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Hayden Adams, Makenna LaGarde lead Patterson at powerlifting meet

The Patterson Lumberjacks and Lumberjills participated in powerlifting competition in Abbeville Saturday. Hayden Adams had the highest finish among Patterson lifters as she placed second in the 198.3-pound class with a total weight of 435 pounds. She had a 175-pound squat, an 80-pound bench press and a 180-pound deadlift. Teammate Makenna LaGarde also recorded a top-three finish with a third-place showing in the 132.3-pound class with a total weight of 485 pounds. She had a 205-pound squat, a 95-pound bench press and a 185-pound deadlift. On the boys’ side, Justin Dotson had the highest finish with a sixth-place showing in the 123.5-pound class ...

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GSW to host Mardi Gras Madness

The Gulf State Wrestling will hold Mardi Gras Madness Feb. 29 at the Bayou Vista Community Center. Action will begin at 6 p.m. and all concession proceeds will go to the Bayou Vista athletic group. Tickets are available now, starting at $10. For tickets, call 985-518-0433. ...

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Hannibal royalty bids farewell

The Krewe of Hannibal will celebrate 40 years at 8 p.m. Feb. 15 at the Morgan City Municipal Auditorium. This is an invitation-only event. Bidding adieu will be royalty XXXIX — King Hannibal Andre’ Palmer and Queen Cleopatra Le’Keisha Morgan. Krewe members will parade with the Krewe of Dionysus in Berwick and Krewe of Amani in Patterson.

Dionysus royalty bids farewell

The Krewe of Dionysus will host its 41st coronation at 8 p.m. on Feb. 15 at the Berwick Civic Complex. Floor seating is invitation only. A farewell appearance will be made by King and Queen Dionysus XL Thomas Galloway and Penny Galloway. Dionysus will hold its alternating parade in Berwick at 2 p.m. Feb. 22.

Large patch disease increases in La. lawns

BATON ROUGE — Large patch disease (formerly called brown patch) is the starting to show up in Louisiana lawns.
LSU AgCenter plant doctor Raj Singh said this fungus is the most common disease of lawns in Louisiana.
The disease can occur on all warm-season turfgrasses but is particularly prevalent on St. Augustine grass.
“Symptoms appear as yellow, circular or irregular-shaped patches of disease that can become quite extensive,” Singh said. “As the disease develops, large areas of turf appear brown as smaller patches come together.”
The pathogen does not kill the grass but rather causes a rot at the base of the leaf sheaths, resulting in easy separation of leaves from the crown of the plant.
Large patch is caused by the soil-borne fungus Rhizoctonia solani. Optimal conditions for disease development occur when nighttime temperatures range from 60-75 degrees and daytime temperatures do not exceed 85-90 degrees.
“Free water, from irrigation nor dew, on foliage is required for disease to develop,” he said. “The disease spreads rapidly on lawns with poor air circulation.”
One way to reduce disease incidence and accelerate turfgrass recovery is to maintain a healthy lawn through balanced fertilization and irrigation, and regular mowing.
“Never apply more than 1 pound of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet for an application, and always follow soil test recommendations for proper fertility,” Singh said.
Large patch symptoms are exacerbated with excess nitrogen. Slow-release fertilizers with a balanced amount of nitrogen and potassium are recommended.
Irrigate lawns as early as possible in the morning while taking rainfall into account.
“Water deeply and as infrequently as possible without causing drought stress,” Singh said. “Improve internal soil drainage and reduce compaction by aerating the lawn regularly.”
Minimize the amount of shade and improve air circulation over the lawn.
Raising mowing height will help the turfgrass to recover. Do not mow lawns when wet, and mow diseased areas last because disease may spread to healthy areas with infected grass clippings.
Cleaning lawn mowers to remove grass clippings may help reduce the spread of the disease.
“Excessive thatch can negatively affect turfgrass growth and provide a suitable environment for the pathogen,” Singh said. “Dethatching may be necessary to improve turfgrass growth.”
In addition to cultural practices, fungicide applications may be required to achieve effective disease management.
When using fungicides, always remember to follow the label rates and frequency of application.
Fungicides containing an active ingredient such as azoxystrobin, myclobutanil, propiconazole or triadimefon may be used to manage large patch.For diagnostic help with lawn problems, contact the LSU AgCenter Plant Diagnostic Center at 225-578-4562 or email Singh at rsingh@agcen ter.lsu.edu.

Mom fears teen dating drama will lead to principal’s office

DEAR ABBY: I’ve got a new one for you. My beautiful 16-year-old daughter was interested in a boy her age from school. He was interested in her, too. He told her he wanted to date her, but that he is “polyamorous” and would be dating many girls simultaneously. She told him he’s too young to know what he is yet, and he was just using it as an excuse to date multiple girls, and she wasn’t interested. They are part of the same friend group. He has been acting very hurt, pouty and angry. He told a mutual friend he ...

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‘We have to live in this house’

How Trowbridge House captured the hearts of its new residents

Remember the “Let’s Go Riding Franklin Reunion” in the city back in the early 2000s?
There were three such events, brainchild of Chad Boutte, a Charenton native, and Chris Mensman, with 2,000 attendees estimated.
Boutte had moved to New Orleans around that time. He reminisced about his younger years when his generation, and others, rode through Franklin from the Sonic to the St. Mary Parish Courthouse and back again, stopping to chat with friends, all in good-natured fun.
He and Mensman decided to recreate those rides of yesteryear, “just to see everybody again. I gave it a shot, and it was a gigantic success.”
Though only three rides were held, Boutte said, “It’s always been in my blood, to try to help revive the place I grew up in. It’s a beautiful, beautiful town.”
He and Steven Mora relocated to Las Vegas for a time, in the entertainment industry, but the economy nosedived and that put a dent in entertainment-based consumer spending. “So it was time to go,” he said.
After much consideration, they settled on New Orleans, post-Katrina. “There was a lot of hype in the rebuilding process, and ‘come move back,’ the first couple of years after that storm,” Boutte said. “If you took the gamble and won, and a lot of people did, you scored big.”
Boutte and Mora used their experience in entertainment augmented by the vast and legendary mystique of New Orleans, which they taught themselves as well as in classes at Delgado. In effect, they became history buffs. They started working for others, on Segway motorized tours, bicycle tours, bus tours, and “then realized that we had learned our craft enough…that there was no reason for us not to do it on our own.”
Mora’s tour base grew exponentially, to the point of either turning customers away or grow.
“We knew that we were getting tons of reviews with the company we were working with,” Mora said. “And we thought, these people are making so much money, and we’re getting all the reviews, why don’t we try to get the ticket price and the reviews? Today we can’t supply the demand. It’s about good workers, the right people, the right mix, the right culture.”
Along the way, they came to Franklin to look at some commercial properties, which did not happen. “So we got back in the truck, came around the corner here, and said, ‘Oh, look at that house, it’s for sale.’”
That was at the corner of Adams and First Street, and its name is Trowbridge House.
They contacted the realtor agent, who gave them a preview of the house and Boutte recalls, “Fifteen minutes later we looked at each other and said, ‘We have to live in this house.’ The business opportunity we were thinking about would not have brought us to Franklin. The house brought us here.”
Boutte and Mora figured they’d split their time 30% in Franklin and the rest in New Orleans but “you find yourself on the house’s gallery, in the trees, and you’re like, ‘What am I doing?’ So now it’s 95%.”
The “Revitalize Franklin” initiative that the City of Franklin’s mayor, council and staff have embarked upon was in full swing, and Boutte and Mora caught the fever. “It’s going well, we’re in love with the city, we’re in love with the house, and there’s a lot of people working on revitalizing Franklin,” Boutte said.
Considering that, Boutte and Mora have become active in the movement. “I think it’s just a matter of making Franklin known,” Boutte said. “All you need are those gigantic billboards, plantation homes on it, historic Main Street, shopping, lights. We really want to work with whomever and make all that stuff a reality.”
It’s a start, Mora said. “We just want to help, and it takes two, three years to get that going. For people to expect that it just happens, no, it doesn’t work that way.”
Then there’s the house.
“The house, in 1999, was restored by Billie Smardon, we’re told that was a $2 million project,” Boutte said. “She wanted to bring it back to the original architectural design, layout and even colors…when she bought the house the kitchen was attached to the dining room.”
That wasn’t correct, so Smardon had the original foundation located and the kitchen relocated to its original, historic location just behind.
She later donated the house to St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, across the street. “I guess she didn’t want to go with the maintenance cost and sold it,” Mora said.
It was rarely used over that time, and sold it to Boutte and Mora. “It needed some cosmetic stuff, but this is how we got it,” Mora said. “The outside needs some love, some rot, not anything major though. Everything’s solid, wooden peg construction. We’re not going to let anybody else buy this house!”
“We’ve been told it should be a hurricane evacuation house,” Boutte said. “It’s survived all these hurricanes since 1840! We’ve been collecting things for the house, finding pieces, we want to personalize it with our family history, but really trying to focus on the Trowbridge history…we’ve found very little information about this house.”
“We want to meet some of the Trowbridges, sit down with them, if they have pictures…we can’t find any pictures of this house prior to today, basically,” Mora said.
They even have some of the shoemaking tools Boutte’s grandfather used in his business in Charenton, near the Post Office; his uncle had the meat market there, and two other uncles had the grocery store and the barber shop.
A portrait of Isaac Trowbridge, the Connecticut-native builder of the house in 1840, hangs in the den, of which both are proud.
For years, the Episcopal Church’s “Blessing of the Pets” has been held on the grounds of Trowbridge House, and continues to this day. “When we moved in we realized there was a connection with this property,” Boutte said. “So we said, if anything that’s ever happened at the house that’s special to this church, there’s no reason to change it, just do it. They were super excited about that.”
Both are members of Franklin’s Bicentennial Committee. They have shepherded a giveaway of live oak trees to private property owners. Fifty trees were donated.
“That started with a visit to the Soil and Water Conservation office by mistake looking for the 4-H office to talk about the soil,” Boutte said. “Turns out they plant the trees along the streets in different areas…they asked for ideas for different projects.”
There are plans to plant oaks along La. 182 from Walgreens to Caffery Curve as well, and other locations.
“It’s probably my favorite project that I’ve worked on,” Boutte said. “To a lot of people it’s just a live oak, but it’s a climate tree, it provides shade, helps the environment. It’s more than just planting tree.”
Mora’s involvement with the bicentennial event includes a segment on Hispanic persons in the area, which is his own lineage. “There’s Latino to Spanish, and we want to get them involved in the project,” he said. “Between mid-September and mid-October, somehow if we can get permitted to close off the street we’ll have a big festival, get vendors in here, a fun day. That’ll be kinda my thing. September 16 is Mexican Independence Day, to celebrate Spanish culture.”
“Obviously it’s a part of Franklin that continues to grow,” Boutte added. “We’ve always been the gumbo pot of culture.”
Both agree that Trowbridge House is home now, as well as Franklin. “There’s still that little spark,” Boutte said. “It’s like, ‘What are you doing for Franklin?’”
“When we heard Franklin was having a revitalization, like what we did in New Orleans, why can’t we do something here?” Mora said.
Both proclaimed that they were warmly welcomed in the city. “That was a scary thing for us,” Boutte said. “All excited, got the house, and…uh-oh, what if they don’t like us, what if they’re racist, I mean, there’s a million things in your mind, but it didn’t turn out that way.
“That’s something that I commend the city for. We live our life just as normal and peaceful as possible, but there’s still that piece in the back of your mind going, ‘You know, it’s a vicious world out there. It could go south. It could go bad.
“It has been completely the opposite. Sometimes you just wake up in the morning and just pinch yourself. It works. It’s a community that truly has embraced anybody that wants to be here.”
Mora said he hopes to help others create businesses in the city, and promote growth.
“Anybody can do it, start your own thing, get people inspired, how to do a resume, that’ll come down the line.”

West St. Mary Civic Center now bears Davis' name

A dedication ceremony for the Joseph “Tooney” Davis Jr. West St. Mary Civic Center was held Saturday, from 3 to 5 p.m.
The ceremony consisted of prayer, music, recognition and recollections from Davis’ friends, colleagues and family, culminating in a ribbon cutting ceremony and an unveiling of the center’s new signage.
Davis was an accomplished figure in St. Mary Parish.
In 1964, he was the first African American employed at Cabot Corporation in Bayou Sale, and he and his wife became the owners of Davis Trucking Service. In 1990, he also became a sugarcane farmer and established Joe Davis Farms.
During both companies’ lifespans, Davis employed over 30 people.
Davis was also an accomplished politician. In 1967, he became one of the first two African Americans to be elected to the Police Jury in St. Mary Parish.
During his 32 years in public service, Davis saw roads paved, resurfaced and named, fire districts established, street lights erected, the groundbreaking for the Elizabeth Barabin Davis Park and Water District Plant, solid waste collection implemented, ground work laid for the Port of West St. Mary and the Intracoastal Canal Bridge, and he secured the monies for the District 1 Sewage Project.
Davis was also elected to the St. Mary Parish School Board. There he reappointed the district by increasing African American representation in the districts, and supported the tax for construction of West St. Mary High and Boudreaux Middle Schools.
It was said of Davis that one of his greatest desires was to have a civic center built to serve the Four Corners and surrounding communities. The West St. Mary Civic Center was completed and dedicated in 2005, three years before Davis’ passing.
Other accomplishments of Davis include being one of the first African Americans to serve on Teche Electric Cooperative board where he also served as president and vice president, and he was a member and vice president of the Minority Trucking and Transportation Development Corporation.
Of his father, Reverend Trent Davis said, “He was fair. As a dad he was hard on us, and when we got home from school we had to change the oil or tires on trucks, and we didn’t want to do that. But, he was instilling in us work ethics and what it takes to make it in this life.
“And I’ll be honest, my feelings have mellowed in time about some of the people my dad tried to help, who tried to tear him down. But, I’m so glad that he made me work, and that now his work speaks in me.”
Ruth Davis, widow of Joseph Davis, said of him, “His vision did not stop with this building (the civic center). This building was for better things to come for all.”
She also said, “In 1967, when he entered the political arena, he was not afraid to storm. He had learned how to sail his ship. And he always, always carried us with him.”
Dr. Gary Wiltz, CEO and Clinical CHO of Teche Action Clinic served on the St. Mary Parish Council with Davis and sat next to him.
Wiltz recalled that during a meeting, a colleague of Davis’ and his was delivering a speech to the council during which he began to get so riled that he showed physical provocations of confrontation with Wiltz. To which, Davis is reported to have stood up behind his friend, cocked back his arm, and said to the provocateur, “Take another step and I’ll set this hamfist on you.”
And confrontation, thus affronted by more formidable confrontation, was avoided.
The Joseph “Tooney” Davis Jr. West St. Mary Civic Center is located at 1498 La. 318, Sorrell Road, at US 90 and can be reached by phone at 337-276-4896.

St. Mary Head Start Parade set for Feb. 15, 1 p.m.

St. Mary/Vermilion CAA Head Start’s Krewe of Head Start Parade is set to roll down the streets of Franklin on Saturday, Feb. 15th at 1 p.m.
Line up begins at 11 a.m. along Cynthia Street and in the Franklin Senior High School parking lot. The parade route is approximately two miles and turns onto Main Street and proceeds through downtown Franklin, then turns onto Willow Street and turns right onto Third Street where it disbands.
This year’s theme is “Aloha, Head Start Goes to Hawaii.” For the second year, the parade will feature “Trucks on Parade” showcasing fathers and father figures.
Entry fees are:
Floats and flatbeds $35; trucks and cars $25; dancers& drill teams $10; walkers $5; 4 wheelers/ custom lawnmowers/motorcycles $10.
Krewe of Head Start Parade began in 1993, and is the Head Start Program’s major recruitment tool for Pre-school children aged 3 to 5, and marketing tool for all other agency programs offered at St. Mary and Vermilion CAA.
The parade also highlights and markets the premier early childhood programs in St. Mary Parish through the St. Mary Parish Early Childhood Network and Ready Start Network which focuses on quality and school readiness for children aged 0 to 5.
CEO Almetra J. Franklin said, “It is important to get the word out about the ever-evolving agency and remarkable things happening in the Community Action and Head Start world.”
The deadline for all entries is Thursday, Feb. 13 at 4 p.m. An entry form may be obtained at the St. Mary CAA Central Office, located at 1407 Barrow Street in Franklin. This form must be completed along with a copy of your insurance and a valid driver’s license.
For more information, contact David Teno, Jeffery Beverly or Reginald Patterson at 337-828-5703.

LISA MARIE “THE HOOD” JONES

Lisa Marie “The Hood” Jones, 40, a resident of Franklin, La. and native of Alexandria, La., passed away on Thursday, February 6, 2020 at 4:02 p.m. at Franklin Foundation Hospital.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday, February 15, 2020 at Jones Funeral Home, Inc. 1101 Main Street Franklin, La. from 12 noon until funeral services beginning at 2 p.m., with Reverend Willie Jackson, Officiating. Burial will follow funeral services in the Franklin Cemetery - Main Street in Franklin, La.
Memories of Lisa will forever remain in the hearts of her mother, Helen R. Clarks of Franklin, La.; one brother, Ananias Bourgeois, Jr. of Baton Rouge, La.; one nephew, two great-nieces, a devoted friend, three devoted cousins, five aunts, Mrs. Larry (Bessie) Kelly, Gloria Robinson, Mrs. Albert Ray (Annie Bell) Green, Victoria Robinson, and Delores Polidore; three uncles, William (Paula) Robinson, Edmond Robinson, and Chris Robinson all of Franklin, La.; a great-aunt, Laura Robinson of Bakertown, La. and a host of cousins and dear friends.
Lisa was preceded in death by her grandparents.
Visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
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