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2019 Galatea royalty bids farewell Feb. 8

The women’s mystic Krewe of Galatea will hold its 51st ball at 8 p.m. Feb. 8 at the Morgan City Municipal Auditorium. Viewing is by invitation only. Queen and King of Galatea L Mrs. Drake Stansbury and Charles “Jay” LeBlanc will be making a farewell appearance. Galatea will present its annual parade at 2 p.m. Feb. 23 in Morgan City.

Man facing second divorce mulls reunion with first wife

DEAR ABBY: I was married to a wonderful, beautiful woman when we were much younger. We got married because of an unplanned pregnancy. After some years, we both had grown in different directions, and we divorced. We remained friends even after I remarried. I’m now in the early stages of my second divorce because I am lonely in a marriage where there’s no communication or intimacy. I have tried working things out; my wife isn’t interested, so I have given up trying. We no longer have a physical bond, but I refuse to lower myself to cheat to fulfill my needs. I ...

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KAREN NECOLE PETERS ARTIS

Mrs. Karen Necole Peters Artis, age 47, a native and resident of St. Joseph Community of Franklin, La. went home to glory peacefully on January 29, 2020 at 2,58 p.m. at Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday February 8, 2020 at St. Joseph Baptist Church (878 Irish Bend Road- Franklin, La.) from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. with funeral commencing at 12 p.m. The Interment will take place in the Irish Bend Cemetery in the St. Joseph Community of Franklin, La.
Mrs. Artis is survived by her parents Willie J. Peters, and Diane Wilson Peters both of Franklin, La.; (2) daughters, Mackenzie Machelle Artis of Franklin, La., and Amethyst Davanne Artis of Spring, Texas; (1) brother, Bradford Dean Peters of Mansfield, Texas.
Mrs. Artis was preceded in death by her maternal and paternal grandparents.
Officiating Ministers, Rev. Ronald C. Young and Rev. Raymond Harris.
The Otis Mortuary, Inc. of Franklin, La. is in charge of preparations.

VALERIE “T-VAL” PERRY

Mrs. Valerie “T-Val” Perry, age 81, a resident and native of Patterson, La., went home to glory on Friday, January 31, 2020 at Ochsner St Mary Medical Center in Morgan City, La.
Visitation will be observed on Friday, February 7, 2020 at Good Hope Baptist Church(908 Washington Street-Patterson, La.) from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. with funeral service commencing at 11 p.m. The interment will take place in The Home Industrial Cemetery, Patterson, La.
Mrs. Perry is survived by (1) son, Patrick Neal Perry of Houston, Texas; (1) Daughter, Kizmet Mignon Perry of Houston, Texas; (2) brothers, Lester Chapman, Sr. and Rev. Fred Powell, both of Patterson, La.; (1) sister, Mrs. Jacqueline McKnight of Patterson, La. (1) grandson, Blaine Perry of Houston, Texas.
Officiating Minister, Rev. Patrick Jones.
The OTIS MORTUARY, Inc. of Franklin, La. is in charge of preparations.

MARY THERESA ROCK LAGRANGE

October 30, 1931 – February 3, 2020
Mary Theresa Rock LaGrange was born October 30, 1931 in Freeland, Pennsylvania to Michael Rock and Helen Miklos Rock. Her parents were European immigrants from Zavada, Czechoslovakia and came to America through Ellis Island. Mary was proud of her faith, being baptized as a Byzantine Catholic at St. Mary’s Catholic Church. She cherished reciting the rosary and attending Mass. Her parents never learned English; however that did not stop them from encouraging their children to attend school and make a better life for themselves in this new country. Mary was blessed with six brothers: John, Andrew, George, Steve, Joe and Mike, which have all preceded her in death.
She attended Freeland High School in Pennsylvania where she graduated in 1949 and went on to become a Registered Nurse after attending Hazelton State Hospital School of Nursing graduating in 1952. She was employed at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, DC. There she met her loving husband, Dewey LaGrange Jr. who preceded her in death in 1988. The two were married and moved back to his hometown of Franklin, Louisiana. Mary continued her love of nursing and caring for others over the years while working for Franklin Foundation Hospital, Franklin Nursing Home, and St. Mary Parish Health Unit. She ended her nursing career while being employed by the St. Mary Parish School Board for 18 years at the age of 72. The care and kindness she shared with others is still remembered today by many of “her” students. They may not remember her name, but they quickly smile and say “You were my school nurse.”
Mary and Dewey also owned two businesses. The King Kone Quick Snack, the first drive-in restaurant and a favorite dining spot in Franklin for 15 years. Then they went on to open a convenient grocery store, LaGrange’s Shop and Save, on Willow St. near the boat landing. It was frequented by many hunters and fishermen before they took off down the Franklin Canal.
The couple had two children, a daughter, Marianne LaGrange Adams of Franklin, La. and a son, Thomas Jude LaGrange of Port Angeles, WA; one granddaughter, Alexi Adams Breaux and her husband Christopher Breaux; and two great grandsons, Bennett and Brock Breaux, all residing in St. Gabriel, La.
Mary felt very blessed by the love of 15 nieces and nephews to carry on the traditions of the Rock and LaGrange families. She felt so grateful for the friends that took in a coal miner’s daughter and welcomed her with open arms to bayou country. She lived her life putting the needs of others before her own. Nursing was truly in her veins.
A heartfelt thank you is extended by Mary’s family to her caregivers, Pat Crow and Rose Martin, as well as to the Hanson Memorial School Touch Program Students, Franklin Foundation Hospital, Franklin Health Care Center, Heart of Hospice, and Dr. Roland Degeyter.
Her family would like to share this poem and prayer:
The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop, at late or early hour. Now is the only time you own. Live, love, toil with a will. Place no faith in time. For the clock may soon be still.
Dear Lord, Help me to lead a life that is reflective of you… a life that will be remembered by others as one of purpose.
Memorial services will be held Friday, February 7, 2020, at 1 p.m. during a Mass of Christian Burial at the Church of the Assumption in Franklin. Inurnment will follow in the Franklin Cemetery Mausoleum. Father Joel Faulk will be the Celebrant for the Mass with Father Peter Emusa and Father Oneil Landry concelebrating. The family requests that visiting hours be observed from10 a.m. until Mass time, with the Holy Rosary being prayed at 11 o’clock.
Family and friends may view the obituary and express their condolences online by visiting www.iberts.com.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Ibert’s Mortuary, Inc., 1007 Main Street, Franklin, La. 70538, (337) 828-5426.

Franklin's VA Clinic:

The local Veterans Affairs Clinic on Haifleigh Street observes 10th year in the city

The Franklin VA Clinic is located at 603 Haifleigh St. in Franklin, under the United States and POW/MIA flags, and has been for 10 years.
Last month marked the 10-year anniversary for the small, unassuming clinic, and many in St. Mary Parish still don’t even know it is there.
Joyce Small, medical assistant at the clinic, has worked there for the 10 years it has been in operation.
“The best thing about working here is visiting with the veterans," she said. “They all have a story to tell, especially when we get in the lab. Now, they are very quiet when they are in the waiting room, but when they get to the lab, we openly talk with each other.”
When asked what the most challenging thing about working at the clinic for the last 10 years has been, Small said it was bringing in vets who had missed their appointments, rescheduling, and explaining the importance of making regularly scheduled appointments. She attributed the bulk of its challenge to the amount of paperwork involved.
Small also said that in her tenure working for the clinic, she has seen three clinic administrators at the helm, and of those three, she proclaimed the current Clinic Operational Director/Clinic Chief Chandra Johnson as “the best.”
Johnson has been the clinic director for four of the clinic’s 10 years, but said of her four years, “Before I got here, the clinic was invisible. Now, the clinic is more visible and offers more services between us, the community, and the main campuses of the VA.”
She said she thinks the word is spreading throughout the local veteran community that the clinic is available, and she said she has also seen an uptick in the rate of returning veterans.
Being a veteran herself, Johnson utilizes that knowledge, and those skills and experiences to educate fellow veterans in a language they understand and are comfortable with.
She said she combats the pervasive stigma among veterans about the VA by making available to them options and services that not only fly in the face of the stigma of inundated and flimsy service, but exhibit the flat-out antithesis.
“When they come in,” Johnson said, “they are blind. So, we start sharing information from the front desk to when they are seen by their provider, we can answer their questions, and let them know about other services available, so they can utilize those benefits they never used, or even knew they had. Then, we connect them with other community services which are VA representatives, for other aspects of their care.”
As for the clinic’s view to its future, Johnson said, “We want to get more veterans in. I want to grow the clinic, as that is always our top goal. But also, to continue to remember that the main reason we are here every day is to care for those veterans and give them the services they really deserve and need; and/or to put them in contact with the services we can’t provide here.”
She also stated that it is important that veterans throughout St. Mary Parish become aware of the clinic’s readiness to serve them moving forward, and in Iberia Parish, as well.
She observed of the clinic’s current patients, “I find they are very excited about being here. So, that makes it very rewarding to come here every day, because they are so thankful and grateful. For so long they didn’t have a clinic, and now every day is like a new beginning for them. And that goes millions of miles for us.”
Tammy Threatts, licensed clinical social worker at Franklin VA Clinic is the other of the clinic’s staff to have been there for 10 years.
“Since the beginning, the population of the clinic has increased,” Threatts said, “We have grown, and we are getting more patients now from the younger veteran population. People are still hearing about us and are coming in. So, now we have more of a variety than in the past, as far as age groups are concerned.”
She said that the Franklin clinic “has been great for the community, because prior to this they (veterans) had to drive either all the way to New Orleans, or to Houma. So, they didn’t have a lot of options as far as coming to a clinic that is closer.
“Any time you are dealing with a rural community, you need to have more services available to them so that it will be more convenient, and they will be more likely to utilize those services.”
Threatts also reported having been told that the Franklin clinic is preferable to other, larger locations because at the Franklin clinic, the patients receive more intimate and personal care.
“I think that when you come here, you get a staff that is more understanding and more empathetic. You don’t get staff that is dismissive or focused on not wanting to be here. We are always going to put our veterans first,” Threatts said.
Johnson confided that she is working with the city and other local entities to put together a social gathering whereby the clinic will officially celebrate its 10th birthday. But details on that are still in the works.
However, the clinic will be open on Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., except for holidays, as always, and will continue to provide optimal care for the local community’s veterans.

Hanagriff praises schools but opposes tax

Parish President David Hanagriff says his opposition to a proposed sales tax for the St. Mary Parish School Board is more in sorrow than in anger. Hanagriff praised the job that the parish’s public schools do. And the raises that the new half-cent sales tax would make possible would even help the Hanagriff family budget. The president’s wife is a teacher. But the timing of the tax during a long stretch of difficult economic conditions is wrong, he said Monday at a St. Mary Industrial Group meeting at the Petroleum Club of Morgan City. “We’re getting by,” Hanagriff said. “But I don’t know ...

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From the Editor: Got chaos? Just get over it

Maybe we should just embrace the idea that we live in the Age of Chaos. As this is written Tuesday morning, no one knows who won the Democratic presidential caucuses in Iowa. It seems some of the people running the caucuses couldn’t use the app that the state party set up to report results. When my nephew was 3, he amazed the family by playing a game on his dad’s phone. I’m just saying. Iowa isn’t the only piece of chaos we’re dealing with. The U.S. Senate is moving toward a vote that seems certain to acquit President Donald J. Trump of the ...

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Wheel House for Feb. 4

RUMMAGE SALE
At Patterson United Methodist Church, 1204 Main St., from 8 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Feb. 8. Sale includes: clothes, shoes, household items, linens, books, toys, and homemade jams, jellies and caponata.

After audit, Patterson police investigate possible misuse of VFD funds

The Patterson Police Department is beginning an investigation into the state legislative auditor’s allegations that a debit card belonging to the Volunteer Fire Department was tapped for more than $14,000 in improper personal purchases and automatic teller machine withdrawals.
The city government’s response to the report links the purchases to the former volunteer fire chief, Scott Domingue.
Domingue said he isn’t yet familiar with the allegations in the audit report. “I’m in the dark myself,” he said.
But, while he said it’s possible mistakes were made, he denied intentional wrongdoing. “Oh God no,” Domingue said.
The audit report said that from January 2016 through August 2019, “an officer of the Patterson Volunteer Fire Department is believed to have made personal purchases and/or ATM withdrawals totaling approximately $14,774 using a debit card linked to a checking account owned by the City’s volunteer fire department.”
More purchases totaling $13,587 have been identified that could not be determined to have been for fire department operations, the report said.
“This officer had sole access and control over the debit card for the volunteer fire department,” the report said. “Additionally, reporting of fire department activities to the membership was very limited.
“Upon discovery, the debit card was seized and frozen and the individual was terminated from his position as an officer of the volunteer fire department. As of the date of the auditor’s report, the investigation into the matter is ongoing and being conducted by officers of the volunteer fire department and the district attorney’s office.”
But Assistant 16th Judicial District Attorney Anthony Saleme said Tuesday that his office is not investigating the case at this point. “We don’t investigate,” Sale-me said. “We prosecute.”
Instead, the case came to the Patterson Police Department. Chief Garrett Grogan said he received the referral from the DA’s Office Tuesday morning and is awaiting more information from the Legislative Auditor’s Office.
No formal charges have been levied as of the date of the auditor’s report. “To date, cash and materials totaling at least $6,522 have been recovered by the volunteer fire department,” the report said.
The report said the case resulted in “decep tion of the former fire department officer and the City’s failure to establish and enforce appropriate policies and procedures.”
The city government, over the signature of Mayor Rodney Grogan, offered this response:
“In 2016 there had been discussion about whether the Patterson Volunteer Fire Department checking account was public or private and whether the funds were under the City’s authority unlike the funds in the revenue sharing account.
“The Volunteer Fire Chief, the alleged officer of the PVFD, was aware of the policy and procedures implemented by the city due to discrepancies within the Patterson VFD and the use of a debit card in 2015.
“In the future, all city departments associated with the City’s Tax ID number will adhere to the City’s credit card, savings, checking, and check signing policy as recommended by the Legislative Auditors. Also, the City will eliminate the use of debit cards within all departments.”

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