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DR. JOHN WAYNE MELANCON

October 11, 1938 — October 23, 2019
Dr. John Wayne Melancon DVM, 81, a resident of Patterson and longtime resident of Hahnville, passed away Wednesday, October 23, 2019 at Patterson Healthcare Center.
John Wayne was born on October 11, 1938 in Abbeville, the son of Achille Joseph Melancon Jr. and Mary Clyde Smith Melancon.
John Wayne was a lover of everything outdoors, especially hunting and fishing, taking many hunting and fishing trips with his family. He had a love for animals and loved taking care of other people’s animals, he truly lived for that. As a result of this love he enjoyed a very successful career as veterinarian at his own veterinarian clinic in Metairie for over 40 years.
John Wayne will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by five children, Dr. Keith Melancon and wife Susan of Bayou Gauche, Dr. Eric J. Melancon and wife Karen of Patterson, Julie Falla and husband Joe of Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Dawn Theriot and husband Brad of Luling, and David Melancon and wife Anndrea of Gulfport, Mississippi; 13 grandchildren; and one sister, Mary Claire Fisher of LaPlace.
John Wayne was preceded in death by his parents; four brothers and two sisters.
The family would like to thank Dr. Natalie Dishman and Heather Wade for the loving care that they gave to John Wayne.
John Wayne’s grandsons will serve as pallbearers.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11:00 a.m. on Tuesday, October 29, 2019 at Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Hahnville with a visitation being held from 9:00 a.m. until Mass time. Father Bernard C. Francis will celebrate the Mass. Following Mass John Wayne will be laid to rest in the Holy Rosary Cemetery in Hahnville with military honors, which will be rendered by the Fort Polk Honor Guard.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be given in John Wayne’s honor to the animal shelter of your choice.

Jim Bradshaw: Did a ghost haunt the dark streets of New Iberia?

By JIM BRADSHAW
It was just about Halloween when the strange figure began wandering the streets of New Iberia on dark nights.
“Is someone trying to play a practical joke on the community, or is there a freak loose in garb that is designed to awaken suspicions?” The Daily Enterprise-Leader asked in late October 1908. “Or [do some people have] hallucinations and imaginations that are extraordinarily brilliant on nights when there is no moonlight?”
The questions were prompted by “a strange night wanderer … apparently a man dressed in black women’s garments” who appeared on the outskirts of town.
Its face was “shadowed with a black hood” and the apparition avoided the sidewalk “but [kept] in the middle of the road so that passers-by may not be able to distinguish the features.”
Identification was also difficult because “no one [who] has encountered this figure … has been brave enough to go out into the middle of the street and find out who the wanderer is and what is his or her reason for the attempt at concealment.”
Those weak-hearted citizens included more than a dozen people who had “seen the strange object … or perhaps … imagined that they have seen it.” Real or imaginary, their tales “strangely” agreed.
"They say that the figure is that of a very tall and manlike person attired in women’s draperies. All of these draperies are of the deepest black and on dark nights the figure looks like a shadow. … It never says ‘Good evening’ as it passes … and it never turns around when [someone comes up behind it],” according to the news account.
The apparition was the subject of much speculation. “Timid women and children are sure that it is the ghost of a wandering spirit,” according to the newspaper.
Some (apparently less fearful) folk thought it was “an escaped convict out for an airing and taking this means of avoiding observance.”
That first news account either stimulated imaginations or caused more people to look for the “spook or spooklette,” as it was described in the newspaper headline.
According to the next issue of the paper the dark figure was seen in two places in one night.
Travelers on one of the back roads said they saw the strange figure walking near Darby’s Woods on the road leading to town. They said they lost sight of it when it rounded a bend in the road.
When they got to the bend, just minutes later, they said, it had simply vanished.
That same night it was spotted by a “party of young men who had gone to the theater.” This time it was passing a graveyard when it just disappeared.
That vanishing act was all that was needed to place the young theater goers among the ranks of the timid. They didn’t try to follow the apparition, or to hunt for it among the tombstones.
“The opinion prevails that someone is playing a joke on the community,” the Enterprise-Leader reported.
That was probably true, but nobody ever discovered who or what the jokester was.
Nor could anybody say where the shadowy figure came from, or how it just disappeared, seemingly at will, once in a dark and creepy wooded area and then, eerier still, just as it passed a graveyard.
A collection of Jim Bradshaw’s columns, "Cajuns and Other Characters, is now available from Pelican Publishing. You can contact him at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Blood donations to be accepted on Halloween

Staff Report
Vitalant will be accepting blood donations at the Morgan City Donation center, 1234 David Drive No. 102, 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Halloween, Oct. 31.
Those donating will receive a Halloween T-shirt (while supplies last); a $15 Dominos gift card, through bonus points in the online rewards store; entry to win a $1,000 Amazon gift card; and a Halloween treat bag (while supplies last).
Volunteer blood donors must be at least 16 years old, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in good health. Additional height and weight requirements apply to donors 22 and younger, and donors who are 16 and 17 must have signed permission from a parent or guardian.
Blood donation takes about an hour from check-in to refreshments.
Appointments to donate can be made at vitalant.org or by calling 877-25VITAL.

Placing at L'Acadian

Submitted Photo
Morgan City’s Diane Amador placed third in the Landscape category in the Sugar Cane Festival's L'Acadian Art Show Sept. 27-29 in New Iberia. Amador is the treasurer of the Artists Guild Unlimited of Morgan City.

Red Ribbon Week at Presbyterian Pre-K

Submitted Photo
McGruff the Crime Dog made an appearance at Atkinson Memorial Presbyterian Pre-K for Red Ribbon Week. Pictured are Officer Ryan Aucoin and K9 Lady, Lt. Chad Adams, Capt. Teddy Liner, assistant chief of the Morgan City Police Department, McGruff, Gidget Everitt, school board at risk officer, Lt. Oscar West of the Sheriff's Office, Niki Fryou, school board instructional supervisor, and Bernadette the 911 for Kids monkey.

Red Ribbon Week at Central Catholic

Students, faculty and staff are celebrating Red Ribbon Week at Central Catholic Elementary School to raise awareness of the negative effects of drugs, alcohol and bullying. Tuesday, students were invited to wear hats to school for HATS OFF TO GOOD CHARACTER day. Pictured are third graders Emily Underwood, Sammi Macaluso, Michael Landry, Stella Saleme, Della Miller and Preston Beattie with teacher Maggie Bagwell.

Patterson High School's Homecoming Parade

The Patterson High homecoming parade rolls Thursday through the city. The highlight of Homecoming Week will be the 7 p.m. Friday football game against Donaldsonville.

Ribbon Cutting opens Patterson's Main Street Festival

The official opening of Patterson’s Main Street Festival took place Thursday with a ribbon-cutting in Morey Park in Patterson. Mayor Rodney Grogan was joined by Patterson City Council members as well as St. Mary Parish Chamber of Commerce members Sheila Hue, ambassador; Tammie Moore, board member; and Leslie Baham, finance director.

Woman found lying in street

A complaint received by the Morgan City Police Department led to the arrest of a woman who was drunk and lying in the middle of a road, Morgan City Police Chief James F. Blair reported in a news release. —Teliegia Marie Busby, 54, of Marshall Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 8:11 p.m. Wednesday on charges of disturbing the peace intoxicated and alcoholic consumption in public. Officers were called to Greenwood Street about a female lying in the street. When officers arrived they located Busby in the area with an open alcoholic beverage and in an intoxicated state. Busby was identified ...

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Blood donations to be accepted on Halloween

Vitalant will be accepting blood donations at the Morgan City Donation center, 1234 David Drive No. 102, 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Halloween, Oct. 31.
Those donating will receive a Halloween T-shirt (while supplies last); a $15 Dominos gift card, through bonus points in the online rewards store; entry to win a $1,000 Amazon gift card ; and a Halloween treat bag (while supplies last).
Volunteer blood donors must be at least 16 years old, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in good health. Additional height and weight requirements apply to donors 22 and younger, and donors who are 16 and 17 must have signed permission from a parent or guardian.
Blood donation takes about an hour from check-in to refreshments.
Appointments to donate can be made at vitalant.org or by calling 877-25VITAL.

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