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Allergy season can be tough on cats, too

Spring is often described as a time of renewal and beauty, with flowers blooming and trees budding. However, spring flowers and budding trees also cause higher pollen counts, and for those with asthma, higher pollen counts can bring a greater risk of an asthma attack.
 Fortunately for our feline friends, asthma attacks in cats are not as common as they are in humans, although cats who have the condition will still require a proper diagnosis and treatment plan to manage their condition.
 Dr. Audrey Cook, a professor at the Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, explores how owners can monitor their cats for signs of asthma so that they may seek veterinary care early, helping to improve their cat’s quality of life and reduce the frequency of asthma attacks.
Diagnosing
asthmatic cats
 Feline asthma is a chronic respiratory condition characterized by inflammation and narrowing of the airways, leading to difficulty in breathing that makes daily activities difficult to accomplish.
 “Most cats are young adults — between 3 and 4 years old — when diagnosed with asthma, but it can affect cats of any age,” Cook said. “Cats with asthma tend to be limited in their ability to play and climb, as they can become short of breath and exertion makes them feel worse. Affected cats may even hide or isolate themselves.”
 Cook pointed out that wheezing is often a strong indication of asthma, but there are also other signs that can be used to help make a diagnosis.
“Signs include increased breathing effort and rate, breathing with an open mouth, and coughing,” Cook said. ”Because most of the signs are less specific, testing is needed to confirm a diagnosis.”
Other conditions can mimic asthma symptoms, which is why a formal diagnosis by a veterinarian is necessary to determine the true underlying cause. This ensures that the cat receives the most appropriate treatment.
 “Those signs are not specific to asthma and can also be seen in cats with respiratory infections, heartworm disease, heart failure, or cancer,” Cook said. “All of these conditions are serious, so it is very important to seek veterinary care quickly for any cat that experiences changes in breathing patterns.”
Effective
management
 If a cat has been diagnosed with asthma, its veterinarian will prescribe medication to manage the condition. Without proper management, asthma symptoms can worsen over time and lead to serious complications, such as respiratory failure.  
“The mainstay of therapy is glucocorticoids, a type of steroid that reduces the underlying airway inflammation,” Cook said. “These may be given by injection or by mouth during acute episodes, but we prefer to use inhaled steroids for long-term control as these have less side effects.
 “Although it does not address inflammation and should not be used as a sole therapy, bronchodilators — a type of medication that relaxes the muscles in the airways — can provide short-term improvements in breathing and reduce coughing,” Cook continued. “These also can be given by injection, mouth or inhaler.”
 After determining the best medication for managing your cat’s asthma, a veterinarian can show you how to administer their treatment.
 Regular veterinary check-ups also are helpful to ensure a cat’s asthma condition is properly managed, allowing veterinarians to monitor their respiratory health, assess the effectiveness of current treatments, and make any necessary adjustments to the treatment plan.
 Additionally, owners can help further reduce the risk of asthma attacks and improve their cat’s overall respiratory health by keeping them away from allergens and irritants.
 “We don’t fully understand what drives asthma in cats, but it is clear that environmental allergens (pollens or other pets) and irritants (cigarette smoke, air fresheners, or litter dust) can make things worse,” Cook explained. “Trying to limit a cat’s exposure to things that can exacerbate airway inflammation is very important.”
 Despite the challenges it presents, many cats with asthma can lead happy and comfortable lives with the help of proper management and a little extra care from their owners.
 

Jim Bradshaw: Was Mamou tea a cure or a killer?

There was at least a minor hullabaloo in spring 1941, when health officials in Washington  made the claim that the Mamou plant widely used in south Louisiana to make a herbal tea could kill you.
The recipe for the tea made from the Mamou plant, Erythrina herbacea, still probably the best known of Louisiana’s medicinal plants, was handed down in old families on the Louisiana prairies, and was a staple used by traiteurs.
It got its Cajun  name because it grows naturally on the prairies and was particularly prevalent on Prairie Mamou, the area is between Bayou des Cannes and Bayou Nezpiqué,
On old maps, the place name appears as Prairie Mammouth,  probably named for bison that once grazed there. Early Acadian settlers used the word to mean any big animal.
Each spring the Mamou plant shows off bright crimson flowers loved by hummingbirds, butterflies, moths, and bees, and pods full of  red beans that people used to make a tea to treat colds, the flu, bronchitis, and whooping cough.
Native Americans in Texas and Louisiana used the red beans to make jewelry. People in south Louisiana also used them to make rosaries.
The argument wasn’t about the rosaries.
It was about the tea, and about the bulletin sent by the feds to health units in South Louisianan claiming that  it was actually bad for you, potentially lethal.
The response by St. Landry planter R. L. Walker in a letter to the newspapers that April was typical.
“These reports in effect say that our old friend the Mamou bean can no longer be placed in polite society and used to cure or help cure our coughs and colds. … If Mamou cough remedies prepared in my own home since I was a child and used consistently by my family were poisonous, I know I would be dead because I have taken it as needed by the gallons. Other members of my family have done likewise.,” Walker said.
He said he was neither a scientist or a mathematician, “but I don’t hesitate to say that over 75 percent of  … [South Louisiana residents] would have died already because Mamou preparations are consistently used, have been consistently used for generations. … If the Mamou bean and syrups made from it have poisoned 75 percent of our population … then 45,000 [St. Landry] residents are dead, but somehow … continue to walk around, make a living, and eat three meals a day,”  Walker concluded.
It turns out there was a bit of over-reaction on both ends of the debate.  
The health warning was correct. The beans themselves should not be eaten.
The U.S. Geological Survey list of Louisiana plants, labels them as poisonous.
They contain a powerful alkaloid that affects the motor nerves, and are used in Mexico to poison rats. The LSU AgCenter says that “all parts of the plant are mildly toxic but have medicinal qualities also that must be tapped into with caution.” Note: With caution.
A culinary podcast warns, “While some parts of the coral bean plant have been used in traditional medicine ..., it is not recommended for consumption by humans. The plant contains toxic compounds, particularly in its seeds and bark, that can cause severe gastrointestinal distress if ingested.”
Nonetheless, people across south Louisiana made Mamou tea and swore by it. Before he came up with his Hadacol cure-all, Dudley LeBlanc briefly marketed “Dixie Dew Mamou,” a cough tonic that used the toxic bark as its base. 
The tonic also contained alcohol, chloroform, oil of peppermint, distilled pine oil, oil of eucalyptus, and menthol syrup, among other things. If it killed you, it wouldn’t be just from Mamou bark.
A mild tea made from just a few beans was probably less toxic than Dudley’s alcohol-chloroform blend, and the tea would not have been so popular and used for so long if it did not kill the cough without killing the patient.
Most people who grow Mamou plants now do it for the hummingbirds and the pretty flowers, not to make the tea — and despite Mr. Walker’s letter of protest, I suggest that keeping it for the birds is a pretty good idea.
According to the AgCenter, the perennial plant likes full sun  It prefers well-drained soil but can tolerate wet feet for short times, Give it room. It can grow  up to ten feet tall, though four to six feet is more common. As it matures, it will come back wider each year, potentially spreading to 20 feet across. It has no serious pest or disease problems. A borer moth will sometimes cause it to die back, but usually will not kill the plant.
And remember, if left for the birds and the bees, the plants will make them happy, not kill you, and provide a regular supply of beads for your rosary.
You can contact Jim Bradshaw at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Jim Brown: The cards are stacked against Trump in New York courtroom

Let’s just call it like it is. Former President Donald Trump doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of being found not guilty in his current New York court case.
Now, I know the case has just barely started. But you can take that to the bank, and I’ll tell you why.  
Whether you like Trump or not, he just has too many cards wrongly stacked against him.
First and foremost, Trump has a judge who seems to be dead set against him. Judge Juan Merchan is the prosecutor’s dream.
I’m sure they were doing high-fives in the District Attorney’s Office when they heard that Merchan was going to be the judge trying Trump. Merchan has donated money to both President Joe Biden and other Democratic causes. He has even made donations to a group dedicated to “resisting … Donald Trump’s radical right-wing legacy.” A juror with this background would not be able to serve.
Merchan should have removed himself from presiding over the Trump trial. Judges have tremendous sway on what the jury gets to hear and what it doesn’t get to hear.
When the judge overseeing one’s trial has contributed money to a group that calls Trump a radical right winger, you know you’re in trouble right from the get-go.
The judge has ordered an anonymous jury and put a gag order on the former president. Look, we all agree that Trump shoots his mouth all too much.
What he is facing are charges that could send him to jail and destroy his political career. Judge Merchan has allowed a veil of secrecy based on the fact that everyone knows who Trump is.
But all Trump knows is the names of the jurors.
When the Unabomber trial took place in New York and the Oklahoma City bombing trial of Timothy McVeigh was held, both defendants were given basic information about the jurors. But not so with Trump.
Trump is allowed to step outside the courtroom, and even there he is limited as to what he can say.
Here’s what often happens.
The prosecution can file charge after charge, and motion after motion, making all types of outrageous allegations that are front page news, yet the gagged defendant can do little more than rant and rave and say nothing. 
And why is the judge fearful of letting the trial be televised?
In a democracy, the public has a right to
see the court system in operation, close up. We have a strong tradition of public trials in this country.
In earlier years, citizens would come to town and watch the defendants being tried, knew when judges issued ridiculous rulings, and saw firsthand when justice was perverted. The televising of Trump’s trial would merely be an extension of how things used to be.
Some would argue that televising the trial would create a circus atmosphere. But millions of Americans can remember back to the O.J. Simpson trial.
Would anyone who watched this riveting melodrama want to keep those proceedings away from the public at large, and not have it televised? Of course not.
As Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz wrote in his book “Reasonable Doubts”:
“Live television coverage may magnify the faults in the legal system, and show it, warts and all. But in a democracy the public has the right to see its institutions in operation, close up.”
A judge has no business deciding the outcome of the trial against Trump or anyone else.
Any judge in state or federal courts should assume the role of  a referee, a mediator if you will, not someone who by his or her rulings directly affect the outcome of any trial. But that seems to be exactly what Trump’s judge is dead set on doing.
Maybe I’m wrong about this predetermined outcome. But with a judge like Juan Merchan overseeing the case, dark clouds are already surrounding the New York courtroom. And this bodes ill will for the former 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. You can also listen to his weekly podcast at www.datelinelouisiana.com.

Wheel House for April 24

MUSICAL
PERFORMANCE
By Overture String Quartet, 2 p.m. Sunday, April 28, at Trinity Episcopal Church, 302 Greenwood St., Morgan City. Public invited. Reception following at parish hall. Time has been changed to accommodate student performers.

High water makes its mark on Morgan City history

Spring is high water season for those of us living on Berwick Bay and for the Atchafalaya River. Although Louisiana is susceptible to flooding year-round, it is during this season that we are particularly vulnerable.
Many residents of our area remember the floods of 1957, 1973, 1975 and 2011. Visit the floodwall monument next to the floodwall gate at Freret Street and Front Street in Morgan City to see the water level markers from these major flood events.
According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, in The Acadiana Advocate newspaper in 2019, “The Mississippi River Valley drains about 41 percent of the country, and this has been the wettest period in the eastern U.S. in the past 124 years.” The website riskfactor.com claims that the risk of flooding in the future will impact day-to-day life in our communities.
However, the inhabitants of the past have disproven the speculation of these experts who express their concerns for our future. The occupants of Morgan City have always taken the inconvenience of high water in stride, adjusting their lives, as necessary.
The Atchafalaya River’s flooding has challenged our citizens living on its banks in 1865, 1867, 1882, 1912, 1927, 1937, 1945 and 1950.
These pictures of flooding in 1912 depict Morgan City residents coping  with elevated wooden planks for sidewalks and using skiffs and pirogues for travel – everyone with a smile on his face.
Gentlemen are seen sitting or standing in the water wearing suits, shirts, and ties.
Ladies have donned their finest bonnets and grabbed their handbags to walk along the planks and shop at the stores on fashionable Railroad Avenue and Front Street. Gathright and Soumellian, Kahn’s, Bojarsky’s, Belanger’s Drug Store, and Shannon’s would have been a few of their destinations.
Photos from 1927 indicate the same “make it work” response from the public. The pirogues may have become speedboats in the streets, and the wagons changed to automobiles, but the citizens of Morgan City accept their fate and keep plugging along.
In a letter written on July 27, 1927, my great-great aunt, 65-year-old Marie Pauline Gray, uses humor to depict the resilient attitude of Morgan City’s residents. She writes that her family thought it best that she not remain in her home alone during the anticipated high water.
Upon her return home, she comically describes the upheaval in her house:
“I could not tell you all the diplomatic and apologetic talk I had to do to my old furniture when I came home! They were all indignant and did not understand why they should have been moved in such an undignified position two feet off the floor, on blocks like stilts!
“And the books, too, were raising a din upstairs about being separated from their kind – histories disliked being in company with religious books; Shakespeare said that Napoleon on one side of him was continuously trying to fight him while on the other side, there was Tom Sawyer almost making him lose his dignity.”
Humor, endurance, acceptance, and resilience – all traits of our local population who will endure their future watery fate with a little assistance from the 449 miles of levees and flood walls that protect the Atchafalaya Basin Floodway.​​

St. Mary prep playoffs update

SOFTBALL

Non-Select Division II
Bi-District
No. 18 Morgan City 7, No. 15 Loranger 6
Regional
No. 2 Lutcher 14, No. 18 Morgan City 0

Non Select Division III
Bi-District
No. 12 Mamou 8, No. 21 Berwick 1

Select Division IV
Bi-District
No. 15 Central Catholic 9, No. 18 Slaughter Community Charter 3
No. 10 Central Private 15, No. 23 Hanson 5
Regional
No. 2 Catholic-Pointe Coupee 5, Central Catholic 1

BASEBALL

Non-Select Division II
Bi-District
(Best two of three)
No. 10 Pearl River 5, No. 23 Morgan City 0
Pearl River 8, Morgan City 1

Non-Select Division III
Bi-District
(Best two of three)
No. 19 Springfield 4, No. 14 Berwick 1
Berwick 3, Springfield 2
Berwick 3, Springfield 2
Berwick advances to play Friday at No. 3 Caldwell Parish in a best-of-three regional

Non-Select Division IV
Bi-District
(Single elimination)
No. 10 Centerville 3, No. 23 Oberlin 0
Centerville advances to play Friday at No. 7 Welsh in a single-elimination regional
No. 9 Vinton 11, No. 24 Franklin 1

Select Division IV
Bi-District
(Single elimination)
No. 17 Cedar Creek 5, No. 16 Hanson 4
Regional
No. 5 Central Catholic will be at home Thursday against No. 12 Delhi Charter. Both teams had Bi-District byes.

Trespassing complaints lead to drug, assault arrests in Berwick

(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.)

Trespassing complaints led Berwick police to recent arrests on assault and marijuana charges.

Berwick

Chief David S. Leonard reported these arrests:

—Lennis Paray, 39, Berwick, was arrested at 10:37 a.m. April 18 on charges of resisting an officer, possession of marijuana (under 14 grams) and four counts of criminal trespassing.

About 10:24 a.m. April 18, the Berwick Police Department received a call of a person sleeping in an abandoned residence.

Officers located Paray and knew for him to have active warrants through the Berwick Police Department. Paray fled on foot and was taken into custody a short time later. He was found to be in possession of marijuana.

Paray was transported to the Berwick Police Department where he was booked

—Chance Bourgeois, 17, Morgan City was arrested at 9:22 a.m. Tuesday on Berwick warrants alleging two counts of criminal trespassing, simple criminal damage to property and simple assault.

On April 19, the Berwick Police Department responded to a vandalism complaint. Officers met with the complainant, who advised that Bourgeois and several others had damaged his vehicle and made threats to him and his family earlier in the evening.

Through investigation, evidence was gathered linking Bourgeois to the crimes. Warrants were issued and on Tuesday Bourgeois came to the Berwick Police Department and turned himself in on the active warrants. He was placed under arrest and booked without incident.

—Michael Thompson, 38, Morgan City, was arrested at 12:35 p.m. Friday on charges of driving while intoxicated (first offense), possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia and no insurance.

—Jeremy Blackburn, 45, Morgan City, was arrested at 12:49 p.m. Saturday on warrants alleging theft (less than $1,000) and failure to appear on a charge of possession of methamphetamine.

About 12:10 p.m. Saturday, the Berwick Police Department received numerous calls regarding a stalled vehicle on the U.S. 90 bridge. Officers met with the driver, who was identified as Thompson, and his passenger, Blackburn.

While speaking with Thompson, impairment from narcotics was detected. Sobriety tests were conducted, and he performed poorly. A search of the vehicle was conducted, and methamphetamine and paraphernalia determined to belong to Thompson were located.

It was also learned that Blackburn had active warrants through the 16th Judicial District Court. Both were placed under arrest and transported to the Berwick Police Department for booking.

—Lawrence Vito, 38, Patterson, was arrested at 4:48 a.m. Tuesday on a Berwick warrant alleging hit and run.
In December, officers with the Berwick Police Department responded to a two-vehicle crash at a local business. One of the drivers left the scene.

Through video and other investigative means, officers were able to determine that Vito was the driver
in the vehicle that fled.

In April, warrants were issued for his arrest and on Tuesday, Vito came to the Berwick Police Department and turned himself him on the active warrant. He was placed under arrest without incident.

(The dates on the Berwick arrests have been corrected).

Morgan City

Chief Chad M. Adams reported that the Morgan City Police Department responded to 30 calls for service over the last 24-hour reporting period and made these arrests:

--Gregory Clements, 55, Fourth Street, Berwick, was arrested at 9:43 a.m. Saturday on a charge of hit-and-run driving. He was released on a summons.

--Emmanuel Jamal Charles, 36, Sixth Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:26 p.m. Saturday on a charge of disturbing the peace.

Franklin

Chief Cedric Handy reported that the Franklin Police Department responded to eight complaints over the last 24-hour reporting period and made these arrests:

--Destiny Bowie, 30, Breaux Alley Street, New Iberia, was arrested at 12:59 p.m. Saturday on charges of speeding and reckless operation. Bowie was booked, processed and released on a $643.50 bond.

--August Gloskey, 65, Lucky's Trailer Park, Baldwin, was arrested at 4:15 p.m. Saturday a charge of criminal trespassing. Gloskey was booked, processed and released to appear in 3rd Ward City Court.

Morgan City police radio logs for April 22

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the Police Department at 985-380-4605.
Monday, April 22
7:50 a.m. 2400 block of Cypress Street; Medical.
8:02 a.m. 1100 block of Marguerite Street; Hit and run.
8:59 a.m. 2700 block of Sixth Street; Welfare check.
6:32 p.m. 1000 block of Fig Street; Fire.
6:51 p.m. 2300 block of La. 70; Complaint.
8:10 p.m. 1200 block of Front Street; Removal of subject.
8:42 p.m. 900 block of Chestnut Drive; Disturbance.
8:53 p.m. First Street/Brashear Avenue; Arrest.
9:23 p.m. 600 block of Bowman Street; Removal of subject.

Black Bear Festival music

In the top photo, Joseph Folse, a native of Houma and resident of Franklin, plays trombone outside the Lamp Lighter Coffeehouse & Bistro during the Bayou Teche Black Bear Festival held April 13 in Franklin. In the bottom photo, people listen to Low Down play on Teche Drive during the festival.

Banner-Tribune photos

Franklin council discusses revenue anticipation notes, ongoing projects

The Franklin City Council passed a resolution giving preliminary approval to issue revenue anticipation notes of up to $750,000 to pay for street and road repairs and other general obligations for the upcoming fiscal year at its regular meeting on April 16.
The city will apply to the State Bond Commission for the approval of the notes, Mayor Eugene Foulcard said.
During his executive report to the council, Foulcard addressed many of the ongoing projects the city has undertaken, such as widening of the Yokely Canal, Cayce Street rehab, the HVAC work at the two recreation centers and the Love Louisiana Outdoors grant that was used to upgrade and replace playground equipment at all four city parks.
“I spoke about the grant that we had gotten to paint the mural in the Pocket Park by the artist Robert Dafford,” Foulcard said. “I was just basically saying that we have many of these different projects that are ongoing, but all of these (funds) are earmarked so we can’t use them for anything else.”
Foulcard said he’s been asked why the city didn’t use the $22 million that was granted to the Wellness Center at Bayou Bend Hospital to instead fix water lines in the city. Those funds were granted to Bayou Bend, he said, not to the city. Other funds that are granted to the city are earmarked for specific projects, he noted.
“All of those projects are earmarked funds for a specific project,” he said.
The mayor said the Fifth Street fishing pier work and the capital outlay grant the city has received for replacing water filters at the water plant and replacing water valves.
The council also heard from Marcus Johnson about Crohn’s awareness and from Joseph McDaniel and Damarra Middleton about the Sunday Funday event scheduled for May 5 at Broussard-Harris Park.
Upcoming events for the city that were announced at the meeting included the Sunday Funday event, a City-Wide Clean Up on Saturday, May 11, a Crohn’s Awareness Event at Parc Sura La Teche on Saturday, May 18 and the St. Mary Parish Soul Food Festival along Teche Drive on Friday and Saturday, June 14-15.
The council deferred action on adoption of an ordinance fixing the tax rates for the 2024 fiscal year until its May meeting.

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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