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Jim Brown: Donald Trump says it's time to lock up dogs and cats

It’s a national scandal and a call to arms. Our country is under attack by dog and cat eaters. So says our former president.
That’s right. Donald Trump is saying that in some communities, immigrants are prowling neighborhoods stealing our pets. “In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs,” he said “The people that came in. They’re eating the cats. They’re eating—they’re eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what’s happening in our country. And it’s a shame.”
Well ,of course, stealing pets is against the law. But what about eating dogs and cats? Do people even do that? Yes they do.
In fact, eating these domestic critters is pretty popular in some parts of the world. An estimated 30 million dogs across Asia are still killed for human consumption every year according to the Humane Society International.
The practice is most common in China, South Korea, The Philippines, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and India. Each year in June, the city of Yulin in southern China hosts a dog meat festival, where live dogs and cats are sold specifically for eating and an estimated 10,000 are slaughtered for their meat.
In South Korea, dog meat dishes are so common that they have their own name – gaegogi. The country has an estimated 17,000 dog farms, according to the Humane Society, where animals are routinely prepared for human consumption.
Of course, we in America are appalled that someone would eat a pet. Well, pretty much so. After all, many Americans have adopted a variety of animals as pets. I would imagine that the former president and a majority of Americans have no problem eating Porky Pig, Donald Duck and Bambi. And horse meat is starting to become more popular throughout the United States. So what’s the big deal about eating Trigger and Mr. Ed? Right?
Now I live in the deepest of the deep southern states where we eat about anything. Louisiana has been called the Culinary Mecca of America. Folks in this part of the country can take just about anything edible and make it not just good, but quite exceptional. And when we say anything, we mean everything. I had a Cajun friend tell me that “Yeah, we fry everything – if we could stick a bike tire in the right kind of batter, we’d eat it.”
I wrote a cookbook some years ago that includes such delicacies as my “world famous” squirrel stew, venison goulash, possum and chestnuts, rabbit in sour cream, and Louisiana Governor Jimmy Davis’s favorite, fried coon file’.
I was traveling through Cajun country a few years ago, and stopped at a rural general store for a cup of coffee. An old fellow was on the porch cooking up a pot of something that smelled good. “Whatcha’ cookin’?” I asked. “Got me a gumbo,” he replied. I inquired what kind of gumbo, and he told me, “an owl gumbo.” When I asked him what an owl gumbo tasted like, he smiled and said, “Oh, about like a hawk gumbo.” (And by the way, I had a pet owl with a broken wing that I kept for several years until it passed away.)
I know friends that have kept a nutria as a pet. If you don’t know, a nutria is a large rat that is regularly publicized as a tasty dish by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. So, to each his own.
Seeing that our locals regularly eat alligator sauce piquante, and add to a stew or gumbo just about anything else that flies or crawls, it’s hard for many of us to get too worked up over a little horse meat or any other animal being eaten. I know that many of you readers have a special affection for the majestic horse. But all horses eventually have to be disposed of. And the same horses that would be slaughtered in the U.S. under strict guidelines are now being shipped to other countries and both treated and killed in far more cruel ways.
So go ahead and eat what you want. Just leave me and my dog, cat, horse, owl, deer, peacock, and all my other animal friends alone. Right Mr. President?
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown

Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.

Jim Bradshaw: Of pecans, pralines and bruised thumbs

It’s a sure harbinger of the season when sandwich-board “We Buy Pecans” signs begin to appear in front of feed ’n’ seed and little grocery stores across south Louisiana. They remind me of days spent crawling through the yard when I was a kid, and also makes me begin to hanker for pralines.
One of the small bits of Gov. John Bel Edwards’ legacy will be that he signed the bill making the pecan Louisiana’s official state nut in 2023. Everybody loves them and the trees are native to Louisiana, so I’m surprised that they hadn’t been named years before that — even  though picky people insist that a pecan is technically not a nut, but a fruit.
Whatever they are, we usually harvest about 20 million pounds of pecans each fall in Louisiana, In 2023 the crop was worth $9.7 million, according to the LSU AgCenter. That’s not one of the biggest crops in the state’s agricultural economy, but when I was a kid pecans were a big part of mine. Our trees were my ticket to Christmas cash.
The biggest pecan tree in our yard was huge and ancient. If it had been an oak, it would have qualified for the Live Oak Society. Hurricane Rita finally banged it up so badly that it had to be cut down, but in my youth it dropped pecans over almost a third of a big backyard. Several smaller trees also contributed to the harvest.
I’ll bet I crawled 20 miles each fall, picking up pecans by the grocery sack full. These were emptied into the biggest cardboard box that we could scrounge from behind Swice’s General Mercantile, which would be almost full by the time the pecan buyer came by in early November.
I can’t remember his name, it might have been Mr. Johnson, but I do remember that he’d lost an arm in World War II and that I was absolutely amazed how he could sack, heft and weigh the pecans with just one arm. He had a hanging scale that swung from the back of his Jeep Woody station wagon to weigh my harvest.
I think the going rate was a less than a quarter a pound in those days, but you’d be surprised how many pounds a good-sized cardboard box will hold. I’ve heard that a mature pecan tree can produce a hundred pounds of nuts each year, and that seems to be about right. I’d get $15 to $20 for what I picked up each year — a lot of money for a kid, or anyone, in the 1950s.
The first thing I would do after he’d peeled my pay off the roll he carried in the pocket of his khaki shirt was to hit the neighborhood drug store for a major comic book haul. But then it was straight to Kress’s Five & Dime to pick out Christmas presents for the family.
Another piece of my nostalgia has to do with shelling the pecans for my granddad’s pralines, and my grandma’s pecan pies. I don’t have his recipes, but grandad’s pralines involved a lot of Steen’s cane syrup and a good bit of butter. Mammaw used a healthy dollop of vanilla and didn’t skimp on the pecans in her pies. (You know how big a dollop is. It depends on how big the pot is, what’s cooking in it, and the whim of the cook. A dollop of hot sauce in a pot of red beans, for example, is smaller than a dollop of vanilla in pecan pie filling. But I digress, as I often do.)
My chore was to crack the pecans with a cast iron cracker mounted on a little wood block. One end of it was a fixed, circular piece of metal, indented so that the point of a pecan would fit into it. The other end had a similar head, but slid up and down on a bar when you pulled a lever. The movable part pushed the pecan into the fixed part and cracked the pecan shell. It was something of a challenge to get just the right tension on the cracker so that the shell broke but the meat could be extracted whole.
The other challenge was to get through a whole pecan season without crushing your thumb in the cracker. I usually sported a bruise-blackened thumbnail from the first of October through Thanksgiving.
My grandmother’s general rule was that it takes about 3 pounds of pecans in the shell to turn out one pound (about four cups) of shelled nuts.
The folks at the home extension office say it really takes only about 2½ pounds in the shell, but Mammaw had seen me work. She knew that 3 pounds of crackin’ involved at least a half-pound of eatin’.
You can contact Jim Bradshaw at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Sheriff's Office: Teens had three automatic weapons

(Editor’s note: The charges listed here and the narratives that go with them are provided by the police agencies that made the arrests. Guilt or innocence has not been determined in court.)

St. Mary Parish Narcotics Section detectives joined with Morgan City, Berwick and Franklin officers in a Franklin home search that uncovered three illegally modified automatic weapons in the possession of teenagers, the Sheriff’s Office said.

--Kamryn Kinchen, 17, Franklin, was arrested at 11:35 a.m. Friday on charges of possession of an unregistered weapon and three counts of possession of an automatic weapon.

--Mycal Jmon Kinchen, 19, Franklin, was arrested at 11:35 a.m. Friday on charges of possession of an unregistered weapon and three counts of possession of an automatic weapon.

On Friday, SMPSO Narcotics detectives and detectives from the SMPSO Criminal Investigations Division were joined by MCPD narcotics officers, Berwick PD narcotics officers and Franklin PD officers to serve a warrant at a residence in Franklin.

Detectives recovered three Glock handguns that had been altered with illegal Glock Switches to make them automatic weapons.

Kamryn Kinchen and Mycal Kinchen were arrested and transported to the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center for booking. Bail was set at $350,000.

The SMPSO is cooperating with federal agencies in this investigation. The Sheriff’s Office thanked the MCPD, BPD and FPD for their assistance in this case.

St. Mary

Sheriff Gary Driskell reported that over the last 72-hour reporting period, the Sheriff's Office responded to 168 complaints and made these arrests:

--Chad Mitchell Ferguson, 30, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:21 p.m. Saturday on a charge of entry or remaining on premises after being forbidden, and on a warrant alleging theft. Bail was set at $3,500.

--Alex Wayne Horton, 35, Amelia, was arrested at 11:50 a.m. Sunday on a charge of domestic abuse battery by strangulation. Bail was set at $7,500.

--Brett Michael Sanders, 33, Bayou Vista, was arrested at 6:57 p.m. Friday on a charge of simple criminal damage to property. Sanders was released on a $500 bond.

--Brody Peyton Louviere, 17, Franklin, was arrested at 10:44 a.m. Friday on charges of possession with intent to distribute marijuana, possession of a controlled dangerous substance in a drug-free zone, and unlawful sale, purchase, or possession of tobacco by person under 18. Louviere was released on a $16,000 bond.

--Natasha Lynn Brinlee, 46, Franklin, was arrested at 5:06 p.m. Saturday on three counts of theft. Brinlee was released on a $4,500 bond.

--Maria Veronica Hernandez, 52, Bayou Vista, was arrested at 9:32 a.m. Saturday on charges of maximum speed limits, turning movements and required signals, stop signs and yield signs, reckless operation (no accident), resisting an officer by flight, and resisting arrest or officer. for

Hernandez was released on a $5,500 bond.

--Brooke Constance Spencer, 34, Patterson, was arrested at 5:26 p.m. Sunday on a charge of disturbing the peace (fighting). Spencer was released on a $1,000 bond.

--April Lynn Aucoin, 44, Patterson, was arrested at 12:51 p.m. Sunday on a warrant alleging failure to appear on charges of possession of marijuana, possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled dangerous substance.
Bail has not been set at this time.

--Curtis Lashown Archangel, 49, Jeanerette, was arrested at 6:31 p.m. Sunday on charges of reckless operation (no accident) and speeding. Bail was set at $1,000.

--Brandon Lee Grant, 42, Bayou Vista, was arrested at 8:07 p.m. Monday on a charge of domestic abuse battery. Bail was set at $6,000.

BOBBIE MIGUEZ PERRY VERDIN

Bobbie Miguez Perry Verdin, 83, lifelong resident of St. Mary Parish, passed away on Sunday, September 22, 2024. Bobbie was an avid animal lover. She specifically adored her precious “babies”, her cats Queenie and Patches. She donated to local animal shelters regularly. Bobbie also enjoyed the friendships she made while spending time at the casino.
She is survived by her loving husband Lucien Verdin; her three children Alton Perry and wife Patty Perry of Maurice, Darryl Perry and wife Jenny Perry of Bayou Vista, Loretta Perry-Wooters and husband Scott Wooters, Sr. of Youngsville. Bobbie leaves behind to cherish her memory eight grandchildren: Barrett Perry, Austin Perry, Grant Perry, Caleb Perry, Chase Perry, Dale Crouch, Jr, Laney Crouch, Elizabeth Wooters and Scott Anthony Wooters, II, as well as nine great grandchildren. She also leaves behind six nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her father Robert Joseph Miguez and mother, Marie Billiot Miguez, as well as her late husband Jules Perry, and grandson Darryl Perry, II. Also, preceding Bobbie were her two brothers and two sisters.
Visitation will be Saturday, September 28, 2024, from 9am-11am, followed by a private graveside service. Pallbearers will be her grandsons Barrett Perry, Austin Perry, Grant Perry, Caleb Perry, Dale Crouch, Jr., and Scott Anthony Wooters, II. Interment will be in the Morgan City Cemetery. Twin City Funeral Home in Morgan City is in charge of arrangements.
The family wishes to extend their heartfelt appreciation to Iberia Medical Center, 2nd floor staff for their exceptional kindness and vigilance in caring for our mother, grandmother, loving wife. We also wish to thank Consolata Home in New Iberia for their gentle and considerate care of her during her residence.

KAY GASPAR DeHART

Kay Gaspar DeHart, 90, a native and resident of Berwick, died Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024.
Services were held Sept. 24 at Twin City Funeral Home. Burial followed in Berwick cemetery.
Twin City Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.

LINDA PELLERIN

Linda Pellerin, 74, a native of Germany and resident of Centerville, died Friday, Sept. 13, 2024.
She is survived by her husband, Alan Pellerin of Centerville; and daughter, Angela Eyler of Hagerstown, Maryland.
She was preceded in death by her parents.
Memorial visitation will be Wednesday from 4 p.m. until services at 4:30 p.m. at Hargrave Funeral Home. Private graveside services will be held at a later date.
Hargrave Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Franklin hands Berwick a road loss

Berwick played its first road game of the season in Franklin on Friday, while also collecting their first loss 20-0. This is the second time this season the two teams have faced off, and also the second time the loser finished with 0 points.
The week before this game was essentially a “bye” week for the Panthers. Leading up to the Week 2 matchup against the Kaplan Pirates, Hurricane Francine hit Berwick, leading to power outages, no school and Berwick’s week 2 game being canceled.
The main issue for the Panthers in this contest was the offense. Berwick could not establish any offensive rhythm. No success was had rushing or throwing the football.
The Panthers had four straight three-and-outs to start the game. The first time the sticks moved was because of an unnecessary roughness penalty. This penalty gave the Panthers some momentum because following the call, the offense, led by senior quarterback Evan Crappell, started to move the ball down the field, but the success barely moved them into Hornet territory as the drive was cut short due to the end of the second half.
The three-and-outs continued to haunt the Panthers in the second half. Outside of a botched punt from Franklin, which resulted in the Panthers one and only red zone trip, Berwick could not move the ball inside Hornet territory. The Panthers’ one chance at putting points on the board was unsuccessful, as the 0 on the final score indicates.
The performance on defense was much better for Berwick. They started off rough. The first quarter play on defense saw Franklin score two touchdowns on back-to-back drives, both being 20-plus yards. On top of the long touchdowns, Franklin had runs of 45 and 25, and a fourth-and-12 conversion.
After the first two drives, the Panthers defense seemed to get settled in. The defense finished the game with two red zone stops, along with a fumble recovery in the red zone and an interception by Layf Bella.
One goal-line stand came following a fumbled kick return by freshman Jayden Gibson. The defense wasn’t perfect but gave the Panthers plenty of opportunities to put points on the board and win this game.
For Berwick, Maddox Sampay was the leading rusher with only 19 yards on six carries. Cole Morris had 17 yards on nine carries. Franklin trapped Crappell for -11 yards on six attempts.
Crappell was 5 of 14 passing for 56 yards with two interceptions. Carter Whipple caught three passes for 28 yards, Carter Dupuis two for 25 and Jason Mathews one for 3 .
"We had a slow start to the game in all three phases," Berwick coach Mike Walker said. "Hats off to coach [Tremayne] Johnson and the coaching staff at Franklin. It was a night and day difference from the jamboree to week 3.
"They outplayed and outcoached us. We hope to be able to bounced back this week."
Next week the Panthers will make another trip to Franklin, this time against the Hanson Tigers (0-2).

New board, new members for Delta Kappa Gamma

Submitted photos
The Delta Kappa Gamma Society International recently installed the new Executive Board for the 2024-2026 biennium and welcomed new members. Top photo: The Executive Board members are, from left: Kim Vasquez, corresponding secretary; Courtney Andrews, second vice president; Rebecca Pye, first vice president; Noelle Lowrimore, treasurer; Andrea Barras, parliamentarian, and Becky Wiggins, president. Not pictured is Tabitha Tyler, recording secretary. Bottom photo: The new members inducted at the Sept 17 meeting are, from left: LeeAnn Hepler, Heather Lorenzo, Kendra Thomas, Dwyla Jones and Christy Deshotel, with Chi Chapter president Becky Wiggins. Delta Kappa Gamma Society International is a professional organization of women educators. Louisiana has many chapters across the state, and the local St. Mary chapter is Chi. Chi Chapter's mission is to promote the professional and personal growth of women educators and excellence in education.

FEMA opens recovery center in MC; here's what it offers

The Federal Emergency Management Agency opened a Disaster Recovery Center on Monday at Morgan City’s Municipal Auditorium. People in any of the eight Hurricane Francine declared disaster parishes, including St. Mary and Assumption, can apply for assistance 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday.
“Our job is to get every home back to being a safe and secure place to live,” said FEMA spokesman Keith Jones.
Homeowners and renters can apply for aid:
--At disasterassistance.gov.
--By calling 1-800-621-3362.
--By using the FEMA app.
--At the center at the auditorium, 728 Myrtle St. in Morgan City .
“Some people just like that one-on-one service,” Jones said.
You may be eligible for:
--Help with repairs to the structure of a primary home that you own.
--Compensation for damage to other property – furniture or appliances for example. This assistance is available to renters, too.
--Up to $750 for serious needs, such as food lost because the power was out.
--Smaller amounts to help with cleanup.
-- Displacement assistance with expenses related to living arrangements if you can’t stay in your home.
You’ll need to bring a driver’s license, state-issued ID or passport to the center, plus a copy of your mortgage, your title or property tax receipts, or a lease if you’re a renter.
FEMA inspectors are already in town examining damage to local property.
If you get a letter saying your initial application is denied, don’t just toss the letter aside, Jones said.
“A lot of time it’s paperwork or you didn’t answer a call from an inspector,” he said.
You may be able to get your application on track at the Disaster Recovery Center.

Metal Shark delivers fireboat to Maryland

Louisiana-based boat builder Metal Shark has delivered the first of two new welded-aluminum 50-foot fireboats to Anne Arundel County Fire Department in Annapolis, Maryland.
These powerful and versatile vessels will operate across Chesapeake Bay and will be tasked with protecting over 500 miles of shoreline. They are set to significantly enhance the department’s ability to respond to emergencies on the water for residents of Anne Arundel County and neighboring jurisdictions, since the Department also provides mutual aid services with Baltimore City, Baltimore County, Calvert County, City of Annapolis, Prince George’s County, Queens Anne County on the Eastern Shore, and the United States Naval Academy.
Designed by Metal Shark’s in-house engineering team and built at the company’s Franklin, Louisiana shipyard, the new 50 Defiant NXT monohull pilothouse fireboats offer faster speeds enabling shorter response times, greater pumping volume increasing firefighting effectiveness, and a next-generation design improving efficiency while affording greater safety to firefighters.
While vessel names have yet to be announced, the first fireboat was recently delivered on-water from Louisiana to Maryland by Metal Shark personnel, who then conducted operator training with the department’s crews, readying the vessel to enter service.
The new fireboats feature a wide range of next-generation enhancements including a spacious, climate-controlled pilothouse delivering best-in-class visibility. Metal Shark’s signature “pillarless glass” with reverse-raked windshield significantly reduces blind spots compared to conventional pilothouse fireboats with smaller, framed windows.
A unique window arrangement, with a second tier of side windows below the beltline, provides improved downward-angle visibility, crucial while maneuvering alongside smaller vessels or during man-overboard retrieval. An overhead skylight array provides an unobstructed upward view when operating alongside ships or elevated structures, or during helicopter hoisting operations. The result is mission-enhancing visibility throughout the complete range of firefighting and rescue scenarios.
The new 50-foot-by-16-foot fireboats feature twin inboard diesel waterjet propulsion for maximum performance and pinpoint maneuverability, delivering a top speed in excess of 45 knots for the fastest possible emergency-response time. At a more economical cruise 30-knot cruise speed, the vessels deliver a nominal operating range of approximately 250 nautical miles.
Designed for maximum firefighting capability and water pumping volume, the new vessels deliver a flow rate in excess of 8,500 gallons per minute, with twin 3,000 GPM self-priming fire pumps driven via PTO from the main engines. Each pump draws from its own dedicated in-hull sea chest, feeding a central manifold with crossover capability, which in turn supplies the entire system.
From the fire control station at the port helm, flow is directed as desired via electronically actuated 8-inch slow-close valves with manual backup. The vessels are each equipped with a remote-operated electric rooftop monitor, two aft-mounted monitors, two aft dual handline outlets, and two 5-inch Storz hydrant outlets. Dual 55-gallon reservoirs carry a total of 110 gallons of aqueous film-forming foam per vessel.
In less than three years Metal Shark will have delivered new fireboats to City of Virginia Beach Fire Department; Chicago Fire Department; East Chilton Fire Rescue (Alabama); East Lincoln County Fire Department (North Carolina); Everett Fire Department (Massachusetts); Forsyth County Fire Department (Georgia); Marco Island Fire Rescue, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue, and Tampa Fire Department (Florida); Massport Fire (Massachusetts); Orange County Sheriff/Fire Department (California); Prince George’s County Fire Department (Maryland); Stafford County Fire (Virginia); St. John County Fire (South Carolina); and numerous others.
“The continued success of our Defiant NXT fireboat platforms has been rewarding to see, and it’s a testament to our commitment to continually review, refine, enhance, and perfect our product offering,” said Metal Shark’s Vice President of Sales for LE, Fire/Rescue & Specialty Projects Dean Jones. “We consider our customers to be lifelong partners, and the folks from Anne Arundel have proven to be an absolute pleasure to work with.
“The mutual trust and respect between our team and theirs resulted in a truly collaborative process, merging their experience with our knowledge base. As a result, these new assets will provide a new level of capabilities, offer increased opportunities for regional inter-agency partnerships, and ultimately redefine maritime safety and response for Anne Arundel County Fire Department and the communities they serve.”
“It is our mission to support those who serve and protect, and it has been an honor and a privilege to help the dedicated men and women of Anne Arundel County Fire Department to upgrade their fireboat fleet,” said Metal Shark CEO Chris Allard. “These high-performance, state of the art vessels will allow crews to respond faster, cover more distance, and do their jobs more efficiently and safely, strengthening the Department’s ability to ensure the safety and wellbeing of the County’s residence and visitors.”

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ST. MARY NOW

Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255