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Man killed in collision with semi

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A moment of distraction may have contributed to the slow-speed, fatal collision of a 50-year-old male motorcyclist from Lemoore and a semi-truck and trailer Monday morning, on Avenue 18 1/2 near State Route 99, according to the California Highway Patrol.
CHP public information officer Greg Rodriguez said the fatality happened near the Pilot Truck stop about 10:30 am, and the solo motorcyclist was southbound on SR 99 when he took the Avenue 18 1/2 off ramp and had stopped at the stop sign.
“The semi driver was moving and had the right of way. He saw the motorcyclist stop and look left and then right. And then for unknown reasons, he drove into the intersection ... directly into the path of the semi truck’s trailers ... He was ejected and went under the truck’s third axle. It was a 2019 Harley Davidson motorcycle, and he was wearing a helmet,” Rodriguez said.
Motorists driving near the scene prior to arrival of police, said the body of the man was still under the rear semi trailer and had been covered with a blanket. Parts of the motorcycle were scattered for 25 yards, they said, and the parts were so damaged they were unable to tell the type of the motorcycle. A few other motorists had stopped at the scene, but there was nothing that could be done to help the man.
No alcohol is suspected at this time. Toxicology reports are pending. Distracted driving, fatigue, potential medical conditions and other factors all remain under investigation.

2 men beat woman in carjacking try in local grocery parking lot

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Courtesy of The Madera Police Department
This clip from surveilance camera footage shows two men suspected of attempting to carjack a woman in the parking lot of Food 4 Less on July 11.
In a brazen car-jacking attempt in a grocery store parking lot, a 30-year-old Madera woman was attacked, beaten and dragged out of her car by her hair by two men, according to the Madera Police Department.
The woman was traumatized by the attack and sustained serious injuries, but is now recovering at home.
Recently released surveillance camera footage shows the entire July 11th incident.
The two black men in their 20s were seen cruising the parking lot of Food-4-Less on Cleveland Avenue about 9:30 p.m. in a silver Honda when they approached the woman’s car as she was pulling in. They walked up and opened both the passenger’s and driver’s side doors and began violently punching the woman several times from both directions and then pulled the terrified woman out and onto the ground as they continued to beat her about the face and arms, before a group of nearby shoppers heard her screaming, ran to her rescue and stopped the beating.
Officers commended the actions of the bystanders and said the woman could have been more seriously injured and her car stolen had the bystanders not intervened.
The attackers then fled into traffic. The car used in the hijacking attempt had earlier been reported stolen out of Fresno. It was later found abandoned in Chowchilla, where the police later recovered additional video footage of the attackers. Police believe the men were both from Fresno, and the Madera location and the woman were selected at random for the car jacking.
Police have exhausted their initial leads and are now hoping someone from the public can identify the pair from the video footage.
The investigation is ongoing. Detectives are asking anyone with information on the men or the incident to call Crime Stoppers at 498-STOP. Crime Stoppers pays up to a $2,000 cash reward for anonymous information called into their tip line that leads to an arrest and a conviction.

Geocaching is fun!

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There are a few friends in my church who enjoy doing something called Geocaching. Ever since I heard of it, I’ve had a yen to do it. It sounds like such great fun.
Geocaching is a scavenger hunt for items in containers that are hidden, and logged into a program that players can access on their phones or on a GPS device. The activity itself is not too costly, unless you count the costs of traveling to places to find the caches. The app can be downloaded for free, but there is an app that is an upgrade with an annual subscription of about thirty bucks. Of course, it is much more fun if you have the premium edition.
Once you discover that you like this activity, you can also hide items yourself (after you know all the rules). There are millions of geocaches worldwide.
I have known about this activity for about a year, but only this past Sunday did I actually take the dive and go on a search for my first geocache. It was such fun! My husband had to go fix a stove for a friend, so he didn’t go with me this time. (I also walked to the location, and it was 100 degrees outside. That walking thing was of no interest to him on that hot day.) I went solo, but I did use one of my lifelines during my search. I texted Sue, who actually helped me know how to spot the cache. I was so excited when I found it!
The search starts with opening up the Geocaching app, and looking at a map of the area. There are green Geocache icons everywhere a cache is hidden. There is also a blue dot showing your location. In the app are some hints, some vague descriptions of what you are seeking, and the general location. When you find the cache, you open the container. Inside will be a piece of paper for you to log your username and the date. Then, you log it on your app. You can also add a little note to the person who hid the cache. There are a few courtesy rules that are nice to follow. The Geocaching icon on the map will turn to a smiley face. (I love smileys, so that is an added benefit for me.)
After just one find, I don’t claim to be an expert, but I know it is something families can enjoy doing together, or groups, couples, or even just a single person. I can imagine it is much more fun to go geocaching with others. (I have to admit, it is a little weird if you are in a public place and you think someone may be watching you go after a cache you have just found.)
Before I even downloaded the app on my phone, I went on the Internet and found a video called “Geocaching 101,” which gave me some good information on the venture I was getting ready to try. There are several other videos that are good, too. Just do a search on “Geocaching” and you will find there are many people of all ages, cultures, sizes, and abilities that who are enjoying this activity all over the world. Try it. You may like it.
— My love to all,
Nancy
• • •
If you look for me wholeheartedly, you will find me.
— Jeremiah 29:13

Opinion: Fall approaches and brings holiday and Madera Fair

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Based on the calendar the fall equinox comes to the Northern Hemisphere Sept. 23. But for many the unofficial end of summer takes place following this first Monday of the month. In the United States, regardless of the sweltering temperatures, the Labor Day holiday signals that another Summer has passed. This three-day weekend is a celebration of the working men and women who keep the country running and productive. It always seems oxymoronic that the toils of the American workforce are lauded by much of the country shutting down and staying home instead of punching the time clock at work.
Enjoy the holiday weekend responsibly and remember buzzed driving is drunk driving. The life you save may be your own.
An indication greater than the calendar date of an impending autumn is the harvest. The culmination of the growers’ year of toil ends as these stewards of the land gather the food needed to feed the planet.
In my youth, the beginning of the school year came after the Labor Day weekend. How many remember when the first day of school took a back seat to the new school year because entire families worked in the fields bringing in the crops.
In the vineyards, grapes were laid out on trays that turned into raisins drying in the sun. Grape pickers were paid a small fee per tray of fruit picked.
In recent times, it has become more profitable for the grape crop to be picked by machine and put in vats used to supply the California wine industry.
The Madera glass plant and Georgia Pacific brought factories to Madera County in the 1960s and 70s to provide bottles for wine and cardboard crates to pack bottles of wine in.
The local boutique wineries, many family owned, have built an industry among the fruits used to create award-winning wines.
Fine wines and spirits are created in the midst of the vines and trees, greatly reducing shipping and labor costs. Direct to consumer purchases are on hand at the various wineries and their tasting rooms.
Even in Madera in the mid-century past, the beginning of the school year was often delayed to allow entire families to take to the fields to bring in the crops. This practice received support as business people in ag-based communities all know that when the growers have a good year it generates prosperity for area retail and service industries.
Many Baby Boomers who were reared in the San Joaquin Valley speak fondly of buying clothes for the new school year with money earned after picking grapes, cotton and tree fruit. The migrant workforce comprised of people of all colors moved from place to place picking whatever crops were ripe.
Harvest times are carefully calculated by agronomists to insure gradual maturation crops. Agronomists are scientists who look for ways to increase soil productivity, to raise more food on the same amount of soil. They also work to improve the quality of seed and the nutritional value of crops, according to Google.
“My Job Depends on Ag” is much more than a buzz-phrase or an advertising campaign created to support farming. The whole country literally depends on agriculture and its ability to provide subsistence to an ever growing population.
Examples of agriculture and its contribution to the lives of all Madera counties will be on display at the Madera District Fair next weekend. Gates open at 5 p.m. Thursday and Friday, 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Gates close each evening at 11 p.m.
Come and see your neighbors’ efforts in the areas of art, cooking, canning, floriculture and many others. Prize-winning entries are displayed at various locations throughout the fairgrounds.
Each evening, big-name performers will appear as part of the Table Mountain and Tecate Light concert series. Free shows with paid admission to the Fair bring Trace Atkins, Loverboy, The Commodores Sounds of Motown, Voz de Mondo and El Lumou to the hometown stage.
Remember, Thursday is Community Night with seniors 62 and older and kids getting free admission.
Discount carnival bracelets, food coupons and discount advance admission tickets are available through Wednesday at the Madera Fair Office, 1850 W. Cleveland Avenue or visit www.maderafair.com.
Long days and pleasant nights, and have a great weekend.
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Readers may contact Tami Jo Nix by emailing tamijonix@gmail.com or following @TamiJoNix on Twitter.

Letter: Offended

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The word of the times: Offended.
Well I am offended by the Liberals, especially the California variety. The California Attorney General, Mr. Becerra, and Gov. Alfred E. Newman, supporting the children of illegal immigrants, said “They are all children of God.”
This is true, but what offends me is how the Liberals use God at their convenience. They will use it now, to apply the guilt, but not in our schools, sport events or other public events. Oh no, that would be an outrage.
The aborted children at Planned Parenthood (according to them) are not children of God, they are just tissue.
God is not a light switch.
Liberals keep the switch off and just flick it on for a photo session or a news item.
If you are a liberal, and a Christian, you need to really think about things.
— Bill Hoffrage,
Madera

Letter: On ‘socialism’ and America

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The word “socialist” is being tossed around in political discourse as if it were a badge of honor or a live grenade, depending on one’s bias.
Sen. Bernie Sanders describes himself as a democratic socialist and progressive. President Donald Trump describes himself as a genius, as well as “The Chosen One,” and labels others as socialists, as if he were calling them rapists, white supremacist mass murders, or other “very nice people.” So, who is a socialist?
All of us.
Let’s start at the beginning.
What is a socialist?
The dictionary definition states that a socialist is one who believes in the political and economic theory in which the ways of making a living are owned by the workers. Worker-owners make products, distribute them, and split the profits. They make the decisions. There are no outside owners, such as shareholders. As such the disparity in pay between the bosses and the worker bees is much less and without shareholder dividends to pay, more money can be used to upgrade factories, improve distribution systems, and provide workers with benefits.
Simply put, socialism requires a government that allows its people to collectively set up, maintain and control important portions of the economy. No country is purely socialist in nature. Many are simply partly socialist, including the USA. Generally, higher taxes are levied to pay for more public projects, benefits and services in the countries that are more socialist. Therefore, governmental policy is used to serve political interests.
That’s the key. Government policy is used to serve political interests. Sound familiar? It’s basic, down home “show me the money”. Take care of who got you there. Or, at the very least, keep telling them that that is what you are doing and hope that they are ignorant enough to keep believing you. How many coal miners has Trump put back to work in West Virginia? That wall is almost built and paid for by Mexico, right? But I’m starting to wander off into reality…
Socialism is not communism
Communism is socialism on steroids. Communism requires a totalitarian government that makes the important decisions without regard for the workers although it pretends otherwise. It’s somewhat like a president in a free market, capitalist democracy ordering companies not to do business with another huge trading partner country (let’s say China) in order to double down on a tariff war that had already cost businesses and consumers billions of dollars. (That’s a bad example because no president would be that stupid. No Congress would be so cowardly to let that president get away with it. And patriots would not stand by quietly on the sidelines doing nothing. Right?)
No American politician espouses total socialism. Not one wants to eliminate corporations, destroy capitalism or knowingly derail the best economic engine the world has ever seen. Politicians need the money of capitalism to get elected and then to put the government to work to serve their political interests.
Let’s look for socialism in the economic history of our country since WWI. We have had ten Republican and eight Democratic presidents. Republicans have given us NASA, the federal Interstate Highway System, and the Environmental Protection Agency.
Nearly every Republican president has led us into a recession: Eisenhower, Nixon-Ford, Reagan and the Bush recession of 2008. Is Trump next? Three consecutive Republicans (Harding, Coolidge, Hoover) teamed up to give us the Great Depression. Coolidge, as an older man, admitted doing so. What policies did they have in common? They cut taxes on the rich, increased tariffs, and tried to isolate America from other countries (not so much Eisenhower who maintained many FDR and Truman policies.)
What did Democratic presidents do to pull our country out of the Republican caused Great Depression and following recessions? They spent taxpayers’ money on Americans. That included the New Deal that put America back to work, reducing tariffs to save American consumers money, raising taxes on the rich, creating and raising the minimum wage, taking the USA out of isolationism and making America a global leader in trade.
Which presidents were the best at creating new jobs? Clinton (by far), FDR, Reagan, and Jimmy Carter. Yes. Jimmy Carter. Democrats who were required to clean up Republican messes excelled at creating new jobs.
What else did Democratic presidents do for average Americans, including the kind of people who presently support Trump? They created the 8-hour work day, supported union membership, banned child labor, backed a woman’s right to vote, created and added to Social Security, passed Medicare and Medicaid, established a program of food stamps, outlawed discrimination in hiring, passed civil rights legislation, and increased spending on education, healthcare, and research and development. Democrats created the National Endowment for the Arts and the Public Broadcasting System. Democratic presidents expanded the National Park System for all Americans, passed the Affordable Care Act, and increased opportunities for unemployment benefits.
These lists are not complete. And we can quibble about who did what in bipartisan efforts. But some things are clear over the past century.
Democratic presidents have signed laws that benefited the average American. Republicans cut taxes for the rich. Republicans have created recessions and the Great Depression. Democrats followed and put our country back on course. Clinton left office with a $63 billion dollar surplus. Bush wasted it and Trump has already added a trillion dollars to the national debt, increased trade deficits, and has, with Mitch McConnell, publicly said that he wants to reduce Social Security benefits to address this debt. And then blamed everything on Obama.
This is a matter of historical record. Look it up yourself. Read. Yes. It’s still legal in this country to read and think for yourself. (Spoiler Alert: Twitter and social media are not reliable news sources. Glancing at a bumper sticker or a homemade roadway sign is not intelligent reading. And watching Fox News talk to Trump in the morning is a self-serving feedback loop.)
So why do I say that we are all socialists? Politicians use the word “socialism” to serve their own purposes. They do so without defining it. Ambiguity can be a beautiful thing. The word fits on a bumper sticker for ignorant and lazy voters. The bottom line is that the word “socialism” has become the bone of contention for those who refuse to have an honest discussion regarding what used to be called the government’s redistribution of wealth. Tea Party folks, I’ve haven’t forgotten you. Your hypocrisy won’t let me.
Today’s “socialism” is a dumb-it-down argument about money. It all gets back to money, doesn’t it? In this ignorant gotcha labeling game of politics (with real consequences as to peoples’ lives), if you want government money and policies to benefit you, then you are a socialist. And, yes, Republicans are socialists, too. Of the people, by the people, for the people. And corporations are people.
How do we redistribute wealth?
Are you receiving Medicare and Social Security from Uncle Sam? If so, then you are a socialist. If that offends you, will you stop your benefits and give back what you have already received? Where do your veteran benefits come from? Do you receive welfare subsidies, food stamps, or low cost housing protections?
Do you choose to pay homeowner association fees? Country club dues? Do you own stock in a publicly traded company? Sounds like a collective to me, pooling resources for the benefit of its members.
Are we dependent on redistributing wealth in other ways? Public education, law enforcement, military, public transportation, roads and highways, parks, environmental protection, jails and prisons, courts, city water to your taps, garbage collection, sewage, and border protection.
Do you watch pro football and baseball? They have had revenue sharing, a feature of socialism. Do you pay a tithe or make donations to the collective known as your church? Do you support charities to support others, including many whom you do not know?
Our tax policy is clearly a choice we make in our democratic socialistic capitalist republic.
Why did Trump pay no federal taxes for nearly two decades after reporting a $916 million loss in 1995? In 2010 our country’s then largest corporation, General Electric, reported a worldwide profit of $14.2 billion, including $5.1 in the USA, and paid no income taxes. It even claimed a tax benefit of $3.2 billion. Amazon pays no taxes on earnings of $11.2 billion. Let’s make America great, again, shall we? It’s a socialist economic choice. (This also begs the question: if truly smart American business people can make billions of dollars and pay no taxes, then why did Trump lose millions and avoid supporting America?)
The number of Americans living in poverty increased by 15 percent from 2000-2006 while the most recent Bush was cutting taxes for the rich. Nearly 33 million workers earned less than $10 an hour, below the federal level of poverty for a family of four. Many had no health insurance, pension plans or sick days. The cost of the American social safety net increases for all of us, financially and morally, when we choose to fail our fellow Americans in favor of others who can’t take their wealth with them. Our taxpayer and insurance dollars pay for welfare, social services, emergency room visits, domestic violence, and other related costs when we don’t properly address poverty.
What would Jesus do?
What should a good Christian Trump supporter do?
American worker productivity increased by 15 percent from 1979-2007. Corporate profits increased by 13 percent per year. Even when one adds Social Security benefits, welfare and other “wealth redistribution” payments to Americans at the low end of the economic scale, their household economic value increased by only 18 percent during that time. The upper twenty percent saw increases totaling 65 percent. Let’s make America GAG again, shall we?
Republicans are suing to eliminate the Affordable Care Act with no replacement waiting in the wings. Republicans gave farmers hurt by Trump’s tariffs $16 billion, including $2.5 million in Madera County. If Republican trickle down (voodoo) economics works, then why are farmers on welfare? (We could talk about the Agricultural Adjustment Act that for years has paid farmers to not grow certain crops in order to stabilize farm product prices. Socialism.)
And if it’s appropriate to put farmers on welfare, then why is it not appropriate to help people who are actually poor? Why do self-proclaimed “good Christian” Republicans support the economic policies of the anti-Christ against the sick and the poor? Why do Republican working folks continually vote against their own economic self-interests? Did I mention that it is still legal to read in our democratic socialist republic?
There is no ‘American Dream’
The poor cannot move on up into the middle class. The shrinking middle class cannot become rich. Trump is right. The system is rigged. It’s rigged by and for people like him.
There needs to be a revolution at the polls in 2020. The revolution must be televised. It’s time for 2020 hindsight. We need to cure stupid. And Republicans who know better need to join the revolution, vote against Trump, and vote for America. That’s one American’s opinion.
— Charles A. Wieland,
Madera County Superior Court Judge,
Retired

Madera pitchers close month on hot streak

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Courtesy of Phrake Photography
Former Madera ace Alec Gamboa walks off the mound during one of his outings for the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Arizona Rookie League affiliate. He finished the season with a 2.88 ERA with 33 strikeouts over 25 innings pitched.
Former Liberty Hawks ace Connor Brogdon has become one of the best relievers for the Philadelphia Phillies Triple-A affiliate, the Lehigh Valley IronPigs.
In his last 10 outings, dating back to Aug. 6, Brogdon has pitched 11 1/3 innings and allowed just one run on three hits. He has 14 strikeouts in that span with a 0.79 ERA.
Overall, with Lehigh Valley, Brogdon is 2-1 with a 3.38 ERA in 29 1/3 innings pitched. He has 39 strikeouts against 12 walks.
With three clubs in 2019, Brogdon is 5-2 this season in 49 games. He has allowed 22 runs in 73 innings pitched for a 2.71 ERA with 101 strikeouts.
J.J. Santa Cruz (Liberty) as also been enjoying success. He is 3-0 with a 2.00 ERA over his last 10 outings for the August GreenJackets, the Single-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants.
In the past month, Santa Cruz has seen his in-game production increase, averaging two innings an outing. Since he allowed three runs in an August 3 outing and one run in an August 8 outing, he didn’t allow a run and allowed just one hit over his next nine innings through five games. He had 14 strikeouts in that span.
With Augusta, Santa Cruz is 6-1 with a 2.44 ERA in 26 games. He has 67 strikeouts over 48 innings with just 13 walks.
Overall, with three different teams, including Triple-A affiliate Sacramento, Santa Cruz is 6-2 with a 2.87 ERA. he has 84 strikeouts over 69 innings.
After a rocky beginning, former Madera ace Alec Gamboa settled down for the Arizona League Dodgers, the rookie league affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Over his last 10 games, Gamboa was 1-1 with a 3.13 ERA in 23 innings. He has 32 strikeouts against just two walks in that span, allowing just 19 hits.
Gamboa didn’t allow a run over a five-outing stretch into August. He allowed just four hits in a 13 2/3 inning stretch where he struck out 20 batters and didn’t walk one. In his last outing, Gamboa allowed a run on two hits with four strikeouts over three innings.
Overall, Gamboa is 1-1 with a 2.88 ERA with seven starts. He has 33 strikeouts over 25 innings pitched with just two walks.
The Bakersfield Train Robbers completed the 2019 Pecos League season and former Madera South standout Garrett Alvarez had a hand in the team reaching the Pecos League championship game.
Alvarez finished the season with a 6-3 record to go with a 3.31 ERA in 11 starts. He struck out 108 batters in 76 innings pitched and walked just 33 batters.
Alvarez also had 28 plate appearances and recorded seven hits with two RBIs for a .323 batting average. He also scored two runs.

Coyotes make quick work of Hawks

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Wendy Alexander/The Madera Tribune
Madera’s Brianna Guerrero sends a kill attempt past the blocks of Sarah Shevenell (15) and Allyx Faretta (9) during Tuesday’s three-set sweep of the Hawks.
Madera junior middle blocker Isabella Saucedo was too much for the Liberty Hawks girls volleyball team could handle in a non-league match-up at Liberty.
Saucedo recorded 27 kills to go with a pair of aces in a quick three set sweep. She led the Coyotes to defeat the Hawks by a combined 75-28 score. Of Saucedo’s 27 kills, four came off Liberty overpasses and four more came on tip kills.
“Bella was no joke,” Liberty head coach Grant Clark said. “It was a great lineup. They put her on the outside and she had free reign on the net. It was a great line-up. She’s a great player. They have great defense and they kept feeding her. We tried flipping our middles, tried putting up a triple block, but she was hitting over our biggest block. I thought our defense was commendable. They hung in there, but they are a good team and they have a great player. We competed, but that’s what we want to look like in the future.”
However, one number concerning Madera head coach Meghan Haas was 11 — the number of kills for the rest of the team, including four from setter Sofia Perez.
“We can’t win with one person,” Haas said. “That’s been evident over the last couple of days. We’re trying to build confidence in the other girls so when they are set, they are ready to go. We need other options, for sure.”
Madera had three other hitters record two kills each.
However, Liberty only recorded 12 kills in the three-set match. Lucia Somilleda led the Hawks with four. Audrina Vasquez added three.
“I told the girls for maybe the first time all season before the match began the other team was better than us,” Clark said. “After the game, they said they want to be that good some day. We want our program to be that good some day. They have college-level talent. They have a system set in place. That’s what we want to achieve someday.”
“We still have to iron a lot of stuff out on our end,” Haas said. “We’re trying to work on what we do. We were placing a premium on taking care of the ball on our side of the net. We have a lot of work to do, but we have kids that want to play and want to swing. It’s a really good group of kids. They’ve been a lot of fun.”
Liberty battled with the Coyotes for the first part of the match.
A Saucedo ace opened a 3-0 lead for the Coyotes before Lauren Parks put down a kill for the Hawks. Stephanie Madrigal served up an ace to cut the lead to one.
Brianna Guerrero put down a tip kill for the side out. Kaci Gonzalez put down a kill and Guerrero put back a Liberty overpass for a 6-2 lead.
After Madera hit out of bounds for side out, Vasquez served up two aces to get the lead down to one, again.
Saucedo put down a back row kill with a down ball and then added another back row kill for a 9-6 lead.
Somilleda put down a kill for the Hawks’ side out and Allyx Feretta served up another ace to cut the lead to two.
After Saucedo put down a side out kill, Guerrero went behind the service line and Madera scored eight straight points. Saucedo had three kills in the run, one off an assist from Perez, one on a Liberty overpass and another off a tip. Liberty hit the ball into the net four times in the run for an 18-7 Liberty lead.
Mariah Medina put back a Madera hit for the side out and Somilleda served up a point before Perez surprised Liberty with a dump kill.
Madera libero Mariyah Alvarez served up four straight points with two more kills from Saucedo for a 23-9 lead.
After a trade in side outs, Perez ended the set with an ace and a 25-10 victory.
A Guerrero ace and a Saucedo kill gave Madera the early lead in the second set. Parks put down a kill, but Saucedo got the side out back with another kill on an overpass.
Another Saucedo kill opened a 4-1 lead before Somilleda got the side out with a kill to cut the lead to two.
Saucedo put down a side out kill and Madera scored 10 straight points.
Alvarez served up nine straight points, including two serves that weren’t returned. Saucedo had four kills in the run while Perez had a dump kill and another off a Liberty overpass. Alizae Vasquez also had a kill for a 14-2 lead.
Audrina Vasquez stopped the run with a side out kill, but Saucedo got the side out right back with a tip kill.
Saucedo added a point with an ace on a serve off the net. However, Vasquez and Jaclyn Smith combined on a dual block.
After five straight side outs, Liberty added a point with Smith serving. Saucedo got the side out with another tip kill, but Sarah Shevenell got the side out for Liberty with a kill.
Madera got the side out and Perez got another kill with a dump into an open spot on the Liberty side.
Shevenell got the serve back to Liberty with a solo block. Jackie Lopez served up an ace to get into double-digits, but Saucedo got another side out kill.
Alvarez served up an ace and Liberty hit into the net for set point. However, Somilleda put down a kill for a Liberty side out. However, a Liberty missed serve gave the Coyotes a 25-11 victory.
Madera put any thoughts of a Liberty comeback to rest early in the third set.
After Lauren Dybas got the side out kill for the Coyotes, Gonzalez served up 10 straight points. In the run, Gonzalez recorded an ace and Saucedo added four more kills to her total. Five Liberty errors helped the Coyotes jump out to an 11-0 lead.
Vasquez got the Liberty side out and Somilleda put down a kill for the first two Liberty points.
A Saucedo kill led to a Madera side out. Jade Davie served up a point and Saucedo had another kill to open the lead to 12.
The two teams exchanged six straight side outs with Madera getting kills from Saucedo and Alizae Vasquez.
Perez served up an ace and Saucedo put down a back row kill for a 19-5 lead.
Shevenell won a joust at the net with Vasquez for a Liberty side out.
After a Liberty service error, Vasquez served up two points, including a Dybas kill.
Audrina Vasquez got a Liberty side out with a kill, but a Guerrero side out gave the serve back to Madera.
Gonzalez served up a point for match point and, of course, Saucedo ended it with her 27th kill of the night for a 25-7 victory.

Mineshaft murderer paid high price for jealousy

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Madera County Historical Society
Luke’s Store in Raymond, where it is likely murder victim James Kipp and his bootlegging partner Albert Fuller once may have bought supplies. From left are Nelson Luke, Tottie Smale, Walter Dick, Andy Davidson and Bill Probasco.
On July 14, 1933, Albert Fuller, Madera County’s “Mine Shaft Murderer,” climbed the steps of the gallows and paid for killing his bootlegging business partner, James Kipp. The murder and Fuller’s two-year attempt to escape the hangman’s noose grabbed the attention of the people and turned it into one of the most notorious crimes in Madera County’s history.
Three elements account for the notoriety of this case. First, the victim, who had been missing for a week, was finally found floating in a deep mine shaft not far from Raymond. Second, the victim was a one-legged man, and third, the motive for the murder was jealousy. Kipp had been fooling around with Fuller’s wife.
Kipp had been reported missing on Oct. 8, 1931, and a week later, Sheriff Welton Rhodes received an anonymous tip that he should look in some of the mineshafts on the Wagner ranch about 10 miles from Raymond for Kipp’s body.
Sheriff Rhodes took some deputies and headed for the hills. While searching the mines in the area, he came to the Walker mine where he found something that looked suspicious. Near the top of the shaft, he found tire tracks. On a rock about a foot from the edge of the shaft and on blades of grass nearby, he found spots of blood. Rhodes called for more help. Soon Victor Lind, a miner in the area, appeared with a windlass and timber. He descended the mine, and 146 feet down he found Kipp’s body floating in water. Lind brought the body to the surface and then went back for the one-legged victim’s crutch.
Later investigation showed that Kipp had been shot in the head and shoved down the shaft. Rhodes speculated that Kipp had been plied with liquor or forced by someone to walk to the mineshaft and shot. He did not die instantly, for Dr. Dow Ransom determined from the autopsy that Kipp had water in his lungs and died from drowning.
It just so happened that Fuller was well known in Raymond because he owned some mining property and was familiar in the area. On the day of the murder, Fuller and Kipp had stopped in
Raymond for fuel and something to eat, and the waitress recognized them and told the sheriff. This led Rhodes to Fuller’s house where he talked with his wife who gave the lawman some curious information. She acknowledged a relationship with Kipp and said that her husband had once told her that the mineshafts of Madera County would be a perfect place to hide a body. This of course put Fuller in the center of the radar screen.
Fuller, of course, denied any knowledge of his partner’s demise, but then some detective work on Rhodes’ part tied Fuller to the crime.
Sheriff Rhodes knew from the gas station attendant that Kipp and Fuller had driven to Raymond in Kipp’s car. When the auto turned up in a Merced garage under the name of Albert Fuller, Rhodes knew he had his man.
Upon being confronted with the evidence, Fuller admitted that he and Kipp had gone to the mine. The killer claimed they went there to retrieve some liquor Kipp had hidden there. Fuller said they began to quarrel over Mrs. Fuller and Kipp pulled out a gun. In the struggle that followed, the one-legged man lost his footing, shot himself in the head, and fell down the mineshaft. Fuller said he stood at the mouth of the mineshaft for about five minutes and called several times but got no answer. He claimed that he at first he was going to notify the law but decided to tell his wife first. Fuller said his wife convinced him not to say anything to anybody.
No one bought Fuller’s story, and he was tried for Kipp’s murder. The jury found him guilty and Judge Stanley Murray sentenced him to death by hanging. On Dec. 28, 1931, Sheriff Rhodes and Deputy G.W. Van Curen boarded the train in Madera with Fuller to take him to his final destination.
Fuller fought his death sentence with a fury, but Madera County District Attorney Mason Bailey fought harder. The condemned man appealed seven times, but in each case, Bailey won.
So Albert Fuller was hanged for the murder of the one-legged cobbler and fellow bootlegger. He never expected that James Kipp’s broken body would ever be found at the bottom of that mine shaft, but he was wrong; perhaps he forgot who was sheriff.

Madera County Sheriff's Log: Aug. 6-12

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The Madera County Sheriff’s Office reported the following incidents.
Aug. 6
9:53 p.m. — Deputies were dispatched to an assault in the 6000 block of Road 7 in Firebaugh regarding a father and his son. Upon arrival it was determined the subject had been arguing with his father. Father hit the son with a log several times causing visible injuries to his back and head. The father was located at the residence and arrested on assault with a deadly weapon charges as well as no bail misdemeanor warrant out of Fresno County. The case is to be forwarded to the Madera County District Attorney’s Office for charges to be filed.
Aug. 8
8:56 a.m. — The Madera Sheriff’s POP Team conducted warrant services in the mountain division in North Fork. A traffic stop was conducted for a vehicle code violation which led to a male subject running from the vehicle. The male subject was positively identified and found to have a felony warrant for his arrest. A perimeter was set by responding deputies and California Highway Patrol Units. Through the use of a Madera County Sheriff’s office K-9, the male subject was located and arrested.
8 p.m. — Deputy was dispatched to the 1200 block of Almond Avenue in Madera regarding a possible child abuse. The victim and witnesses were contacted and statements obtained. The suspect was arrested and booked in the Madera County Department of Corrections. A report was written and forwarded to the Madera County District Attorney’s Office for charges to be filed. A report was also forwarded to Madera County Child protective Services
11:36 p.m. — Deputy responded to the area of Posey Avenue and Entrada Avenue in Madera for a report of shots fired. A subject was contacted jumping a fence behind a residence and fled from the deputies. The subject was located and found to be on California Department of Correction Parole. The subject was subsequently arrested. The case will be forwarded to the Madera County District Attorney’s Office for charges to be filed.
Aug. 9
7:02 p.m. — Deputy was dispatched to the 54000 block of Road 432 in Bass Lake for a report of a female juvenile being bitten by a dog. The girl was examined by paramedics. A report was written and forwarded to the Madera County Animal Services for review.
10:55 p.m. — A vehicle stop conducted by deputies in the 4000 block of SR-41 in Oakhurst regarding a female subject being arrested as a felon in possession of a loaded firearm, narcotics violations and violation of probation. The case was forwarded to the Madera County District Attorney’s Office to pursue charges.
Aug. 10
11:43 p.m. — Deputy responded to the 200 block of West 4th Street in Madera for a report of vandalism. T he reporting party stated that a subject was actively punching the windows at the address. The subject was contacted and subsequently arrested. The case is to be forwarded to the Madera County District Attorneys Office for charges to be filed.
11:50 p.m. — Deputy was dispatched to Valley Children’s Hospital in Madera regarding a possible sexual assault that occurred in the 48000 block of Victoria Lane in Madera County. The reporting party was contacted and statement was obtained. The minor child was placed on a protective hold and turned over to Madera County Child Protective Services. A report was written and was forwarded to detectives for follow–up.
Aug. 11
6:44 p.m. — Deputy was dispatched to the 15000 block of Avenue 17 in Madera regarding a victim being stabbed in the back. The victim was transported by helicopter to the hospital. The case was forwarded to detectives for follow-up.
Aug. 12
9:12 a.m. — Deputy was dispatched to the area of Road 26 and Avenue 12 in Madera regarding a stolen fertilizer trailer. The case was forwarded to the Agricultural Crime detective for review of evidence and photos.

Businesses receive awards for school partnerships

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For The Madera Tribune
CTA Recipients Paulo Soares, left, and Hansel Kern.
Camarena Health and Kern Family Farm each received a Crystal Tower Award August 27 at the 16th Annual Business and Education Shareholders’ Luncheon hosted by the Madera County Compact.
The two businesses were recognized for their partnerships with Madera County schools in front of more than 160 business and community leaders.
Camarena Health was nominated by Elizabeth Puga at Madera South High School. Camarena Health has been a partner with the school for more than five years.
Camarena Health recently built a school based health center on the Madera South High School campus. They also provide opportunities for students including job shadowing, health career days, equipment donations, and have provided money to help Madera Unified focus on mental health issues.
Kern Family Farm was nominated by Michelle Dungan at North Fork Elementary School. Kern Family Farm has been a partner with North Fork Elementary School for the past 15 years.
Along with monetary donations, owner Hansel Kern volunteers all day in the school garden every Friday. This allows all students on campus to tend to various areas in the garden such as the greenhouse, vineyard, fruit trees, and garden crops. The garden now grows produce that is used in the cafeteria salad bar. The family store, The Gnarly Carrot, also donates snacks for the students.
Both businesses exemplify the Madera County Compact’s mission, “Working in partnership with education to prepare young people for the increasing demands of society and the workplace.”
“It is amazing the amount of dedication these businesses have for our students and the community as a whole, said Dr. Cecilia Massetti, Madera County Superintendent of Schools. “We are so privileged to work alongside these businesses to help shape the future and promote success in our students.”
The luncheon highlighted the exceptional student work Madera County has to offer. Many high schools in Madera County contributed to the success of the luncheon.
Minarets High School’s choir show band sang for the guests and Madera High School’s Public Safety Academy students presented the flag. Yosemite Union High School students created table centerpieces and Pioneer Technical Center students acted as servers.
A video featuring the Crystal Tower Award recipients was produced by the Madera South High School video production class. The video was shown preceding the acceptance of the awards.
Angel Reyna, the new president of the Madera Community College Center presented information on the current state of the Madera Center and future goals for the campus.
The luncheon was hosted by the Madera County Compact and was held at the office of the Madera County Superintendent of Schools. It was sponsored by Camarena Health, Educational Employees Credit Union, Madera County Superintendent of Schools, The Specialty Crop Company, Agriland, First 5 Madera County, and California Health Sciences University.
The Madera County Compact is a group of business, community and education leaders working collaboratively to support efforts to improve the quality of life in Madera County.
They promote business partnerships with schools to improve the achievement levels and skills of students and prepare young people for the increasing demands of college and career.
Past recipients of the Crystal Tower Award include A/Dolphin Associates, B-K Lighting, Bridge Store, Robert Brosi, D.D.S., Citizens Business Bank, Delaware North (Tenaya Lodge), Educational Employees Credit Union, Evapco West, Greenleaf Orchards, JBT (formerly FMC) FoodTech, Kings Valley Industries, Kuckenbecker Tractor, Madera Agricultural Services, Madera Community Hospital, Madera Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, Movies Madera, Mowers Plus, Oakhurst Physical Therapy, Ozterity Lighting, Pacific Ethanol, Pete’s Sport Shop, Ponderosa Telephone, Rancho San Miguel, Round Table Pizza, Sierra Ambulance, Sierra Telephone, S & J Lumber, Valley Bowl, The Vineyard Restaurant, Vulcan Materials, WestCoast Products & Design.

Man arrested on narcotics charges

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Madera County Sheriff's Department
Esmond Hedrington.
A pickup truck driving in the middle of the road in the residential neighborhood of Fairmead Monday night attracted the attention of a patrolling Madera County deputy sheriff and K9 officer, according the authorities.
Deputy Logan Majeski was near the intersection of Sinclair Drive and Elm Street about 11:30 p.m. when he saw the gray pickup truck driven by 73-year-old Esmond Hedrington of Chowchilla and pulled it over.
While speaking with the driver the deputy noticed a large metal spoon with white residue on the floor of the truck.
The K9 and drug dog Nacho alerted multiple times on the interior of the pickup truck and a physical search of the vehicle located approximately an ounce of a white substance believed to be of methamphetamine. Various drug paraphernalia, including a pipe and a digital scale were also found in the vehicle.
Hedrington was taken into custody and arrested, and charged with felony possession of narcotics for sale, and transport of a controlled substance. Hedrington was transported and booked at Madera County Department of Corrections without incident.
Records show a previous arrest for Hedrington in 2014 on charges of assault with a deadly weapon.

Two nabbed on suspicion of attempted murder after I St. shooting

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Madera Police Department
Joseph Luis Huerta Jr., left, and Moses McGuire Jr.
Two Madera men have been arrested in connection with a shooting that occurred on 4th and I Streets last weekend, according to the Madera Police Department.
Moses McGuire, Jr., 18, and Joseph Luis Huerta, Jr., 23, were arrested on felony charges of attempted murder after a police investigation identified the pair from passing motorists and multiple video surveillance cameras from nearby businesses.
Public information officer Sgt. Mark Trukki said it wasn’t yet known why the two targeted the car Friday night the 23rd of August with the three young men in it and opened fire, but McGuire is a known gang member and has a long criminal history in spite of only being 18 years old. The three victims deny and apparently had no gang affiliation, but the investigation into the motive is ongoing, Trukki said.
McGuire is believed to have been the one that fired the shots from the passenger seat, according to Trukki.
Huerta has little to no criminal history, he said.
“They were first seen at and then leaving the AMPM store on Gateway about 10:30 pm. There doesn’t appear to be any altercation or fight. McGuire and Huerta then followed the other car and when they turned east on to 4th, they fired about three small caliber rounds at them from behind. One shot went through the car and struck a 19-year-old man riding in the front passenger’s seat. He was struck in the side of his neck. The bullet ended up near his spine, so they can’t remove it ... but he was fortunate and is now recovering at home. He could have been killed,” Trukki said. “We don’t know where the other rounds went,” and they could have easily struck anyone else nearby on Fourth Street, he said, but no other injuries were reported.
The motive for the shooting remains under investigation, Trukki said, but it is possible the incident was a case of mistaken identity or even potentially retaliation for the gang-related homicide in July, in which a gang member was shot and killed while outside at a party.
In an ironic coincidence Moses McGuire, Sr., 38, who also has a long criminal history, according to police records was arrested five days before his son on charges of making criminal terrorist threats, and inflicting bodily injury on a spouse and various other probation violations. His bond was set at $100,000.
Moses McGuire, Jr., and Joseph Luis Huerta, Jr., are both being held in the Madera County jail on $1 million bond.

Rodriquez named principal of Matilda Torres High

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Wendy Alexander/The Madera Tribune
Sabrina Rodriquez, the newly named principal for the new Matilda Torres High School currently under construction, is surrounded by colleagues and construction officials as she stands in her new office during a tour on Thursday.
Sabrina Rodriquez, veteran school administrator, has been named principal of Madera Unified’s new Matilda Torres High School. Her appointment was announced by Superintendent Todd Lile at Tuesday evening’s meeting of the board of trustees.
“I want to congratulate Sabrina Rodriquez for being selected principal of Matilda Torres High School, said Lile. “I am confident Mrs. Rodriquez will excel in her journey by setting the standard for hard work, creativity, and resiliency with a fearless drive to continuously improve. Judging by the quality school culture at both MLK and Desmond established with her leadership we can expect big things at Torres High School.”
Rodriquez’ elevation to the helm of Matilda Torres High gives women a clean sweep of the principalships in all three of MUSD’s high schools. Robyn Cosgrove is the principal of Madera High School, and Aimee Anderson is the principal of Madera South High School.
When Lile introduced Rodriquez at Tuesday’s meeting, her excitement was palpable as she expressed her gratitude to the board for selecting her to fill the district’s most visible administrative vacancy.
Rodriquez has earned the reputation for being able to remain calm in a crisis and for keeping the ship on course during turbulent times. Her professional apologia is “self-efficacy,” the confidence in one’s ability to do the job. In this manner, she puts the district’s motto, “We Believe,” on a personal level.
Rodriquez began her career in education in 2003 at Hilmar High School where she taught English and served as advisor for the school newspaper and the yearbook. During that year, she also completed work with Chico State for her teaching credential.
In August 2004, Liberty High in the Ranchos almost signed her up, but they didn’t move quite fast enough. Ron Pisk got there first and put her to work as an English teacher at Madera High; North Campus. The next year Rodriquez, attracted by the lure of helping to open a brand new school. went to Desmond Middle School.
At Desmond, she taught English Language Arts. After hours, she served on several councils, coached basketball and volleyball, served as activities director, advisor for the student council, served as GATE coordinator, finished her Master’s in Education Administration, and was named named Desmond Teacher of the Year for the 2006-2007 school year.
In 2008, Rodriquez accepted the job of vice principal of Berenda Elementary School and began work on a doctorate at CSU, Fresno. Two years later, she moved to Thomas Jefferson as vice principal and continued her work in her educational doctorate program at Fresno State.
In 2011, Rodriquez got the opportunity she had been working toward. She was made principal of Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School where she took on the full range of administrative responsibilities of a principal. With two years as an elementary school vice principal and a year as a middle school vice principal, Rodriquez, armed with her philosophy of “self-efficacy,” was ready to take the helm.
Rodriquez served as principal of MLK for seven years. During that time, she also finished her course work for her doctorate, was advanced to candidacy, and began preparation to defend her dissertation.
With the departure of Prince Marshall as principal of Desmond Middle School, Rodriquez replaced him in June 2018. She had just begun her second year at Desmond when the opportunity to open Madera’s brand new, state-of-the-art high school availed itself.
Matilda Torres High School is scheduled to open in August 2020, but district officials have not announced when they will move Rodriquez to the new campus. In the meantime, she will remain at Desmond. In an interview with The Tribune, Rodriquez said until she is moved, her focus will be on her commitment to the Desmond school community: students, teachers, and parents. In the meantime, she cannot hide her excitement over next year’s assignment.

CHP rescues dog on freeway

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DJ Becker/The Madera Tribune
CHP officer Javier Ruvalcaba holds a small brown dog he pulled from the center divide of SR 99 Wednesday morning. The dog survived crossing two lanes of high speed traffic in central Madera before being seen by Ruvalcaba and rescued.
A small brown Yorkie mix dog somehow survived crossing two lanes of high speed northbound traffic on State Route 99 Wednesday morning south of Cleveland Avenue and fortunately was spotted in time by a passing California Highway Patrol officer, as she lay crouching in fear in the center divide.
Long time Madera resident and CHP officer Javier Ruvalcaba said pets running in traffic were a serious traffic hazard and he had already been to one traffic collision that same morning caused by a dog running loose on a rural road. Owners of animals running loose and causing traffic collisions are responsible for those financial damages, he said, whether it’s a dog, cow, or horse.
Ruvalcaba said he wasn’t sure the terrified little dog wasn’t already injured or would even allow him to approach but he felt he needed to try, to prevent it from running back into traffic if he could. To his surprise, he said the dog was uninjured, friendly and allowed him to pick her up and put her in his car.
The dog, now named “Honey,” was impounded at the Madera County Animal Shelter and placed in a foster home. Shelter staff said the unaltered female dog was likely in reproductive heat and running loose in central Madera, and she recently had and weaned a litter of puppies. Anyone wishing to reclaim or apply to adopt Honey should visit the Madera County Animal Shelter.

Potluck dessert recipes for sharing

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Selena N.B.H./Wikimedia Commons.
Cook the sugar cookies in plain rounds, or use decorative cutters, icing and colored sugar.
Ever since I can remember, I have always loved attending potluck meals, no matter if they were put on by church groups, clubs or schools. If those groups happened to put together a fundraising cookbook, all the better. Some of my very favorite recipes came from those books. I am betting that many (most?) of you feel the same way.
Here are some recipes you may want to consider for the next time you are invited to a potluck meal.
I hope you are enjoying summer as it continues to wind down.
Cherry-berry cake
1 box white cake mix
1 1/2 cups boiling water
1 package (3-oz.) cherry gelatin
1 package (8-oz.) cream cheese, softened
2 cups whipped topping
4 cups fresh strawberries, coarsely chopped
1. Prepare and bake cake, 3 to 5 minutes. Using a wooden skewer, pierce holes in top of cake to within 1 inch of edge, twisting skewer gently to make slightly larger holes.
2. Gradually pour gelatin over cake, being careful to fill each hole. Cool 15 minutes. Refrigerate, covered, 30 minutes.
3. In a large bowl, beat cream cheese until fluffy. Fold in whipped topping. Carefully spread over cake. Top with strawberries. Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours before serving.
Coconut key lime thumbprints
Filling:
2 tablespoons cornstarch
2/3 cup key lime juice
3/4 cup sugar
2 large egg yolks
Cookie:
1 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon coconut extract
2 cups flour
2 large egg whites
2 teaspoons water
2 1/2 cups sweetened, shredded coconut
Drizzle:
4 ounces white baking chocolate, chopped
1 tablespoon shortening
1. For lime curd filling: in a small saucepan, whisk cornstarch and lime juice until smooth. Whisk in sugar and egg yolks; cook and stir over medium heat until boiling. Transfer to a bowl; cool slightly. Press plastic wrap onto surface of curd; refrigerate until cold.
2. For cookies: Preheat oven to 400. Cream butter, confectioners’ sugar and salt until light and fluffy. Beat in extracts. Gradually beat in flour.
3. In a small bowl, whisk together egg whites and water. Place coconut in a separate bowl. Shape dough into 1-1/4-inch balls. Dip in egg whites, then roll in coconut, coating well. Place 2 inches apart on parchment paper-lined baking sheets. Press a deep indentation in center of each with the handle of a wooden spoon.
4. Bake until edges are golden brown, 12 to 14 minutes. Reshape indentations as needed. Cool on pans 5 minutes. Remove to wire racks to cool completely.
5. To serve, fill each cookie with about 1 1/2 teaspoons curd. For drizzle: In a microwave, melt white chocolate and shortening; stir until smooth. Drizzle over cookies. Refrigerate leftover filled cookies.
Amish sugar cookies
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup sugar
1 cup confectioners’ sugar
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
4 1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
1. Preheat oven to 375. In a large bowl, beat butter, oil and sugars. Beat in eggs until well blended. Beat in vanilla. Combine flour, baking soda and cream of tartar; gradually add to creamed mixture.
2. Drop by small teaspoonfuls onto ungreased baking sheets. Bake in preheated oven until lightly browned, 8 to 10 minutes. Remove to wire racks to cool.
Frosted banana bars
1/2 cup butter, softened
2 cups sugar
3 large eggs
1 1/2 cups mashed ripe bananas (about 3 medium)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
Dash salt
Frosting:
1 package (8-oz.) cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup butter, softened
4 cups confectioners’ sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1. Preheat oven to 350. In a large bowl, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in eggs, bananas and vanilla. Combine flour, baking soda and salt; stir into creamed mixture just until blended.
2. Transfer to a greased 15-by-10-by-1-inch baking pan. Bake in preheated oven for 20 to 25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool in pan on a wire rack.
3. For frosting, in a small bowl, beat cream cheese and butter until fluffy. Add confectioners’ sugar and vanilla; beat until smooth. Frost bars.

Skeeko’s began as a gas station

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Madera County Historical Society
Skeeko’s service station as it appeared in 1938 on Gateway Drive. It later became a Madera landmark as Skeeko’s bar.
Many historical landmarks dot the landscape of Madera, and one of these is an establishment on the corner of Gateway Drive and 1st Street that for decades was called Skeeko’s.
In its heyday, Skeeko’s was one of the best-known watering holes in Madera. Earlier, however, it had been an Italian restaurant, and even earlier it had its genesis as a gas station.
It was all the brainchild of one Alfredo Guiseppe Farnesi, an Italian immigrant who came to Madera early in the 20th century.
Farnesi was born on Jan. 20, 1888, in the village of San Lorenzo in Lucca, Italy, to Petro and Paolina Farnesi. Alfredo stayed at home and helped his parents until he was 19 and then left with his 17-year-old brother, Jacapo, to come to America.
After landing at Ellis Island, Alfredo and Jacapo traveled to Sanger, California, where they had another brother, Carado, who owned a vineyard and operated a winery there. Alfredo worked for his brother in the summer and in the winter he carried food and water to the lumberjacks in the mountain lumber camps. He worked hard, saved his money, and in 1916, following the advice of his friend Dominic Del Cerro, who farmed in the La Vina District, Alfredo moved to Madera with his dream. He wanted to open a gas station — Madera’s first.
Alfredo Farnesi’s first home in Madera was in the Barsotti Hotel on Gateway Drive, and it didn’t take the newcomer long to find the spot where he wanted to build his service station. The empty lot on the northwest corner of the highway (Gateway Drive) and 3rd street was perfect.
After consulting, Domenic Barsotti, the owner of the hotel in which he lived, Alfredo met the owner of the lot, Charles Floto, and made an offer to rent the property on which he wanted to build his gas station. Floto agreed and in turn introduced Farnesi to Ezio Cortopassi, who built Alfredo the building he wanted. By 1919, it was finished, and Alfredo opened his business, which he called Skeeko’s, a nickname he had acquired from a farmer who lived in the Sharon District north of Madera.
The first Skeeko’s had two pumps, a large room and a restroom in the back. Then, because he had not become proficient in English, Alfredo hired two teenage brothers to assist him — not because he needed help at the pumps — but to help him communicate with his customers.
All the while, Alfredo continued to visit his friends, the Del Cerros, and in time he met Mrs. Del Cerro’s sister, Caterina Tocchini. A courtship quickly developed, and in 1921, Alfredo and Caterina were married.
In the meantime, Alfredo decided to expand. He closed his first station and opened a new one just down the street. Here he built a much larger operation and kept the name Skeeko’s. It had 7 gas pumps and a house attached in the rear. In the next year, Alfredo became a father for the first time when his son, William was born.
In 1932, Alfredo tore down the service station and remodeled the front of the building. He also tore down the walls of the house but saved the restaurant. He was about to shift his business in a new direction. Where the walls of the house had been, he added a bar and a dining hall. Caterina did most of the cooking, specializing in Italian food.
Then in a propitious moment, prohibition was repealed, and America hit the bottle again. Alfredo Farnesi applied for and was granted the first liquor license in Madera. It cost him $200. His business began to build until the government threw up a hurdle. A law was passed declaring that anyone with a liquor license had to be a citizen. Since Alfredo had not yet been naturalized, that placed him on the horns of a dilemma. However, he was not without his options; he was determined that Skeeko’s would stay in business, so he looked to his brother, Corado, in Sanger.
Corado Farnesi had a son, Pete Farnesi, who was of legal age and was a citizen. Alfredo invited his nephew to move to Madera and to become his partner. Alfredo would not require the younger Farnesi to put up any money; all he had to do was to manage the place and put his name on the liquor license. In the meantime, Alfredo’s son, Bill, had reached the age of 16 and was able to help his father and his cousin in the business.
With Pete Farnesi managing the place he added a truck stop to their business complex, and Bill managed the pumps. Pete also put in a bar with three booths and 12 stools. Skeeko’s was now not only a gas station, it had a restaurant and a bar. In time the gas pumps were removed for good, and Pete Farnesi opened up a restaurant of his own in Chowchilla. In 1953, Alfredo Farnesi officially retired and sold Skeeko’s to Marge Davis.
Alfredo Farnesi died in Madera at the age of 94, but his creation, “Skeeko’s,” lives on in the minds of many Maderans. Likewise, his nephew, Pete Farnesi, left his mark on Madera, but that’s another story.

Opinion: Alaska — an ice place to visit

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Courtesy of Tom Elias
The Nenana River flows beside gravelly Denali Highway from its glacial sources, as seen from a Denali Jeep Excursion in Alaska.
SEWARD, Alaska — A two-week trip to some of this vast state’s major population centers and some smaller towns, too, revealed the truth of the message on t-shirts commonly sold here – “Untamed.”
At times in this fantastically scenic, rough-and-ready state, a visitor feels like the Wild West is still alive.
Sitting in the Starbucks coffee shop section of an IGA grocery just outside the charming little town of Talkeetna, only 100 miles north of Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city, yielded one illustrative vignette:
At the next table, a young man flirted with an attractive young woman. It seemed ordinary until a glance down revealed a holstered .45 caliber pistol hanging from the boy’s belt.
Or take a hike beside a river near Denali National Park and you might notice a sign hanging from a buoy: “No shooting in the water.”
This raw quality has survived more than 160 years of Alaska being American territory and 60 as a full-fledged state, one that produced onetime vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, who seems a natural product of the society she grew up in.
“We are few people in a vast, beautifully dangerous land,” said a letter to the editor of a newspaper.
More and more residents of the Lower 48 states appear eager to see this place, enough to make tourism a $2 billion industry here, second only to petroleum in its economic impact.
There are myriad opportunities for visitors to see this almost measureless land, more than three times larger than California, with a coastline four times longer than the Golden State’s — and a population of barely 700,000.
Single-engine float planes take off every minute or two from Lake Hood, beside the Anchorage airport and just outside the coffee shop of the Lakefront Anchorage Hotel. They’re headed for tours of the 20,320-foot Denali mountain, formerly known as Mt. McKinley, North America’s highest peak. They’re also taking fly fishermen to lodges alongside lakes deep in the Alaskan interior.
Almost every significant town offers helicopter tours of wild coastal lands and huge mountains including the four 16,000-foot-plus peaks in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park. Some choppers and planes land atop glaciers, which have receded by many miles, but still offer smooth landing areas and walkable surfaces.
You can also land on the slopes of 18,008-foot Mt. St. Elias and many other sharp peaks. But for some, staying on the surface of land and sea offers the most satisfaction — and far lower costs than air tours, which can cost upwards of $800 per hour per person.
Here are a few attractions for those folks:
The Glacier boat tour on Prince William Sound southeast of Anchorage. For $159 for adults ($80 for children), Phillips Tours will pick you up at any of three Anchorage hotels for an 11-hour adventure where you’ll not only see glaciers calving tons of ice into the sea every hour or two, but can also take note of clear marks on nearby cliffs showing how far those glaciers reached less than a century ago.
The six-hour catamaran ride is so smooth Phillips offers a “no seasickness” guarantee and captains of its ships like the Klondike Explorer and the Bravest actively seek out and stop near wildlife. We saw humpback whales, harbor seals, sea otters, sea lions, moose and bald eagles and their huge nests.
A national forest ranger providing commentary on board pointed out the effects of global warming, including evidence that some glaciers have receded more than two miles in just the last two years.
He wasn’t shy about discussing this, even though he technically works for President Trump, the nation’s leading climate change denier. “No one is muzzling us,” said the ranger. Still, his name is not given here to protect him from potential repercussions.
There are also no muzzles on the predominantly female corps of ship captains giving commentary aboard the several ships operated by Major Marine Cruises from Seward, about 120 miles south of Anchorage. These depart from behind the waterfront Harbor 360 hotel. Major Marine runs tours of up to 8 1/2 hours, priced from $89 for a 3 ½-hour wildlife jaunt to $224 for its longest trip, which features three active tidewater glaciers calving into the remote Northwestern Fjord. This one is billed as the company’s best option for wildlife photography.
The shortest tour, down Resurrection Bay and into the Gulf of Alaska, also offers myriad glacier views and plenty of wildlife, from puffins to huge fin whales, the second-largest creatures on earth.
On foot: If you’re visiting Seward, where snowcapped peaks are visible year-‘round just across the
700-foot-deep Resurrection Bay, you can also see a glacier up close and personal, and free, even in the 85-degree weather we encountered.
This is the Exit Glacier, protruding down from the 700-square-mile Harding Icefield into Kenai Fjords National Park just 12 miles northwest of town.
The approach road features year signs showing how far the Exit Glacier extended in 1899, 1901, 1920, 1959 and more recent years. Some signs pop up along the two-mile Glacier Overlook loop trail that starts at a small visitor center where park rangers were not collecting fees when we arrived.
Anyone who likes driving to remote areas will likely appreciate Denali Jeep Excursions along the gravel Denali Highway just south of the national park, about 250 miles north of Anchorage. Most car rental contracts in Alaska forbid driving unpaved roads. The park itself has only one road, paved for just 14 miles into its tundra interior.
So driving more than 100 miles in a Jeep caravan to areas frequented by moose, grizzly bears, beavers and much more wildlife can be fun. For $169 per adult, Denali Jeep Excursions will pick you up at major area hotels like the Denali Princess and the Grand Denali Lodge and deliver you to a jeep compound 18 miles south of the park, near Cantwell, a hamlet of just a few buildings.
Two-way CB radios link Jeeps on the caravan as the tour leader spots animals and delivers folksy commentary in a strong Alabama accent. You see the glacial sources of the Nenana River, a major Yukon River tributary that flows just outside Denali National Park, and you might even glimpse Denali itself on a clear day — only about 30 percent of visitors actually see the mountain.
But you will for sure see trumpeter swans on a lake created by a beaver lodge and from the guides you’ll hear unforgettable phrases like, “men, please use the facili-trees,” just before a brief pit stop.
It also can be easy and feel more authentic to avoid chain hotels in Alaska, even though there are Hiltons and a Sheraton in Anchorage and Best Westerns in several places.
For one example, near Denali National Park there’s the Denali Lakeview Inn, a modern structure where almost all rooms overlook Otto Lake and several 5,000-foot Alaska Range mountains behind it. For about $230, you’ll get personal service, plus a large breakfast stowed in the refrigerator of each room, to be enjoyed whenever you like.
Seward’s Harbor 360 offers large, modern rooms right on the waterfront for $314 per king-bedded accommodation with breakfast. This hotel features a year-round indoor swimming pool and hot tub.
At Talkeetna, the log-cabin-style Susnitsa River Lodge offers large rooms and cabins for about $199, with the river of the same name flowing rapidly past beneath your veranda. We got our best views of Denali (and some of our best meals) in this small town 45 miles from the southern base of the former Mt. McKinley.
Add it up and there are plenty of highly-civilized ways to see America’s last frontier by land and sea, even if you don’t like small planes and helicopters. Or add in a chopper or plane ride, too. But always be aware that most of Alaska looks and feels much as it did when the English explorer Captain James Cook landed at what is now Anchorage in 1778.
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Thomas Elias writes the California Focus syndicated column appearing in more than 90 California newspapers, including The Madera Tribune.

Opinion: It’s not actually all green…

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The most interesting news item last week was President Trump’s suggestion that we buy Greenland.
Greenland isn’t actually very green — it’s mostly white because of all the snow and ice up there.
Greenland is owned by Denmark, the rulers of which say Greenland isn’t for sale, although one wonders why they want to keep the place.
I have been to Denmark, and I will tell you they make a lot of nice cheeses and ham there, not to mention a very fine alcoholic drink called Akvavit, which is made from potatoes grains and dill, and despite the raw sound of its garden ingredients is considered by Danish drinkers to be the mother’s milk of Denmark, or the “water of life,” if you choose.
As I mentioned, Denmark owns Greenland, although it is difficult to understand why. Mrs. Doud and I flew over Greenland once — on our way to Denmark — and it was nothing but a white sheet of ice. Who would want to live there?
I know a few who have been there, mostly U.S. Air Force veterans, who say being stationed in Greenland was like being sent to Alcatraz, because alcohol was only available at particular times of the day, and very restricted.
When Denmark took over Greenland, only Danes were allowed to drink alcohol.
Gradually, Greenlanders were given access to alcohol, but this created a problem, which is that Greenlanders don’t seem to handle alcohol very well. Beginning in 1954, Greenlanders were given permission to buy the domestic beer, immiaq, but apparently it doesn’t taste any better than it sounds. It also leads to criminal behavior, fighting and a lot of throwing up.
Another news item had to do with refreezing the Arctic. It involves sending submarines down below the Arctic ice sheet and having them turn out hexagon-shaped ice cubes through a very complicated process that only works if you desalinate the water under the ice.
You probably are thinking this sounds like a very expensive enterprise, and it would be if anybody actually did it.
You probably would have to go up in the northern part of Greenland and places like that to accomplish such a refreezing, and you would have to take many barrels of immiaq or cases of Akvavit with you if you wanted to keep your crews happy.
One reason why President Trump wants to buy Greenland is that it would put a thumb in the eye of China.
It seems as though China is moving into Greenland as fast as it can, and that move is not part of a vast plan to turn Greenland into a tourist paradise.
It probably has to do with Greenland being a lot closer place than China from which to launch missiles at the United States.

Hawks bounce back to get sweep

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Wendy Alexander/The Madera Tribune
The Liberty Hawks girls volleyball team celebrates a second set victory during Thursday’s sweep over the Dos Palos Bobcats.
After losing in a sweep against the Madera Coyotes, the Liberty Hawks girls volleyball team bounced back two days later with a home sweep against the Dos Palos Broncos.
The Hawks led for most of the game in the win on Thursday, a far contrast from the loss against the Coyotes.
“It was really important that we bounced back and I had a feeling that we would,” Liberty head coach Grant Clark said. “Madera is several leagues above us and we learned some valuable lessons from them.”
It was the first home win of the season for the Hawks, who lost the previous two home games against Madera and Minarets.
Clark said the Hawks have been losing against teams they’re expected to beat, but that wasn’t the case against Dos Palos.
“We would get big leads and lose momentum and we would get complacent,” Clark said.
Against Dos Palos, Clark saw a much better focus from his team.
“We had one moment when [Dos Palos] went on a little run and then immediately we came back and closed them out,” Clark said. “I’m happy with how we bounced back from adversity.”
The Hawks faced a 4-0 deficit in the first set against Dos Palos, but quickly flipped the outcome in their favor.
Liberty scored four consecutive points to make up for an early deficit, including a block by Sarah Shevenell, which tied the set at five.
The Hawks then took the lead with the next point and continued to expand the gap.
With the score 20-9, Liberty senior Stephanie Madrigal added another point to make it 21-9.
The Hawks closed out the first set with a 4-0 run to win it 25-11.
Liberty senior Lucia Somilleda scored two points early in the second set to help the Hawks take an 8-3 lead.
After the Hawks extended the gap to nine points, Dos Palos made its own run to cut the lead to three.
Liberty sophomore Allyx Faretta scored three of the final four points in the second set to help her team hold off the Broncos and take a 25-17 win.
“Second set, [Dos Palos] came back and I just told them to dig for some long rallies because we weren’t putting the ball away, neither were they,” Clark said. “There was probably at least a 20-touch rally that just kept going. I think it was important that we won that and pushed us over the edge.”
The Broncos, once again ,put up a fight early in the third set and trailed 7-5.
Liberty, however, pulled away with a 7-0 run.
After Audrina Vasquez gave the Hawks a 22-10 lead, Liberty put together a 3-1 run down the stretch and closed out the sweep with a 25-11 win.
Vasquez recorded four kills, while Somilleda added three more for the Hawks. Somilleda and Madrigal ended the game with four service aces each,
“We served really well and then we got timely kills to keep the momentum going,” Clark said. “Without a doubt, our number one weapon tonight was our serve.”
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