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TERESA MIRE PRICE

July 7, 1945 — April 28, 2023

Teresa Mire Price, age 77, of Morgan City, LA passed away on Friday, April 28, 2023. She was born on July 7, 1945 to the late Fulton and Earline Fanguy Mire in Morgan City, LA.

Family and friends of Teresa are invited to attend the Visitation on Friday, May 5, 2023 at Holy Cross Catholic Church from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. with a Memorial Mass immediately following.

Teresa was a loving wife, mother and grandmother who enjoyed traveling, cooking, baking cookies and spending time with her family.

She is preceded in death by her parents and her sisters, Barbara Broussard and Lois Theriot.

She is survived by her loving husband of 57 years, Curtiss C. Price, Sr.; daughter, Christine McCleary (James); two sons, Curtiss Price, Jr. (Cindy) and Brian Price (Missy).

She also leaves to cherish her loving memory to her 13 grandchildren, Bradley, Stephanie, Marcus, Mallory, Autumn, Presley, Brett, Mattie, Mollie, Mac, Hayden, Dylan and Ethan; 12 great-grandchildren; one sister, Frances Kerr and a host of other relatives and friends.

Fond memories and expressions of sympathy may be shared at www.hargravefuneralhome.com for the Price family.

Wheel House for May 3

PRAYER
National Day of Prayer at noon Thursday, May 4, on the lawn at Morgan City City Hall. Theme: “Pray Fervently in Righteousness and Avail Much.” Public invited.

Around Town for May 3

Belated happy anniversary Jayson and Lacey Delco, who celebrated Tuesday, from family and friends.

Shrimp and Petroleum Festival poster contest underway

The Louisiana Shrimp & Petroleum Festival, Louisiana’s oldest chartered harvest festival, announced its 2023 poster contest.

The contest is open to artists throughout the state, and the winning design will be used for the official 2023 poster.

A $500 cash award will be presented to the winning artist. Contest guidelines are now available by calling 985-385-0703 or emailing info@shrimpandpetroleum.org.

Guidelines are also available on the festival’s website. The deadline for submission of
designs is June 16.

The Louisiana Shrimp & Petroleum Festival will be held on Labor Day weekend, Aug. 31-Sept. 4.

For several years , the festival has been chosen as a Top 20 Event by the Southeast Tourism Society, a Top 100 Event in North America by the American Bus Association and as The Most Outstanding Festival in Division III (attendance of more than 50,000) by the Louisiana Association of Fairs & Festivals.

This event features the historic Blessing of the Fleet, the Music Stage, the Cajun Culinary Classic and the spectacular Fireworks on the River.

The festival hosts many other family-oriented events during Labor Day weekend, and no admission is charged.

For more information, contact: Hailee Thomas, executive director, at 985-385-0703. The web address: https://www.shrimpandpetroleum.org/poster-contest

Jim Bradshaw: Blackjack Dupre tested the metal of vault, jail

Police were baffled after someone used a cutting torch to open the vault in a store in the LaHaye building in Ville Platte early in the morning of June 21, 1962.

The culprits got away with $20,000 — which may still be the biggest robbery ever in Evangeline Parish.

The police might have stayed baffled if one of the robbers, disgruntled over his share of the loot, hadn’t decided to tell all.

John Wade Fontenot was the one who tipped off the police. He said the mastermind was an ex-con named Earl (Blackjack) Dupre, and that the third man was a guy named Joe Young.

Blackjack could have made a good living as a metal worker.

He wielded the torch that opened the vault, later fashioned a piece of a metal bed into a crowbar and nearly pried himself out of the Evangeline Parish jail, then used his skills to land a job stamping license plates in the low-security metal shop at Angola, from which he promptly disappeared.

The other two acted as lookouts in the Ville Platte affair.

The trio broke into the LaHaye building through a side door, then cut into a steel vault, then cut into a safe that was inside the vault.

It took hours to do all of that, and they nearly ran out of time.

They fled the scene not long before Lee D. Fontenot opened his store about 5:30 a.m.

He said the vault metal was still hot and soft drink cans they left behind were still cool.

It was a low budget operation.

Their torch was stolen from the Pitre Junk Yard in Ville Platte, the acetylene to fuel it came from a welding shop next to the store, and a tarpaulin they put up to hide behind came from a nearby cotton gin. The soft drinks were taken from the store itself.

Sheriff Bruce Soileau called in crime lab experts who “took fingerprints and ran other tests … but turned up nothing substantial,” according to the Ville Platte Gazette.

That’s how things stood until Fontenot called the sheriff from Mexico City, where he was holed up, and said he would “spill the whole thing” if Evangeline Parish officers came to get him.

That took some wrangling involving the U. S. State Department and the American Embassy in Mexico City, but they finally got the credentials they needed to make an arrest in Mexico.

When they finally got to him, Fontenot said he was broke, that his buddies wouldn’t give him any more of the stolen money, and that he was $100 in debt to the hotel where he was staying.

Deputies had to borrow $100 from the U.S. Embassy to pay the bill before they could bring Fontenot back to Ville Platte.

Acting on his information, Joe Young was promptly arrested at his sister’s home in Lake Charles.

He “expressed great surprise” when police showed up. He said the $7,300 he was holding came from a lucky bet on a horse race.

Blackjack Dupre was arrested in Morgan City.

He also said he knew nothing about any Ville Platte robbery, and had no idea how an envelope holding several hundred dollars got taped to the back of a picture hanging on his living room wall.

The sheriff locked Dupre and Young in the Evangeline Parish jail, but Fontenot was allowed out on bail.

The judge thought Dupre and Young weren’t to be trusted, since at the time of this robbery they were free on bail and awaiting trial for a burglary in Baton Rouge.

They stayed in the Evangeline jail until two days before their Ville Platte trial was scheduled to begin. That’s when, the Gazette said, they “came perilously close to escaping.” They’d used a piece of a hacksaw blade — nobody knew how they got it — to cut the bolts to their cell door and used pieces of a bunk to pry it open.

They were hiding under a stairway just a few feet from freedom when they were caught.

They had been put in the same cell because it was the only maximum-security cell in the Evangeline jail. This time they were locked up in the St. Landry Parish jail, in separate cells.

Despite their earlier denials, both men decided to plead guilty just before their trial was set to begin.

Dupre was given nine years at Angola, Young got five. Fontenot, who’d been the first to confess, stayed free on five years’ probation.

Dupre didn’t stay in Angola for long. He was seen at work in the license plate plant at 1 p.m. on May 16, 1963, but then, according to the warden, he “just disappeared.”

It was a bit unclear why nobody knew he was gone for at least three hours. He was ultimately recaptured and kept under closer watch.

You can contact Jim Bradshaw at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

ELEANOR LUCY BLANCO

Eleanor Lucy Blanco, 85, a resident of Patterson, died April 23, 2023, at her residence.

She is survived by two sons, Wade Frentz and Wess Frentz; two grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, two brothers and one sister.

Graveside services will be Thursday at 10 a.m. at St. Joseph Catholic Church Cemetery in Patterson.

Twin City Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

MALCOLM BRADFORD

Malcolm Bradford, 69, a resident of Morgan City, died Tuesday, April 25, 2023, at his residence.

East St. Mary Funeral Squad will perform at cemetery.

Visitation will be Friday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Jones Funeral Home Chapel. Burial will follow in Morgan City Cemetery, with the East St. Mary Veteran’s Funeral Squad performing.

He is survived by a daughter, Madia Bradford of Morgan City; son, Bryant Francois of Morgan City; and three brothers, Floyd Bradford of Morgan City, Jessie Bradford of Lafayette and Carl Bradford of Patterson.

He was preceded in death by parents, two brothers and a sister.

Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

School system investigating alleged inappropriate conduct by employee toward student at PHS

St. Mary Parish school system officials are investigating an allegation of inappropriate conduct by an employee on the Patterson High campus toward a student, newly named Superintendent Buffy Fegenbush said in an email.

The system was made aware of the incident Tuesday, Fegenbush said.

"School officials immediately reported the incident and began an official investigation," Fegenbush said.

"While we can confirm that an incident took place on campus, we are still investigating the details surrounding the incident. Because this is an active investigation involving a student, no further information will be provided.

"We want to assure our community that reports of student safety on our campuses are thoroughly investigated and reported to law enforcement as required by law. Individuals are held accountable for their actions in accordance with state law and board policy."

Possible tax proposition on Hospital Service District agenda

A possible 5.5-mill property tax is on the agenda for discussion at Wednesday's St. Mary Parish Hospital Service District No. 2 board meeting.

The district's board will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Morgan City Court building, 7162 La. 182 East.

At last month's meeting, the board raised the possibility of imposing a new property tax in hopes of maintaining labor and delivery services at Ochsner St. Mary in Morgan City.

The district owns the hospital, which Ochsner Health has operated under lease since 2019.

In March, Ochsner announced that it would end labor and delivery services at the Morgan City hospital April 1. The company pointed to demographic trends toward an aging population with slower growth in the number of women of child-bearing age.

The hospital delivers the lowest number of babies among 66 institutions that report to the Louisiana Hospital Association, the company said.

Ochsner is consolidating labor and delivery services in its Bayou Region at Ochsner St. Anne in Raceland.

The announcement led to publicly expressed concerns that women with medical emergencies related to childbirth could be endangered by the longer drives require required to reach hospitals in Raceland, Franklin, Houma or Thibodaux. There is also fear that pediatric services would also end at Ochsner St. Mary.

At one public meeting after the announcement, Morgan City Mayor Lee Dragna raised the possibility of bringing back a Hospital Service District property tax. Fernis LeBlanc, the CEO for Ochsner's Bayou Region, said Ochsner is willing to work with the district to explore ways to keep labor and delivery services at the hospital.

You can download a .pdf version of the agenda at the link below.

Pages

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