestimba 49, Mariposa 21 Friday's games Delhi at Mariposa Waterford at Le Grand Orestimba at Denair Gustine at Ripon Chr. WESTERN ATHLEllC CONFERENCE Team League Overall 2-0 6-0 Patterson 2-0 5-1 Los Banos 2-1 34 Pacheco 1-1 3-3 Central Valley 1-2 2-5 El Capitan 1-2 2-5 Ceres 0-3 1-6 Livingston Fdday, Oct 9 Pacheco 42, Livingston 13 Los Banos 59, El Capitan 20 Patterson 45, Ceres 7 Friday's games Central Valley at Livingston Pacheco at Ceres Patterson at Los Banos GOLDEN EMPIRELEAGUE Team League Overall 3-0 6-1 Dixon Capital Chdstian 2-0 6-0 2-1 6-1 Marysville 1-1 24 Mesa Verde 1-2 4-3 Lindhurst 0-2 3-3 Natomas West Campus 0-3 1-6 Fdday, Oct 9 Dixon 69, West Campus 6 Mesa Verde 55, San Juan 45 Marysville 17, Natomas 6 Capital Chr. M, Lindhurst 0 Friday's games Central Valley at Livingston Pacheco at Ceres Patterson at Los Banos VALLEY OAK LEAGUE Team League Overall 3-0 6-0 Oakdale 3-0 6-0 Manteca Central Catholic 3-0 6-0 Weston Ranch 1-2 4-2 1-2 3-3 Sierra 1-2 3-3 Lathrop 0-3 3-3 East Union 0-3 1-6 Kimball Fdday, Oct 9 Manteca 43, Sierra 8 W eston Ranch 26,EastU nion20 Central Catholic 69, Kimball 3 Oakdale 49, Lathrop 14 Friday's games Weston Ranch at I athrop

Oakdale at East Union Central Catholic at Manteca Kimball at Sierra Friday night SONORA48, SUMMERVILLE 26 Sonora (6-1) 1 4 1 3 7 14 — 48 Summervilte(34) 7 7 6 6 — 26 First Quarter Son — Kane Rogers 7 run (Riley Garrett kick), 6:57. Sum — Travis Rodgers 10 run (Jake Noonan kick), 5A4. Son — Rogers 36 pass from Sammy Page (Garrett kick), 2:50. Second Quarter Sum — Alex Prevost 1 run (Noonan kick), 10:16. Son — Nate Gookin 60 run (Garrett kick), 4:04. Son — lan Cicero 19 pass from Rogers (pass failed),:50. Third Quarter Sum — Rodgers 88 kickoff return (kick failed), 11:41. Son — Gookin 34 run (Garrett kick), 5:58. Fourth Quarter Sum — Eli McLaurin 20 pass from Rodgers (Noonan kick), 11:13. Son — Gookin 9 run (Garrett kick), 7:47. Son — Wyatt Faughnan 94 run (Garrett kick), 4:17. S on S u m First Downs 11 15 Rushes-Yards 4 4 -454 27-126 Passing yards 66 160 Total offense 5 41 266 PC-PA-Int 4-8-0 10-22-1 Fumbles — lost 2-0 3-1 0 -0 2 - 3 9 Punts - Avg. 1 1-110 6 - 50 Penalties INDMDUAL STATlSllCS RUSHING —Sonora: Page 8-71, Bradley Canepa 11M, Faughnan 4-107, Gookin 12-167, Rogers 4-39, Jayden Estrada 1-5, Brett McCutchen 2-13, Jesus Rodriguez 1-8, Team 1-(4). Summerville: Rodgers 8-50, Prevost 7-6, Nathaniel Ulvevadet 10-63, JT McCready 1-4, Dominic Esquivel 1-3. PASSING — Sonora: Page 3-7-067, Rogers 1-1-0-19. Summerville: Rodgers 10-22-1-160. RECEIVING — Sonora: Rogers 1-38, Faughnan 2-29, Cicero 1-19. SummerVill: McCready 4-57, McLaurin 4-57, Ulvevadet 1-22, Prevost 1-25.


Sonora, California

BIUEFS Klinsmannsends Fabian 3ohnsonhome HARRISON, N.J.— Fabian Johnson was told to returntoGermany by U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann, who was disp leased t h e defender took himself out of last weekend's 3-2 loss to Mexico in the 111th minute. Seventh minutes after Johnson was replaced by Brad Evans, Paul Aguilar scored the go-ahead goal for Mexico, which earned a berth in the 2017 Confederations Cup. Speaking a day before the U.S. plays Costa Rica in an exhibition, Klinsmann said: "I had a very severe word with Fabian Johnson, and I sent him home today." "He can rethink his approach about his team," Klinsmann said. Johnson, the starting right back for the U.S., plays for Borussia Moenchengladbach.

Bell's run at buzzer lifts Steelersover Bolts SAN DIEGO — Five seconds left, down by three points and the ball inside the 1. The Pittsburgh Steelers needed a gutsy play against the San Diego Chargers. They got it for a stunning victory. LerVeon Bell scored on a

wildcat run as time expired to give Mike Vick and the Steelers a 24-20 victory Monday night that had tens of thousands of Pittsburgh fans roaring and waving their Terrible Towels at Qualcomm Stadium. Bell took the direct snap, ran left and was slowed in traffIc before diving for the end zone and getting the ball across the line as Donald Butler dragged him down. Bell said it was the most meaningfultouchdown of his three-year career. 'The game-winner on the last play of the game, that' s what you dream about," he said.

Americans etain Residents Cup INCHEON, South Korea — The best Presidents Cup in 10 years revealed exactly what the Americans need to do if they want to win the Ryder Cup. Lobby for an increase in points. The International team long believed that playing more matches gave the Americans an advantage because of their depth, and the fact this Presidents Cup wasn't decided until the final match suggests some truth to that. It was a petty argument. The

I n t ernational

team was disappointed the matches were not reduced f'rom 34 to 28, and the Americans were irritated by a compromise that reduced them to 30. This was as closeas the Presidents Cup has ever come to hard feelings. That's why the two cups only the look the same from the outside. One con-

tains a bone dry martini, the other a lava fiow. A nd that's why t h e Americans should celebrategreatgolfand agreat victory without thinking it was a big step toward solving their recent Ryder Cup woes.

It's not going to hurt. The assistants that U.S. captain Jay Haas had with him last week were Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III, Fred Couples, Jim Furyk and Steve Stricker. At least three of them will be centralfigures at the Ryder Cup for the rest of the decade or more. The idea behind that Ryder Cup Task Force was to build some continuity. Even so, the Presidents

Cup is more like a dress rehearsal compared with opening night that is the Ryder Cup. — The Associated Press

Tuesday, October 13, 2015 — C3

THE UN' DEMO CRAT

WILDCATS Continued from PageC1 any clean shots. With two minutes remaining in the half, Amador tied the game with a close shot in trafIIc.

The score remained 1-1 heading into the second half. Wildcat goalie Anthony Prophet may have let one past him in the first half, but he made perhaps the save of the game with 29:32 remaining in the second half. Amador passed the ball well in transition, and had Sonora outnumbered 2-1 by the 'Cats goal. A powerful shot was taken, and Prophet jumped and made a fi ngertip save to keep Amador from taking the lead. The Dunlavy Field faithful sat up off the cement stands and cheered Prophet for his outstanding play. "He's a senior and he made a senior play on that ball," said Wildcat head coach Lloyd Longeway. "A junior goalkeeper might have been caught off of his line or not ready at the time. But, he got back just enough because it looked like it was going in. It was a game saver for us. I think if they score there, our heads are down and wemight not have won the game." Sonorastillneeded to score. As the time ticked off the scoreboard, it was apparent that the clock would soon become the 'Cats enemy. "I knew that a tie wouldn' t have helped us in the standings,so I made a couple of changes to help our offense," Longeway said. "I moved Zach Whitmer, our sweeper, up to the top, and I moved Missael out of the back to the midfield to try to get that

Guy Dossi /Union Democrat

Sonora's Clayton Roberson (9, above) speeds upfield Monday against Amador at Dunlavy Field. Wildcat Jacob Schader (19) maintains possession under pressure from an Amador defender. Sonora's Cole Costello fights for the ball. extragoal because we really wanted to win tonight." Sonoramoved the balldown the field and quickly got the ball closer to the south side goal. Ross Irwin passed the ball to Schader, who was streaking down the far side of the field. Schader received a perfect pass from Irwin and blasted a sensational shot that rocketed past the Amador goalkeeper. The goal gave the 'Cats a 2-1 lead with under five minutes to play in the game. "Jacobisa competitor and that is why we brought him up on our team," Longeway said. 'We could see that during our summer training. He just does not quit and he showed that tonight. Late in the game, he was where he

ROUNDUP

needed to be and he took advantage of it." Sonoradid its best to protect the lead and Amador did not get the opportunity to attempt a game tying shot. With the final blow of the referee's whistle, the 'Cats exploded off the bench in celebration. They circled around Longeway at midfield, some too ti red to stand straight up, and their coach praised them for their gritty and outstanding play. 'Tm really excited about where our program is going," Longewaysaid.'We have alotof exceptional playersand Sonora High soccer has a really bright future. With guys like Clayton Roberson, Mssael Vazquez, Jacob Schader — there are re-

kills. Herndon had three aces and nine digs. Stafford had a team-high 23

allyalotofgreatyoungplayers in the program. Right now, our older players have been teaching them and have been really good teammates all year, helping them improve." With th e w i n , S onora brings its record in Mother Lode League play to 3-3-1. The 'Cats will try to keep the momentum going onThursday when they take on Calaveras in San Andreas. With Summerville an d L i n den fighting for the one and two

Wildcat 3V volleyers win in 2

The Sonora Wildcat junior varsity Continued from PageC1 assists. volleyersswept Amador 25-12 and Christine Lora finished with 17 digs 25-8 Monday atBud Castle Gymnaweek and there will be a lot of activi- and Adri Davies had four blocks. slunl. ties and distractions, but this is an imBret Harte (16-6, 4-2 MLL) will host For Sonora,Emma Fray had five portant meet and we must be focused." Calaveras (9-3, 5-1 MLL) today at 6 kills and four aces, Haylie Santos JV — Travis Moore finished first for p.m.The 'Frogs are looking to avenge served for eight aces and made nine Sonora with a time of 26:31.1. a late September 3-0road sweep digs, Paige Houck smacked kills and against the 'Skins. Madison Fong had six kills.

seeds in the MLL, the 'Cats now one step closer to taking controlofthe third seed. sWe were in a fight with Amador in the standings for third and I think that the top three teams go to playoffs," Longeway said. "One of our goals early in the season was to go to playoffs. Amador has a heck of a team and I'm really proud of my guys. We tied Amador last time, so we really wanted to get them here at home."

two kills and one block.

Sonora junior varsity water polo edgesMerced8-7

The Sonora junior varsity water polo team on Thursday defeated Merced 8-7. The 'Cats got goals from Connor McCluskey, Levi Houghton and Ryan Grogan. Bet Harb. volleyers earn 3-set But the top performer was Keanu Timberwolves volleyball Sonora frosh netters beat Bus Perez, win Thursday over Amador who tallied five goals, including The Bret Harte Bullfrogs volleyball sweeps AbleCharter The Wildcat freshmen volleyers the game-winner with 47 seconds left. team got back into the win column The Tioga Timberwolves beat Hum- cruised past the Amador Buffaloes Sonora had a strong game from its Thursday night with a 3-0 sweep of phreys Able Charter Friday in three Monday 25-12, 25-8. goalkeeperHayden Tolbert,whomade Amador (25-12, 25-13, 25-10). sets 25-14, 25-18 and 25-17. For Sonora, Bri Spring served 10 a number ofcrucial fourth quarter Sophomore Katie Juarez led Bret Tioga was led by Jenn Harvey with for 13 with four aces, Kenzie Fray saves. "I'm very proud of the heart and Harte with eight kills. She also had a 12 service aces and three kills. served 12 for 12with nine aces, team-high five aces and 10 digs. Sophomore Ada Pollock matched Emma Collette served 7 for 7 with determination they showed to pull of CarleyHerndon, Addison Staff ord Harvey with a team-high three kills. an ace, Eden Console-Taylor had the victory in such a gritty game," said and Morgan Puccinelli all had five Ashley Harrison had four assists. three kills and Melody Warlick had head coach Josh Martin.

49ERS

even considering the 49ers have given up 127 points durContinued from PageC1 ing this skid after opening the season with an impressive self, but I thought the team 20-3 victory against the Mnplayed well," K a epernick nesota Vikings. "Over the p ast c ouple said afterward. "OfFensively I thought we came out, we got a weeks I think we' ve progresrhythm,we had players make sivelygotten better as a unit. big plays for us." Overall, we' ve got to continue Then, the Niners (1-4) lost to build on this last perforit Sunday night to the New mance," defensive lineman York Giants on Eli Manning's Quinton Dial said at Levi' s 12-yard touchdown pass to Stadium. "Real heartbreaker tight end Larry Donnell with there, man. We can't hang our 21 seconds left. That sent San heads. It's a long season....It Francisco to a fourth straight tests your manhood as a man loss. and as a team as well. That' s 'The record's the record. what we signed up for." That's just the fact and the reSan Francisco's next opalityofit,and that's not good ponent — Baltimore with its enough," Tomsula said Mon- franchise-worst 1-4 start — is day."We' ve got to change that." struggli ng, too, for a drastic There are still some glaring difference from when these concerns, most notably defen- teams played in the Super sively after surrendering 525 Bowl nearly three years ago. yards ofoff ense Sunday to None of the Ravens' games the Giants. That included 41 this season have been decided completed passes by Manning by more than six points. for 441 yards and three touchThe last time the 49ers and downs while allowing New Ravens played a game that York 30 first downs. counted, Baltimore beat San Not that linebacker NaVor- Francisco 34-31 at the Super ro Bowman sounded overly Bowl following the 2012 seaconcerned after the game or son in a matchup of former his teammates a day later49ers coach Jim Harbaugh

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and his big brother, John. Now, John comes to the Bay Area looking to beat the struggling 49ers while his brother is long gone and thriving at Michigan. Tomsula hadn't thought that far ahead yet, only just beginning his prep for Baltimore after arriving home early Monday morning and giving his players some time to sleep. The way they lost made for a tougher trip.

"It's one of those games you kind of feel like you got kicked in the gut," left guard Alex Boone said Monday. "Offense did some good things, did some bad things. I thought we played well, though. Defense, they were in there the whole game. We shouldn't have left the game in their hands. It's one of those tough games because you feel like you did some really good things but you look back and you remember you

lost, which is always hard." Notes: TE Vernon Davis is expected to return Sunday the Ravens after missing two games with a knee injury.... RB Regye Bush's tight calf was the only thing Tomsula had on his injury report.... LB Ahmad Brooks was stiH away from the team following the death of his sister, with the funeral this week, so his status

against

remained undear."I won't push

on that, I won' t," Tomsula said.

FOOTBALL CONTEST This Week's Winners 7 5 - Bernell CarlSon, Iwsls HARTE,missedtwo, won the tie breaker

$5Q - 2nd Lt. Trent VOniCh,StArrvt,WA,missediwo, 1st closest to the tie breaker

25 — Michelle lanni, sasass,missedt o, 2nd closest to the tie breaker

HE NIN THE MOTHER LODE'S LEADING INFORMATION SOURCE


C4 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THE UN' DEMO CRAT

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

USCfires coach Sarkisian after putting him on leave LOS ANGELES (AP) — Southern California fired Steve Sarkisian on Monday, one day after the troubled footballcoach was put on leave. Athletic director Pat Haden made the move one day after determining Sarkisian showed up at school in no condition to lead practice, although Haden refusedto reveal specifi cs

about the coach's condition. Offensive coordinator Clay Helton was appointed interim coach Sunday. USC hasn't elaborated on Sarkisian's problems, but the second-year coach had an embarrassing public display in August at a pep rally where he appeared to be intoxicated while giving a speech. Sarkisian lat-

er apologi zed and said he had combined alcohol and medication, but promised not to drink again during the season.

Sarkisian's unsteady appearance Sunday prompted Haden to make the program's fourth coaching change in just over two years. "After careful consideration of

what is in the best interest of the university and our student-athletes, I have made the decision to terminate Steve Sarkisian, effective immediately," Haden said in a statement. "I want to add how proud I am of our coaching staff and players and the way they are responding to this difficult situation. Through all of this

we remain concerned for Steve and hope that it will give him the opportunity to focus on his personal wellbeing." Helton, Sarkisian's offensive coordinator, will officially lead his first practice Tuesday as the Trojans (3-2, 1-2 Pac-12) prepare for their annual rivalry game at No. 14 Notre Dame.

SCORES R MORE Bowling League results At Black Oak Lanes, Tuolumne All team scone are listed with handicap, if Included. Family Affair (9-27) Games —Women: LisaJones 183 Barbara Persson 146, Laura Persson 139; Men: Fred Persson 199, Dave Mufbletto and John Fresquez 183. Series — Women: L. Jones 457, B. Persson 399, L Persson 380. Men: Persson 537, Muffoletto 537, Mufl'oletto 51 5, Philip Dinger 503. Team Game: Pin Heads 563, Team No. 5542. Team Series: Team No. 5 1597, Rn Heads 1576. Standingr. Ringers 11-1, Mysterious Sandbaggers 7-5. SIRS ($25) Games:TalfWynne 246,Danny Laureta 125, Don Banchero 209. Series: Gene Deaver 628, Gerry Davis 575,Don Banchero 561. Team Game: Dennis's Gang 771, Misfits and Georgie's Boys 769,TheWild Ones 723. Team Serier. Mislits 2249, Dennis's Gang 2198, Georgie's Boys 2162. Standings: Misfits 10-2, Drex Wrex 9-3, No Excuses 7.5-4.5 Monday Madness (IF28) Games — Women: Mary Feola 222, Kim Stephens 216, Charlene Allen 179; Men: Robert Porovich 277, Bobby Papapetrou 259, Warren Walker 258. Series — Women: Stephens 588, Feola 545, Allen 51 6; Men: Porovich 717, Papapetrou 683, Walker 656. Team Game: Sauerkraut Samurai 847, Team No. 8833, Just Win Baby 825. Team Sedies: Sauerkraut Samurai 2430, Team No. 8 2364, Lucky Strikers 2344. Standings: Pocket Pounders and A Family Affair 15-5, San Andreas Mini Mart 13-7, Lucky Strikers and The Good Brothers 124. High Rollers (9-22) Games — Women: Nan Anderson 184, Lillian Thomas 180, Christine Steinhoefel 177; Men: FrankGaspardiand Kevin Flanagan 245, Bob Thomas and Dave Rossi 235. Sedes— Women: Steinhoefel 506,A nderson 491,Mary FeolaandAlyssaDedmon 460.Men: Ranagan 682, Bob Thomas 661, John Rago 640 Team Game: Power House 794, Auto Tech & Tires 757, Paintmasters 731. Team Series: Power House and Paintmasters 21 62, Luv Ya Baby Daycare 2130, Bowling for Soup 2120. Standings: Auto Tech 8r Tires 11-1, Sierra Memorials 9-3, Barber Bob's Bowlers, Luv Ya Baby Daycare and Auto B Craft 7-5.

MorningRollers(9-23)

Games — Women: Jeannie Philbin 217, Shirley Parades 202, La Donna Newton 173; Men: George Johnson 215, Bob Peterson 198, Jim Hughes 189. Series —Women: Philbin545,Parades 524,Pat Choates 488; Men: G. Johnson 564, Hughes 523, Johnny Fox 507. Team Game: Blooms 8r Things 711, Black Oak Casino Resort Bowling Buddies 700, Mi Pueblo Restaurant 696. Team Seriea BlackOakCasino ResortBowling Buddies 1976, Mountain Treasures 1975, Blooms & Things 1962. Standings: Blooms & Things 10.5-1.5, Mi Pueblo Restaurant 10 2, Jamestown Hotel Keggers 8.5-3.5. Young at Heart (9.23) Games — Women: Pat Wynne 205, Irene Deaver 203, Mabel Wilets 193; Men: Billy Oliver 242,Dave Rossi238,M ike Dolan237. Series — Women: Wilets 51 1, Teny Hall 505, Norma Espino 500; Men: Rossi 671, Oliver 663, Jim Simmons 619. Team Game: Ham Bones 751, The Ten Pins 747, Wednesday Wonders 724. Team Series: Ham Bones 2180,TheTenPins 2120,Over Easy2116. Standings: Cool Kata 10-2, Over Easy and The BeerFrames 9-3,Wednesday Wonders, Alley Dogs and Gold Harte 8-4. Jokers Wild (9-23) Games — Women: Renee Brown and Sherdi Davis 189, Sally Kems 172; Men: Curtis Leonard 274, Warren Walker 247, Roger Brown 245. Series —Women: Davis467,Brown 448,Kathy Foote445; Men: Leonard 768, Walker 704, Roger Brown 656. Team Game: Oscar Martinez Bail Bonds 774, Linkline Charter 745, Sierra Motors 712. Team Series: Oscar Martinez Bail Bonds 2200, Linkline Charter 2116, Lans's Crew 2049. Slandings: Oscar Martinez Bail Bonds, Four Pack, Red Car-Per Services and Gun's n Rosie 9-3, Anderson Plumbing 84, Linkline Charter

and ER E nergy'.

Early Birds (9-24) Games — Women: Sharon McThorn187, Shirley Parades and Nicole Maher 180; Men: Bob Peterson 211, Ivan Johnson 183, Greg Gerhart 175.

Series — Women: McThorn 538, Jane Clark 479, Parades 474; Men: Peterson 526, Johnson 486, Golden Terry 464. Team Game: Slackera 51 0, Wilcox Construction 483. Team Serier. Slackers 1401, Sizzling Stars 1395 Standings: Slackers 10-23, Sonora Grocery Outlet 7& Senior Merrymakers (9-24) Games —Women: Janet Kirkland 180, Joan Allen and Ann New 170; Men: Tony Basile 200, Jim Sehr 186, John Crass 184. Series — Women: Kirkland 502, Ruth Benson 465, New 452; Men: Crass 520, Sehr 51 2,Basile 507. Team Game:Fishermen 728,Longshore683, Rain Makers 638. Team Series: Fishermen 201 5, Longshols1 924, Gutter Busters 1839. Standings: The Newbies 14-2, The Awesome Foursome 13-3, Pin Busters and Gutter Busters 11-5. Mixed Angels (9-24) Games — Women: Nanette Waixee 189, Shirley Parades 169, Vicky Fox 150; Men: Hal Prock 232,EddieWarsee 226,Kevin Moyle 216. Series — Women: Warzee 520, Parades 445, Fox 430;Men: Prock 594,Warzee 582, Moyle 573.

Team Game: Chips Chevron 770, Team No. 2 749, Lane Brains 713. Team Seriem Chips Chevron 21 78, Lane Brains 2107, Team No. 2 2097. Standings: Team No. 2 9-3, three teams at 7-5.

Umchu Full House (16-1) Games — Women: Amanda Klaahsen 258, Irene Deaver 190, Barbara Persson 179; Men: Mike Silva268, Kevin Flanagan 256, Dave Rossi 255. Series — W omen: Klaahsen 576,SharonGomes 501, Deaver 474; Men: Jim Simmons 680, Flanagan 653, Jerry Fischer 648. Team Game: Fantastic Four 931, Stdke or Go Home 843, Spare Change 838. Team Series: Sierra Memodials 2359, Fantastic Four 2351, Spare Change 231 5. Standings: Psychedelic Seniors 186, Spare Change 17-7, Fantastic Four and Sierra Memorials 168 Gamblers Getaway.

Baseball MLB DMSION SERIES (Best&%; x-if necessary) American League Houston 2, Kansas C)ty 2 Thursday, Oct.8:Houston 5,Kansas City 2 Fdiday, Oct. 9: Kansas City 5, Houston 4 Sunday, Oct. 11: Houston 4, Kansas City 2 M onday, Oct.12:KansasCity9,Houston 6 Wednesday, Oct. 14: Houston (McHugh 19-7) at Kansas City (Cueto 11-1 3), 5 07 p m. (FS1) Texas 2, Toronto 2 Thursday: Texas 5, Toronto 3 Fdiday, Oct. 9: Texas 6, Toronto 4, 14 innings Sunday, Oct. 11: Toronto 5, Texas 1 M onday, Oct.12:Toronto8,Texas4 Wednesday, Oct. 14: Texas (Hamels 7-1) at

Toronto (Stroman 4-0), 1:07 p.m. (FS1) National League All games televised by TBS Chicago 2, St Louis 1

p.m. New York 2, Los Angeles 1 Fdiday, Oct. 9: New York 3, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, Oct. 10: Los Angeles 5, New York 2 Monday, Oct. 12: New York 13, Los Angeles 7 Tuesday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles (Kershaw 16-7) at New York (Matz 4-0), 5:07 p.m. x Thursday, Dcc 15: New York at Los Angeles, 5:07 p.m.

i

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52 I 3 5 tf3 0 2I3 1 t/3 0 1 0 1 2

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HBP — by Ardeta (Moss).

Umpires — Home, Mike Winters; First, Mark Carlson; Second, Dana DeMuth; Third, Bdian Knight; Left, Phil Cuzzi; Right, Bill Welke.

T — 3:28. A — 4241 1 (40/29). NL DMSION SE(6ES NETS 13, DODGERS 7 LosAngelesab rhbi Newyork ab r hbi Kendr(ck2b

aldson (2), Colabello (1), Pillar (1). SB — Revere (2). CS — Pilar (1). IP H R E R BBSO Toronto Dickey 4 2I3 5 1 1 0 3 Price W,1-1

Aasanchez Osuna Texas D.Holland L,0-1 Lewis Ohlendorf Diekman S.Dyson Kala

3 ti3 1

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2 5 6 6 1 0 3 3 1 1 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 D.Holland pitched to 2 batters in the 3rd. H BP — by Lewis (Ru. Martin). WP —Dickey. Umpires — Home, Marvin Hudson; First, Dale Scott; Second, Dan Bellino; Third, James Hoye; Left, Vic Carapazza; Right, Alfonso Marquez. T — 3:18. A — 47,679 (48,114). AL DIVSION SE(6ES ROYALS 9, AS)ROS 6 Kansasclty ab rhbi Houston ab r h bi A .Escobarss 4 1 1 0 Altuve2b 4 1 0 0 Zobrist2b 4 2 1 0 Spdingerrf 4 1 0 0 L.Caincf 5 1 1 1 C orreass 4 2 4 4 China Open Hosmer1b 5 2 2 3 Col.Rasmuslf4 1 2 1 Sunday, At China National Tennis Center I CMorales dh 4 0 0 1 Gattis dh 4 0 1 0 Beijing J.Dyson dh 1 0 0 0 Marisnick pr 0 0 0 0 Purse: Men, $2.70 million (W)500); Women, M oustakas3b4 1 1 0 Tuckerph 1 0 0 0 $4.72 million (Premier) S.Perezc 2 1 1 2 C.Gomez cf 5 1 2 1 Surface: Hard47utdoor Gorepr 0 0 0 0 V a lbuena3b 2 0 0 0 Singles-Men-Championhsip B uterac 0 0 0 0 C a rter1b 3 0 0 0 Novak D)okovic (1), Serbia, def. Rafael Nadal AGordonlf 3 0 0 1 Gonraleztb 1 0 0 0 (3), Spain, 6-2, 6-2. R iosrf 3 1 1 0 J . Castroc 3 0 0 0 Women — Championship O rlandopr-rf 0 00 0 Lowdeph 10 0 0 Ga rhineuM g uruza (5),Spain,dsf. Times BacC onger c 0 0 0 0 sinszky (12), Switzerland, 7-5, 6-4. T otals 35 9 8 8 Totakr 36 6 9 6 Kansas City 020 0 0 0 0 52 — 9 Houston 0 11 0 1 0 3 0 0 - 6 E — Correa (1). LOB — Kansas City 6, Houston

Tennis

9. 28 — Correa (1). HR—Hos mar(1), S. Perez(2), Correa2(2), Col.Rasmus(3),C Gomez(1). SB—J.

Dyson (2), Gore (1). CS —Gore (1). IP H R E R BBSO Kansas City Ventura 5 4 3 3 3 8 ICHerrera 1 0 1 1 2 3 Madson W,1-0 1 4 2 2 0 2 W.Davis S,2-2 2 1 0 0 0 3 Houston McCullers 6 1/3 2 2 2 2 7 W.Harris H,2 2/3 4 4 3 0 1 Sipp L,0-1 BS,1-1 1/ 3 1 1 0 0 1 Gregerson 2/3 0 0 0 2 1 J.Fields 1 1 2 2 1 2 W.Hanis pitched to 4 batters in the 8th. ICHerrera pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.

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alta (1). 38 — A.Russell (1). HR — Piscotty (2), Hayward (1), Fowler (1), Solar (2), Bryant (1), Rizzo (1),St.Castro(1), Schwarber (1). SB — J. Baez (1). CS—A.Jackson (1). S — Fowler. IP H R E R BBSO St. Louis

AL DMSIDN SERIES BLUE JAYS 8, RANGERS 4 Tomnto a b r h b i Texas ab r hbi Revere lf 4 1 2 0 DeShieldscf 5 0 0 0 Donaldson3b4 21 2 Choorf 4230 B autistarf 5 0 1 0 Beltre3b 4 0 2 0 E ncarnciondh5 1 2 1 Fielderdh 4 1 1 0 Colabello1b 4 2 2 2 Moreland1b 4 0 0 1 S moak1b 1 0 0 0 Andrusas 4 0 2 1 Tulowitzki ss 4 0 0 0 J.Hamilton If 2 0 0 0 R u.Martine 3 1 1 0 Napoliph 10 0 0 P illarcf 4 1 3 3 V enable lf 0 0 0 0 Goins 2b 3 0 0 0 Stubbs ph-If 1 0 0 0 D dor2b 4 1 10 C hirinosc 4 0 2 1 T otals 37 8 1 2 8 Totals 37 4 1 1 3 Toronto 313 00 0 1 00 — 8 Texas 001 00 0 1 20 — 4 DP — Toronto 1, Texas 2. LOB —Toronto 8, Texas 6. 28 — Bautista (1), Encarnacion (1),

The only CERTIFIED Subaru Technicians

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C arpenter3b 5 01 0 Fowlercf 4111 Piscotty1b 4 2 2 2 Solerrf 2 2 22 Hollidaylf 4 2 1 0 Cahill p 0 0 00 H ayward rf 4 1 2 2 T.Wood p 0 0 0 0 Jh.Peralta ss 4 0 1 1 AJackson rf 0 0 0 0 P hamcf 3 0 0 1 B ryant3b 5 1 2 2 Wainwrightpg 00 0 Rizzotb 4111 G.Garcia ph 1 0 0 0 St.Castro 2b 4 1 2 1 J.Broxton p 0 0 0 0 Schwarber If 3 1 1 1 Molina c 2 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 00 M ossph 0 0 0 0 D enorfialf 0 0 0 0 T.cruzc 1 0 0 0 A .Russellss 2 0 1 0 Wong 2b 4 0 0 0 J.Baez pr-ss 2 0 2 0 W acha p 2 0 0 0 M.Montero c 3 0 00 S iegrist p 0 0 0 0 Arrieta p 2 0 0 0 M anessp 0 0 0 0 Richard p 0 0 0 0 Grlchukcf 2 1 1 0 Coghlan ph 2 1 1 0 H.Rondon p 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 6 8 6 Totals 33 8 1 3 8 SL Louis 000 20 2 0 02 — 6 Chicago 010 1 3 2 6 1x — 8 E— J.Baez (1). DP —St. Louis 1. LOB —St. Louis 6, Chicago 7. 28 —Hayward (1), Jh.Per-

Chicago

Friday, Oct. 9: St. Louis 4, Chicago 0 Saturday, Dct. 10: Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 Monday, Oct. 12: Chicago 8, St. Louis 6 Today, Oct. 13: St. Louis (Lynn 12-11) at Chicago (Ha mme l 10-7), 1:37 p.m. x-Thursday, Oct. 15: Chicago at St Louis, 1:37

BONORA SUBARU

HBP — by Ventura (Correa), by McCullers (AEscobar, S.Perez). Umpires — Home, Ron Kulpa; Rrst, Geny Davis; Second, Todd Tichenor; Third, Lance Barksdale; Left, Angel Hernandez; Right, Mike Everitt. T — 4:05. A — 42387 (41,574). NL DMSION SERIES CUBS 8, CARDINALS 6 A .Louis a b r h bi Chicago a b r h b i

I •

R

Japan, 7-5, 6-2. Alison Risks (7), United States, def. Han Xinyun, China, 6-0, 6-4. Evgeniya Rodina, Russia, def. Zheng Saisai (8), China, 7-5, 6-3. Wang Qiang, China, def. Zhang Yuxuan, China, 7-5, 6-4.

Magda Linette, Poland, def. Yulia Putintseva, Karakhsuin, 7-6 (3), 6-1. Eliraveta Kulichkova, Russia, def. Patrida Maria Tig, Romania, 64, 6-3.

Soccer Major League Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T p t s GF GA x-New York 16 9 6 54 55 39 x-D.C. United 1 4 12 6 4 8 39 40 New England 1 3 11 8 47 45 Columbus 1 3 11 8 47 51 53 Toronto FC 1 413 4 4 6 55 53 Montreal 1 313 6 4 5 45 43 Orlando City 1 113 8 4 1 44 54 N ew YorkCityFC 10 1 5 7 3 7 47 53 Philadelphia 9 16 7 34 40 51 Chicago 8 18 6 3 0 42 52 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T p t s GF GA x-FC Dallas 1 510 6 5 1 47 38 x-Los Angeles 1 4 9 9 5 1 53 39 x-Vancouver 1 5 12 5 5 0 42 34 S porting Kansas City 13 9 9 4 8 46 41 Seattle 1 4 13 5 47 40 34 San Jose 1 212 8 4 4 39 37 1 2 11 8 4 4 31 36 Portland Houston 1 113 8 4 1 41 45 RealSaltLake 11 12 8 41 37 43 Colorado 8 14 10 34 30 39 NOTE: Three points for victory, one pointfor tie. x- clinched playoff berth Saturday's game Montreal 1, Colorado 0 Wednesday's games New York at Toronto FC,4 p.m. Vancouver at FC Dallas, 6 p.m. Portland at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m.

Hockey National Hockey League EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L O T Pts GF GA 3 3 0 0 6 13 6 3 3 0 0 6 10 4 2 2 0 0 4 8 3 3 2 1 0 4 9 8 2 1 1 0 2 7 2 3 1 2 0 2 6 9 3 0 2 1 1 5 12 3 0 3 0 0 7 16 Metropolitan Division GP W L O T PtsGF GA N.Y. Rangers 3 3 0 0 6 12 6 N.Y. Islanders 3 1 1 1 3 7 9 Philadelphia 3 1 1 1 3 4 10 Washington 1 1 0 0 2 5 3 Carolina 2 0 2 0 0 4 6 New Jersey 2 0 2 0 0 4 8 Pittsburgh 2 0 2 0 0 1 5 Columbus 3 0 3 0 0 6 13 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OTPtsGF GA Nashville 2 2 0 0 4 4 1 Minnesota 2 2 0 0 4 8 6 Winnipeg 3 2 1 0 4 11 7 Chicago 3 2 1 0 4 9 6 Colorado 2 1 1 0 2 10 8 St. Louis 2 1 1 0 2 5 4 2 1 1 0 2 6 6 Dallas PaciTic Division GP W L OTPtsGF GA Vancouver 3 2 0 1 5 9 5 San Jose 2 2 0 0 4 7 1 Arizona 2 2 0 0 4 6 2 Calgary 2 1 1 0 2 4 7 Anaheim 2 0 1 1 1 1 4 Edmonton 2 0 2 0 0 1 5 Los Angeles 2 0 2 0 0 2 9 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Monday's Games Tampa Bay 6, Boston 3 N.Y. Isla nders 4, Winnipeg 2 Buffalo 4, Columbus 2 Philadelphia 1, Rorida 0

Vancouver 2, Anaheim 1 (SO)

Today's Games Nashville at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at N.Y. a Rngers, 4 p.m. Montreal at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. San JoseatWashington,4 p m. Florida at Carolina, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit,430 p m. Edmonton at Dallas, 5i30 p.m.

National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T P c t PF PA N ew England 4 0 0 1.0 0 0149 76 N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 . 7 5095 55 Buffalo 3 2 0 . 6 0 124 0 105 Miami 1 3 0 .2 5 0 65 101 South W L T P c t PF PA Indianapolis 3 2 0 .6 0 0 99 113 Tennessee 1 3 0 . 2 5 0102 91 Houston 1 4 0 .2 0 0 97 135 Jacksonville 1 4 0 .2 0 0 93 145 North W L T P c t PF PA 5 0 0 1.000 148 101 3 2 0 .6 0 0120 95 2 3 0 A 0 0118 132 1 4 0 .2 0 0123 137 West W L T P c t PF PA Denver 5 0 0 1.000 113 79 San Diego 2 3 0 A OO 116 134 Oakland 2 3 0 A OO 107 124 Kansas City 1 4 0 .2 0 0117 143 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T P c t PF PA N.Y. Giants 3 2 0 . 6 00132 109 Dallas 2 3 0 4 0 0101 131 Washington 2 3 0 A 0 0 97 104 Philadelphia 2 3 0 A OO 117 103 South W L T P c t PF PA Atlanta 5 0 0 1.000 162 112 Carolina 4 0 0 1.000 108 71 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 A OO 110 148 New Orleans 1 4 0 .2 0 0103 143 North W L T P c t PF PA 5 0 0 1.000 137 81 2 2 0 . 5 0080 73 2 3 0 4 0 0 86 142 0 5 0 . 0 0 083 138 West W L T P c t PF PA Arizona 4 1 0 . 8 00190 90 St. Louis 2 3 0 A OO84 113 Seattle 2 3 0 A OO 111 98 San Francisco 1 4 0 .20 0 75 140 Sunday's games Chicago 18, Kansas City 17 Buffalo 14, Tennessee 13 Cincinnati 27, Seattle 24, OT Atlanta 25, Washington 19, OT Tampa Bay38 Jacksonville31 Philadelphia 39, New Orleans 17 Cleveland 33, Baltimore 30, OT Arizona 42, Detroit 17 Denver 16, Oakland 10 New England 30, Dallas 6 N.Y. Giants30,SanFrancisco 27 Open: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota,N.Y. Jets

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$104,733. 19. (24) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 333, 25, $88,575. 20. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 333, 25, $132,066. 21. (31) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 333, 24, $107,258. 22. (33) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 332, 22, $1 20,100.

23. (34) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 332, 0, $78,625. 24. (4) Greg Biffle, Ford, 331, 20, $111,808. 25. (38) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 331, 19, $77,945. 26. (36) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 331, 18, $104J)59. 27. (29) David Gilliland, Ford, 330, 17, $99~. 28. (12) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 330,16, $93,495. 29. (40) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 330, 15, $90,028. 30. (37) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 330, 14, $77,635. 31. (32) Michael McDowell, Ford, 329, 13, $73,420. 32. (27) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 329, 12, $82,742. 33. (35) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 328, 0, $73,070. 34. (43) Alex Kennedy, Chevrolet, 326, 10, $72,945. 35. (42) Reed Sorenson, Ford, 325, 9, $72,795. 36. (26) Paul Menard, Chevrolet,325,8,$80J)15. 37. (19) David Ragan, Toyota, engine, 289, 7, $99,695. 38. (39) Cole Whitt, Ford, accident, 262, 6, $67,602. 39. (7) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, engine, 257, 6, $1 12,066. 40. (28) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 251, 4, $67,530. 41. (41) Jab Burton, Toyota,244,3,$55,530. 42. (1) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, accident, 236, 3, $124,166. 43. (20) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, accident, 58, 1, $66,030. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner 139 760mph. Time ofRace:3hours,35m inutes,5seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.703 seconds. Caution Flags: 9for44 laps. Lead Changes: 14 among 10 drivers. Lap Leaders: Ky.Busch 1-4; M.Kenseth 5-76;

J. Log no a 77-121; J Johnson 122-1 23; IC Larson

124-126; C.Edwards 127; J.Logano 128-231; A Dillon 232;J.Gordon 233; C.Bowyer 234; S. Homish Jr. 235-241; J.Logano 242-284; S.Hornish Jr. 285-299; J.Logano 300-334. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Logano, 4 times for 227 laps; M.Kenseth, 1 time for 72 laps; S.Homish Jr., 2 times for 22 laps; Ky.Busch, 1 time for 4 laps; K.Larson, 1 time for 3 laps; J.Johnson, 1 time for 2 laps; C Edwards, 1 time for 1 lap; A Dillon, 1 time for 1 lap; J.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap; C.Bowyer, 1 time for 1 lap. Wins:M.Kenseth,5;KyBusch,4;JJohnson, 4; J.Logano, 4; K.Harvick, 3; Ku.Busch, 2; D.Earnhardt Jr., 2; C.Edwards, 2; D.Hamlin, 2; B.Keselowski, 1; M.Truex Jr., 1. Top 16 in Points: 1. J.Logano, 3,048; 2. K.Harvick, 3,042; 3. M.Truex Jr., 3,041; 4. D. Hamlin, 3J)40; 5. Ku Busch, 3 039; 6. C Edwards, 3J)39; 7.J.Gordon, 3,037; 8. B.Keselowski, 3,035; 9. R.Newman, 3,029; 10. Ky.Busch, 3,025; 11. D Ea mba rdt Jr., 3 016; 12. M.Kenseth, 3 003; 13. J.McMurray, 2,130; 14. J.Johnson, 2,092; 15. P.Menard, 2,083; 16. C.Bowyer, 2,082. NASCAR Driver Rating Formukr A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-1 5 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average SpeedUnderGreen,FaslastLap,LedM ostLaps, Lead-Lap Finish.

NASCAR Sprint (hrp4)ank of America 560 Sunday, At Charlotte Motor Speedway Concord, N.C. lap length: 15 mlles (Start position in parenthestu) 1. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 334 laps, 48 points, $329J)73. 2. (11) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 334, 42, $240,750. 3. (15) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 334, 41, $1 72320.

-145 At N Y Mals +135 LA Dodgers At Chicago Cuba -130 St Lo u is +120 American LeagueDMsional Series At Toronto -180 Texas +165 Hous l on +118 At Kansas City -128

National Hockey League FAVORfIE UNE UND ERDOG UNE At Carolina Ofl Rodida Off AtWashington -135 San J ose +125 -135 Mont r eal +125 AtPittsburgh At NY Rangers Of f Winni p e g O ff -135 At New Jermy +125 Nashville A t Detroit Off Tampa Bay O f f -1 65 Ed m onton +1 55 At Dallas St. Louis -124 At C a lgary +114 At Los Angeles Of f Vanc ouver O ff NFL Thursday Favoril» OpenTodayo/U U n derdog Atlanta 2i/2 3 ( 5 1 'Ir) At N. Orleans Sunday Denver 5/2 4 (4 2 / 9 At Cleveland Cincinnati +I "/2 2 (45) A t Buffalo At Minnesota 2/2 3/2 (44) Kansas City Houston Z/2 1 (43 )At Jacksonville At Detroit ff/2 3 (43) Chic ago 6 4 ' / 2 (40y2) Washington At NY Jets Adzona 2i/2 5 (Off) At Pittsburgh Miam i At Tennessee I'/2 3 (4 3y2) At Seattle Ti/2 6i/2 (41 ) C a rolina At Green Bay 9 g i/2 (Off) San Diego Baltimore 3/2 2/2 ( 4 4)At S. Francisco New England 5 T /i 2 (55)At indianapolis Monday At Philadelphia 3 3 y 2 (5 0 ) NY Giants College Football FAVORfIE O P EN TODAY 0/U DOG Arkansas St 6 5 (5P /2) AtS.Alabama Thursday 2/2 1'/2 ( 50) At Kentucky Auburn W Kentucky 24 3 3 ( 6 8)At North Texas 4'/2 8/2 (5 6) At Stanford UCLA Friday At BYU Cincinnati 7 7 (Ol f ) Houslon 14 17/2 (Ixs/2) At Tulane Boise St 8 9 (47 ) At Utah Sate Univ Pk 6 (5 5 ) At Fresno St Saturday A t Toledo 25 25 (58 ) E Michigan A t Temple 17 21 (4 5 )Central Florida AtC. Michigan 7 7 y 2 (50'/2) Buffalo Marshall 6y2 6 ( 5 4y2) At FAU At Uconn ty2 3 (4 F / 2) South Florida At Ga Southern 26 28 ( 6 8)New Mexico St A tM.Tennessae7 9 (55 ) FIU At Ball State t e/~ 16 (63) Georgia St At Clemson 1 5 yr 15 (3(F/2) Boston College At Virginia Si/2 7 (54) Syracuse At Wisconsin 20 i/r 20 ( 48) Purdue At No~ m iowa 3 P k ( 4 0) At N. Carolina 13y216y2 (46y2) Wake Forest At Kansas T exas Tech 2 7 31 (7 5 ) Nevada 7 6i/~ (51'/~) At Wyoming At Miss St 15 / 2 1 3 ( 5 8)Louisiana Tech At UMass 5 7 (56) Kent St At Ohio 3/2 3/2 (52y2) W Michigan N illinois 15 i/2 15 (54)At Miami (Ohio) Air Force Pk 1 (54) At Colorado St Alabama 3 4 (53) At Texas A&M A t LSU Tys 7 (Dff ) Rorida At Minnesota +2yr 2 (46yr) Nebraska A t Georgia 1 7 16 (4 6 ) Missouri O klahoma 5 y r 5 (58 ) At Kansas St At Ga Tech 3 3 (50) Rttsburgh At Miami 7 6 (52) Virginia Tech At Michigan 3 7Y2 ( 4 1 ) Michigan St At Baylor 17 2 ( F/2 (78)West Virginia At Indiana O ff O f f ( Ofl) Rutgers At Troy 12'/s Off (Off) Idaho At East Carolina 11 1(7/2 (74) Tulsa At South. Miss 7Y2 8/2 (60) UTSA Appalachian StSi/2 tgi/2 (48) At La-Monroe At O. Dominion g/2 8 (4P/2) Charlotte A tS. Carolina 8 3/2 ( 4 4 ) Vanderbilt A t Wash. St 8 7 (5P / 2) Oregon St At Utah 7 7 (56) ArizonaSt A rizona 7 T/2 ( 6 6 ) At Colorado At Bowl. Green t ty2 12 (67) Akron TCU 17 2(7/2 P4/2) At iowa State At Florida St 1 0 7 (45 ) Louisville A t Notre Dame 2 6 (60 ) Southern Cal Mississippi 8 I O y 2 (68) At Memphis At Ohio State 21 I 6y2 (47) Penn State At New Mexico 3 4y 2 (50) Hawaii AtSan JoseSt 2 2 y 2 ( 49) San Diego St At Washington +t'/2 t'/2 (58i/2) Oregon

Transactions BASEBALL National League ATlANTA BRAVES —Named Ted Simmons, Matt Kinzer and Leon Wurth major league

Golf nshlp

nwood Country Club illion Pan 72

Football

Monday's game

Rick Parungae

13. (25) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 334, 31, $94,850. 14. (16) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 334, 0, $80P00. 15. (10) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 334, 29, $115475. 16. (17) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 334, 28, $114,033. 17. (18) Sam Homish Jr., Ford, 333, 28, $117470. 18. (21) Casey Meara, Chevrolet, 333, 26,

Vancouver at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m.

Pittsburgh 24, San Diego 20

Stephen Braeksher

$117+91.

SL Louis at C algary, 6p.m.

Green Bay 24, SLLouis 10

FriendlyService Associates you can Trust!

4. (5) Denny Hamlin, Toyota,334,40, $1 47225. 5. (6) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet,334,39,$1 39 150. 6. (8) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 334, 39, $1 17,040. 7. (14) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 334, 38, $141,151. 8(22) JelfGordon,Chevrolet,334,37,$144701. 9. (13) Brad Keselowski, Ford,334,35,$136J)81. 10. (9) Aric Almirola, Ford, 334, 34, $133,651. 11. (23) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 334, 34, $124,198. 12. (30) Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 334 32

scouts and Kiley McDaniel assistant director, baseball operations. Promoted A J. Scola to

manager, minor league operations; Danielle Monday to assistant, baseball operations and Chris Lionetti to assistant, scouting. NEW YORK METS — Selected the contract of INF Matt Reynolds from Las Vegas (PCL) and added him to the NLDS roster. Removed INF Ruben Te)ada from the NLDS roster. Designated RHP Tim Stauffer for reassignment. WASHINGTON NATIDNALS — Named Randy Knorr senior assistant to the general manager-player development, Bobby Henley senior advisor-player development and Matt

Lecroy manager for Harrisburg (EL). Promoted Brian Daubach to hitting coach for Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS — Waived F Tony Mitchell. FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS — Activated DE IK Enemkpali. Placed RB Cierre Wood on injured reserve. CHICAGO BEARS — Signed RB Antone Smith. Placed RB Jacquizz Rodgers on injured reserve. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed KR-PR MarcusThigpen.Released QB Josh Johnson. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Promoted Darren Rizzi to assistant head coach/special teams coordinator. NEW YORK JETS — Activated DL Sheldon Richardson from the suspended list. Waived TEWes Saxto n. ST. LOUIS RAMS — Released RB Trey Watts WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed CB Deveron Carr to the practice squad. Released LB Lynden Trail from the practice squad. HOCKEY National Hockey League DETROIT RED WINGS — Reassigned D Richard Nedomlel from Grand Rapids (AHL) to Toledo (ECHL). NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Reassigned G Ken Appleby from Adirondack (ECHL) to Albany

(AHL).

ECHL READING ROYALS — Announced F Brandon Alderson was assigned to the team from Lehigh Valley (AHL). Released Fs Tyler G)urich and Stephen Tellier and D Clinton Atkinson from their tryout agreements. Placed D Mike Marcou on team suspension. Claimed F Riley Armstrong off waivers. SOCCER Major League Soccer TORONTO FC — Named Bill Manning president. COLLEGE ARIZONA STATE — Announced the resignation of softball coach Craig Nicholson. Named assistant coaches Robert Wagner and Letty Olivarez as co-interim softball coaches. CENTRAL FLORIDA — Announced football coach George O' Leary relinquished his job as the school's interim athletic director. FLORIDA — Suspended freshman QB Will Grier one year for violating the NCAA's policy on banned drugs. LOUISVILLE —Announced men's assistant basketball coach Ralph Willard will take an indefinite medical leave of absence to address an unspecified health issue. Promoted men' s director of basketball operations David Padgett to men's assistant basketball coach. SOUTH FLORIDA — Suspended red-shirt freshman DL Benjamin Knox from all team activities after being charged with firing a gun at the exterior of a residence hall on campus. SOUTHERN CAL — Fired football coach Steve Sarkisian. Named Clay Helton interim football coach. ST. SCHOLASTICA — Named Shawn Pragam acorn MLB Bartlette men's assistant hockey coach. WESTERN NEW ENGLAND — Named Wes National League Divisional Series FAVORITE UNE UND ERDOG UNE Popolizio athletic communications director.

The Une


Sonora, California

BadyBlues

By Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott CrankShaft

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THE UNIONDEMOCRAT

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45 46

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57

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59

Monday's solution: 62

64

66

65

SOLUTION

67

70

39 '60s-'70s

"Hollywood Squares" semiregular 42 bind: stuck 43 Video game letters 44 Circular imperfection in wood 45 Slip-on shoes 47 One with a killer serve 49 Wisenheimer 52 Obsessed whaler captain 54 Boating stopover 55 Half of the hiphop duo Black Star 58 Certain NCO 59 Billions of years 62 Truth knownonly to a few ... and a hint to a word hidden in 18-, 27-, 39- and 49Across 65 Agcy. with nares 66 Mark with a sale price, say 67 Greek goddesses ofthe seasons 68 Vex 69 Airline seat choice 70 Hinged fasteners 71 McMahon and Sullivan

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ENCE.EDEM A

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17 Norse war god 18 Ruthless adversary 20 Planting ground 22 Have debts 23 Joints often sprained 24 Words before card or lock 26 Precious 27 Serious software problem 30 "Rats!" 34 Hyundai luxury model 35 Victor's cry 37 Besides 38 Actress Hagen

By Wiley Miller

LE'r'& XH'

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis for the Los Angeles Times ACROSS 1 Attorneys' degs. 4 Clipper or Laker, briefly 9 Up to now 14 Sup 15 Get up 16 Jigsaw puzzle

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By Mike Peluso DOWN

1 One of two MetLife Stadium NFL teams 2 Belafonte hit 3 Erotic dance 4 "Platoon" war zone 5 WWI era English poet Rupert 6 High-flying battles 7 East, in Mexico 8 "Michael Collins" actor Stephen 9 Exhausted 10 Made a pigof oneself? 11 Have a hunch 12 Summit 13 Husband-andwife creators of Curious George 19 Doctor House portrayer Hugh 21 Prevaricator 25 Lewis' partner 26 Monastic hood 27 Flora's partner 28 Ancient Mexican 29 Rodeo rope 31 Life-ending season in Ecclesiastes 32 Socially insensitive, in a

way

71

10/13/15 Monday's Puzzle Solved EG G O

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S A N K A C L U T C H O HO H A S B E E S E E D S H I R K S E Z G R E B B E A ST R F R E H A B O R E G A N M A D H A A P A A S S H Y I H

A S I A N P U RS E H I H A T N K E E P O T C A T E A S A B B A G T S E T E T E D S N I C E O C O O L N G O N T I T O R Y O O P E T

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©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

U R I N A

L T E R

D IFFICULTY RATING: **A ' k 4 THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by DavidL.Hoyt and JeffKnurek

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doing?

GRETI ©201 5 Tribune Centent Agency, LLC ~ Ali Rights Reserved.

:;" He's just :;:; showing off.

FEHTT

Monday's puzzles solved.

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33 " your 55 Juan's "Look!" 56 "Dedicated to the mother" Love" 36 Tibet neighbor 40 More than a little 57 Grounded fast risky planes, briefly 41 Mausoleum 5 8Spartan 461997 movie promenade beekeeper 60T echie, 48 Tire type stereotypically 50 Hardships 61F i fth Avenue 51 Letter-shaped ret a iler shoe fastener 6 3 Librarian's 53 Line of rebuke shrubbery 64 " Amen!"

How are you

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WHEN THE 5TALLIDN NDTICEP THE ATTRACTIVE MARE IN THE PA5TURE, HE WA5 —Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

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(Answers tomorrow) J umbles: HOIST MET A L GOA L I E NIMB L E Answer: The retired army general tried to lose weight, but it was a — LOSING BATTLE

For Monday's puzzles, see puzzle section in Saturday' s classified's.


C6 — Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Sonora, California

THE UNION DEMOCRAT

Central Sierra Foothills Weather Five-Day Forecast

ave

95 .- 57

Road Conditions

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for Sonora

TODAY

93/59'

Local: Partly sunny and hot today. High 95. Patchy clouds tonight. Low 57. Summerlike tomorrow with intervals of clouds and sun. High 91.

Maryaf)fille '

91 '„ -56 Summerlike with periods of sun

THURSDAY

87W 53 A thunderstorm in spots

Sinta Ro

Extended: Clouds and sun Thursday with a shower or thunderstorm around; very warm. High 87. Mostly sunny Friday. High 86. Saturday: variable clouds with a shower possible in the afternoon. High 78. Sunday: a couple of showers possible. High 80.

++

91/52

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Last

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Mostly sunny and very warm

SATURDAY

78~ 53 r

Chance of an afternoon shower Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

O ct 20

Oct 27

No v3

a~o Fi~n~i ~e

Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary

60/37/s

'

Burn Status

souo

Burning has been suspended for the season.

Monday's Records ' Sonora —Extremes for this date — High: 104 (1979). Low: 38 (1986). Precipitation: 0.01 inch (1976). Average rainfall through October since 1907:2.29inches.Asof6p.m .M onday,seasonal rainfall to date: 0.59 inch.

4. Merced

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Nov 1 1

Reservoir Levels

~ Sal'inas 83/6al

Monter 6/6

Donnella: Capacity (62,655), storage (30,682), outflow (1 39), inflow (N/A) Baardsley: Capacity (97,800), storage (47,983), outflow (504), inflow (N/A) Tulloch: Capacity (67,000) storage (54,951), outflow (222), inflow (1 74) New Melonas: Capacity (2,420,000), storage (273,098), outflow (257), inflow (883) Don Padm: Capacity (2,030,000), storage (628,891 ),outflow (N/A), inflow (N/A) McClure: Capacity (1,032,000), storage (85,104), outflow (29), inflow (23) Camanche: Capacity (41 7,120), storage (113,756), outflow (105), inflow (0) Pardee: Capacity (210,000), storage (123,219), outflow (135), inflow (180) Total storage:1,357,664 AF

California Cities City Anaheim Antioch Bakersfield Barstow Bishop China Lake Crescent City Death Valley Eureka

Fresno

Today Hi/Lo/W 90/67/pc 93/63/pc 96/70/pc 95/68/pc 89/50/pc 90/65/pc 66/53/s 102/68/pc 67/52/s 94/67/pc

Wed. Hi/Lo/W

City

85/67/c 88/61/pc 91/69/pc 94/68/c 87/51/pc

Hollywood Los Angeles Modesto Monterey Morro Bay Mount Shasta Napa Oakland Palm Springs Pasadena Pismo Beach Redding

86/64/pc 67/53/s

99/73/pc 69/54/pc 91/68/pc

Today Hi/Lo/W

Wed. Hi/Lo/W

90/67/pc

85/65/c 87/68/c 92/64/pc

89/71/pc 96/64/pc 76/61/pc

75/63/c

83/59/pc

78/59/pc

99/76/pc 89/67/pc

99/76/c 84/66/c 76/62/c

City

Today Wed. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia

60/43/pc 60/42/pc 74/46/s 82/65/pc 73/56/c 87/54/s 76/46/s 86/67/s 76/48/s 74/55/pc

Sacramento San Diego San Francisco

86/45/pc 87/54/pc

81/66/pc 96/56/s

Stockton Tahoe Tracy Truckee Ukiah Vallejo Woodland Yuba City

Riverside

74/60/pc

78/63/pc 87/44/s 91/54/s

Today Wed. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 92/63/pc 89/63/c 95/60/s 91/58/pc 85/73/pc 82/71/c 81/62/pc 76/62/pc 96/60/pc 92/60/pc 78/42/s 76/43/pc 95/62/pc 91/61/pc 80/35/s 80/37/pc 97/53/s 94/53/pc 85/58/pc 80/58/pc 95/56/s 91/55/pc 94/58/s 91/57/pc

City

94/56/pc

National Cities City Albuquerque Anchorage

World Cities

44/35/pc 69/57/pc 94/72/s

'0

E'

Atlanta Baltimore Billings Boise Boston Charlotte, NC Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Juneau Kansas City Special thanks to our Weather Watchers:Tuolumne Utilities District, Anne Mendenhall, Kathy Las Vegas Burton, Tom )0mura, Debby Hunter, Groveland Community Services Distr(ct, David Bolles, Moccasin Louisville Power House, David Hobbs, Gerry Niswonger andDonand Patr(cia Carlson. Memphis Miami

77/62/s 88/76/c 79/50/s

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A n g els CamP

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(r - a San J ~8 7/63

MINIMUMS and MAXIMUMS recorded over the weekend, ending at 6 p.m. Monday. Last Temps Rain Since Season S at. S un . M o n . Sa t . Sun. Mon. Snow Julyt thisdate 64-93 63-90 6 3-93 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 . 00 0.59 0.67 Sonora 55-91 55-87 5 8-93 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 0.38 Angels Camp Big Hill 68-88 0.00 0.00 0.75 0.99 62-80 62-80 6 2-84 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 1.90 1.75 Cedar Ridge 58-88 57-85 5 6-88 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 . 00 0.50 0.50 Columbia 60-95 59-97 0.00 0.00 0 .00 0.20 0.46 Copperopolis 55-91 55-87 6 4-95 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 . 00 0.82 0.67 Grove)and 54-88 54-86 5 3-88 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 0.31 0.34 Jamestown Murphys 55-91 55-87 6 1-92 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 0.50 51-88 52-86 5 1-89 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 1.00 1.05 Phoenix Lake Pin ecrest 51-82 0.00 0.00 1.90 1.86 55-91 55-87 6 0-90 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 . 00 0.20 0.10 San Andreas Sonora Meadows 55-91 55-91 5 9-91 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 . 00 0.51 1.1 8 Standard 0.84 Tuolumne 55-91 55-87 6 7-89 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 0.76 3.89 59-85 59-84 5 9-86 0 . 00 0.00 0.00 0 .00 1.15 3.25 Twain Harte BarometerAtmospheric pressure Monday was was 30.10 inches and falling at Twain Harte; 30.05 inches and falling in CedarRidge.

City Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Bangkok Beijing Berlin

I

Regional Temperatures

Today Hi/Lo/W 89/79/pc 48/39/pc

4~

'

~ g96/60 a Oakiand-"

FRIDAY

- 55

nto

/60

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Sunrise today ......................... 7:08 a.m. Sunset today .......................... 6:27 p.m. Moonrisetoday ......................7:42 a.m. M oonsettoday .......................7:05 p.m.

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StanislausNational Forest,call 532-3671 for forest road information. Yosemite NationalPark asof 6 p.m. Monday: Wawona, Big Oak Flat, El Portal, Hetch Hetchy, Glacier Point andTiogaroadsareopen. MaripcsaGroveRoadis closed until spring2017. For roadconditions or updates in Yosemite,call372 0200or visit www npsgov/rosa/. Passes asof6p.m .M onday:SonoraPass(Highway 108) is open. Tioga Pass (Highway 120) is open. Ebbetts Pass(Highway 4) isopen. Goonline to www. uniondemccrat.corn,www.dot.ca.gov/cgibiryrcads.cgi or call Ca)trans at800427-7623for highway updates and currentchainrestrictions. Carrytire chains, blankets, extra waterandfoodwhen traveling inthe highcountry.

Carson ity 85/50 IL

Partly sunny and hot

WEDNESDAY

® AccuWeather.corn

Today Wed. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 81/51/s 47/38/sh 77/51/s 75/50/pc 75/45/s 79/50/s 72/56/sh

81/54/s 47/37/c 74/51/s 67/44/pc 74/43/s 80/49/s 68/47/pc 73/45/s 62/46/s 64/42/s 57/44/pc 94/62/s 83/46/s 71/50/s 59/43/pc 88/60/s 39/25/pc 86/74/pc 91/59/s 65/43/s 49/35/r 74/51/s 94/72/pc 70/45/s 82/55/s 87/75/pc

78/49/pc 61/43/pc 65/45/pc 61/50/c 89/59/s 81/50/s 70/46/s 62/48/c 86/58/s 34/26/c 88/75/sh

91/58/pc 65/44/pc 49/39/r 76/49/s

95/72/pc 70/47/s 80/52/s 87/75/s

City Phoenix

60/46/s 66/46/s 74/45/s 83/64/s 69/50/pc 89/59/s 72/49/s 88/68/pc 73/43/s 68/49/pc

Pittsburgh Portland, OR Reno St. Louis Salt Lake City Seattle

Tampa

Tucson Washington, DC

Today Wed. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 98/74/s 64/49/c 73/51/pc 89/54/s 71/49/s 78/53/s

101/76/s 58/45/pc 71/50/s 87/53/pc 73/50/s 80/54/s 61/48/s 87/69/pc 96/71/s 68/49/pc

63/48/pc 86/70/s 93/67/pc 76/55/pc

TUESDAY OCTOBER 13 2015

® Seattle 63/4s , •,lBillings '75/45

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Wed. Hi/Lo/W 89/77/t 49/40/sh 75/61/s 89/76/pc 75/48/c 44/41/sh 69/54/r 90/69/s 57/32/pc

City Cancun Dublin Hong Kong Jerusalem London Madrid Mexico City Moscow Paris

Today Hi/Lo/W

Wed. Hi/Lo/W

88/74/t

87/75/t

54/40/pc 83/76/pc 82/61/pc 57/42/pc 64/45/t 77/51/pc 42/28/c 54/36/s

City Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Tijuana Tokyo Toronto Vancouver

54/41/pc 85/76/pc 78/59/s

58/46/pc 67/41/s 71/51/pc 42/34/pc 50/39/pc

Today Hi/Lo/W 82/72/pc 71/60/t 71/48/s 90/79/s 70/61/t 87/69/pc 73/59/pc 61/46/sh 57/46/s

Wed. Hi/Lo/W

El Paso 86/~58 j

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87/74/s 71/59/t 71/49/s 88/78/t 73/62/pc 82/67/pc 69/58/s 55/41/c 57/45/s

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Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand preci p itation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. 4o' ((o'

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TV listings TUESDAY

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~ESPN ~fJSA ~TNT ~UFE

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O CTOBER 13 2Q 5I

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Inside MLB F amily Guy F a mily Guy A m erican Dad American Dad Conan (5:00) MLB Baseball National LeagueDivision Series, Game4: TeamsTBA. KCRA3 Reports KCRA3 Reports Ac. Hollywood Extra Best Time Ever With NPH The Voice Battle rounds continue. Chicago Fire "Let It Burn" KCRA 3 Team Tonight Show Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Family Feud Family Feud The Flash An evil speedster. IZ ombie "Zombie Bro" 2 Broke Girls Mike 8 Molly CW31 News The Insider How I Met H o w I Met Big Bang Big Bang Modern Family Modern Family Anger Anger KCRA 3 News at 10 The Office T h e Office PBS NewsHour KVIE Arts Shw Steves' Europe Mary Tyler Moore: A Celebration Secrets of the Dead Frontiine Suspected bombmaker. VOCES on PBS"El Poets" FOX 40News Dish Nation TMZ Two/Half Men Grandf athered TheGrinder ScreamQueens "PumpkinPatch" FOX40News Two/Half Men Seinfeld ABC 10 News Inside Edition Jeopardy! Wh e el Fortune The Muppets FreshOff-Boat Marvel' sAgents ofS.H.I.E.L.D. Beyond the Tank ABC 10 News Jimmy Kimmel Noticias19 N o t iciero Univ. IlliuchachaltalianaViene Antes Muerta que Lichita Lo I m perdonable Yo No Cree en los Hombres N o t icias19 No t iciero Uni News Entertainment NCIS "Double Trouble" NCIS: New Orleans "I Do" Limi t less "Page 44" CBS 13 News at 10p Late Show-Colbert Criminal Minds "Reckoner" Cri m inal Minds "Hopeless" Criminal Minds "Boxed In" Crim inal Minds "Fate" Criminal Minds "Amelia Porter" Saving Hope "Pilot" (3:00) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (5:00) KRON 4Evening News The Insider E n t ertainmentKRON 4News at 8 The Walking Dead The Walking Dead "Strangers" News Inside Edition KPIX 5 News at 6pm Family Feud Judge Judy NCIS "DoubleTrouble" NCIS: New Orleans "I Do" Limi t less "Page 44" KPIX 5 News Late-Coiberi ABC7 News 6:00PM ABC7 News Jimmy Kimmel Jeopardy! Wh e el Fortune The Muppets Fresh Off-Boat Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Beyond the Tank Action News at 6 Jeopardy! Wh e el FortuneBest Time Ever With NPH The Voice Battle rounds continue. Chicago Fire "Let It Burn" News Tonight Show pBS NewsHour Business Rpt. Spark Mary Tyler Moore: A Celebration Secrets of the Dead Frontiine Suspected bombmaker. History Detectives Tuesday Night Beauty The Find With Shawn Kiliinger Giftideas from Coleman. Temp-tations Kitchen Heartfelt Holidays With Valerie Decorative accents. Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie K.C. Undercover Austin 8 Ally Jessie Best Friends Girl Meets I D i dn't Do It B est Friends Jessie Girl Meets Au s tin & Ally (4:30) Movie: *** "American Gangster" (2007) Russell Crows Movie: **** "The Dark Knight" (2008, Action) Christian Bale. Batmanbattles a vicious criminal known asthe Joker. Batman Begins HenryDanger Henry Danger WITS Academy Thundermans Thundermans iCarly F ull House F u l l House Fu l l House Fu l l House Fr i ends Frie n ds Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage: Miami Storage: Miami Storage Wars Storage Wars Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Reba Reba Reba Reba Movie: ** "RV" (2006, Comedy)RobinWilliams, Jeff Daniels. Shark Tank The Filthy Rich The Filthy Rich Shark Tank Shark Tank The Filthy Rich The Filthy Rich Paid Program Paid Program CNN Democratic Debate Anderson Cooper 360Special Analysis of the Democratic debate. C N N Democratic Debate The Kelly File Hannity The O'Reiily Factor The Kelly File Hannity On Record, Greta VanSusteren SportsNet Cent Warriors Gr. Warriors NBA Preseasonasketbali 6 Denver Nuggets at GoldenState Warriors. Warriors Post. SportsNet Cent SporisTaik Live 30 for 30 SEC Storied SportsCenter SporlsCenter Sporiscenter Sportscenter Law 8 Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law 8 Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Modern Family Modern Family Castle "Sucker Punch" Castle 'The Third Man" Movie: ** "Red" (2010, Action) BruceWilis, Morgan Freeman. Pub l ic Morals Public Morals Wife Swap: Abroad Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap TheJacksons:NextGeneration The Jacksons:NextGeneration Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men "Tanana's Test" Go l d Rush Gold Rush: Alaska Ink Master "Go Big or GoHome" Ink Illiaster Tattoo Night. (:31) InkMaster (:02) Ink Master ctionj Henry Cavill, AmyAdams, Michael Shannon. The Bastard Executioner The Bastard Executioner (4:30) Movie: ** "Immortals" M o vie: ** "Man of Steel" (2013, A Movie: ** "The Lucky One" (2012) ZacEfron, Taylor Schilling. Monica the Medium "RoadTrip" Movie: ** "Beastly" (2011) Alex Peltyfer, Vanessa Hudgens. The 700 Club Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars (5:00) "Crossing Deiancey" (1988) Movie: ** "Look Who's Talking" 1989) ( Movie: ** "Mrs. Soffel" (1984) DianeKeaton. (:45) Movie: *** "A Dry White Season" (1989, Drama)

Now AcceptingNew Patients Dr. Terrence Reiff NewExtended Hours - 6 Days a Week Monday 8—5pm • Tues—Wed—Thur 8—8pm Friday k Saturday 8 —Spm

ONORA ENTIST

Boulder Plaza, 13945 Mono Way, Sonora, CA

209.533.9630 l wy yyy.sonoradentist.corn


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