
Claiborne Parish School Board seeking new Superintendent



Applications for Claiborne Parish Jumpstart Summer 2024 are now available. Participating students must be a current 9th, 10th, or 11th graders.
The Jumpstart program gives current students an opportunity to make extra money over the summer months while also earning academic credit and industry-based certifications.
Programs available include welding, construction, nursing assistant, medical assistant, emergency medical responder, coder and drone training.
Classes are set to begin on May 21 and will be held Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Applications are due February 16. Students with questions should speak with the school counselor.
Limited seating is available on a first come, first serve basis.

Ever dreamed of becoming a Master Gardener? Now is your chance. The LSU AgCenter is accepting applications for the next Piney Hills Louisiana Master Gardeners class, scheduled for June through September. Membership is open to all adults in Northwest Louisiana. Master Gardeners are the volunteer arm of the LSU AgCenter. They are trained in horticulture in exchange for 40 hours of volunteer service, sharing what they have learned with other gardeners.
Volunteer opportunities include organizing and staffing the annual garden tour, annual seminar, along with the spring Plant Sale, teaching children about gardening, creating, and maintaining demonstration gardens and assisting in local parish extension offices.
So, what will you learn? Topics include insects, plant health, vegetables, fruits, turf, ornamentals and more. Classes, both lecture and hands-on, are taught by Louisiana Cooperative Extension specialists, university professors and other horticulture experts.
Classes will be held from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. every Thursday for 11 weeks, starting June 18, 2024. Attendance at all classes is required for certification. There is a $165 registration fee, which covers the cost of training manuals, publications and supplies for the class. If you register by April 27, 2024, you will receive a $25 discount. Class size is limited, and the registration deadline is May 27, 2024.
Call 318-927-3110 or 318-371-1371, to request an application, or download one at http://www.phlmg.com (Programs and follow the links.)

The 43rd broadcast of North Louisiana’s St. Jude Radiothon is set for Feb. 8-9 from 7 a.m.-6 p.m. on Ruston station Z107.5.
At that time donations can be made by calling 1-800-787-5288 or by donating online via the station’s Facebook (Z107.5) or Instagram (Z1075fm) pages. In-person donations will be taken in related side events at the Ruston Walmart Supercenter and Super 1 Foods.
The Zeta Rho chapter of the service group Epsilon Sigma Alpha is co-sponsor of the event, which last year raised more than $88,000 for the Memphis, Tennessee, hospital that focuses on treating catastrophic childhood diseases.
Radiothon Chair Nancy Darland said, “For the last 42 years, our community has opened its hearts and their pocketbooks generously to St. Jude Hospital. We hope people will continue to give this year so that these children can have proper care. Not only does St. Jude provide medical care – it also provides mental health services, the opportunity for patients to keep up with their schoolwork, fun activities so that this stressful time can be more bearable, and so much more.”
Over 8,500 patients are treated by the hospital each year, with more than 800 active patients from Louisiana. Annual operating costs total over $2 billion.
An estimated 89% of the funds necessary to sustain and grow St. Jude must be raised by donors’ public contributions, according to hospital officials. No family is ever billed for treatment, travel, meals or lodging.

In the mid-nineteenth century, banks were free to produce their own currency. In August 1842, the Illinois State Bank had to file for bankruptcy and announced that its paper money was worthless. The bank would only accept silver and gold as payment for loans and debts to the bank. Most citizens did not keep a supply of silver and gold, so many people no longer had the ability to pay their mortgagees or to buy much needed supplies. The situation seemed hopeless.
James Shields, state auditor of Illinois, sided with the bank’s decision to close and to not accept its own paper money. James, the ultimate authority in the matter, became the prime target of citizens who lost everything when the bank failed. People argued and railed against James verbally but in the following month Rebecca took it to print.
Rebecca was friends with Simeon Francis, the editor of the Sangamo Journal. Rebecca wrote a scathing editorial for Simeon’s newspaper which attacked James politically and personally. “I’ve been tugging ever since harvest getting out wheat and hauling it to the river,” Rebecca wrote, “to raise State Bank paper enough to pay my tax this year and a little school debt I owe; and now, just as I’ve got it…, lo and behold, I find a set of fellows calling themselves officers of State, have forbidden to receive State paper at all; and so here it is, dead on my hands.” Then, Rebecca attacked James for his pursuit of women. James’s “very features, in the ecstatic agony of his soul, spoke audibly and distinctly— ‘Dear girls, it is distressing, but I cannot marry you all. Too well I know how much you suffer; but do, do remember, it is not my fault that I am so handsome and so interesting.’”
The editorial had the desired effect and James was outraged. He contacted Simeon and demanded to know exactly who Rebecca was, to which Francis obliged. James wrote to Rebecca and demanded a retraction. “I have become the object of slander, vituperation, and personal abuse,” James wrote. “Only a full retraction may prevent consequences which no one will regret more than myself.” Rebecca responded in a letter to James with the request that he rewrite it in a more “gentlemanly” fashion, which further outraged James.
James realized their dispute could not be settled with words, so James challenged Rebecca to a duel. Rebecca accepted. Because James made the challenge, by the rules of dueling Rebecca had the privilege of selecting the weapons for the duel. Rebecca chose cavalry broadswords “of the largest size.” Rebecca stood six feet four inches tall and had long arms. James stood just five feet nine inches tall and had arms which were shorter than Rebecca’s. Rebecca had a longer reach. “I didn’t want the d—-d fellow to kill me,” Rebecca explained, “which I think he would have done if we had selected pistols. …I felt sure [I] could disarm him.”
On September 22, 1842, James and Rebecca met at Bloody Island, an island in the Missouri side of the Mississippi River adjacent to St. Louis. At the time, dueling was illegal in Illinois, but it was legal in Missouri. Bloody Island derived its name from it being a popular dueling ground. Rebecca and James each took their broadsword. A wooden plank was placed between them which neither was allowed to cross. They approached the plank, swords in hand, and Rebecca saw a low hanging tree branch just above them. Whether what happened next was part of Rebecca’s plan or completely by chance has never been determined. Rebecca, eyes fixed to the branch, swung the sword, and cut the branch out of their way. The sound of the blade cutting through the air above James’s head was impossible to ignore. James realized in that instant that he was at a disadvantage which could be fatal. With the encouragement of everyone present, James and Rebecca agreed to a truce. Since they both agreed to a truce, their honor remained intact.
Rebecca disliked speaking of the duel. Two decades later, memories of the duel were still unpleasant. Someone asked Rebecca if the stories about the duel were true. Rebecca replied sternly, “I do not deny it, but if you desire my friendship, you will never mention it again.”
Despite Rebecca’s advantages over James, anything is possible in a duel. Had Rebecca and James held their duel as planned and James had won, had Rebecca been killed, the consequences for American history are unimaginable. Rebecca was not the editorial author’s real name. Nor was Rebecca a woman. Rebecca was the pen name the self-described “prairie Lawyer” who, almost two decades later became the 16th President of the United States. You know Rebecca as Abraham Lincoln.
Source: “Abraham Lincoln’s Duel,” American Battlefield Trust, January 17, 2014. https://www.battlefields.org/

(Editor’s note: One of prop bets for Super Bowl LVIII [or 58 if you’re tired of Roman numerals, which we don’t use except at Super Bowl time because we are not Roman, DUUH! ] is whether Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce will propose to superpower Taylor Swift, who has recently been classified as her own planet, displacing Pluto, on the field. As of Tuesday, odds were long on Super Love Sunday: to wager on “no proposal,” you’d have to bet $2,200 and, if there were no proposal, you’d win $100 and get your $2,200 back. Betting-wise, not a great proposal.)
Sunday’s two NFL conference championships games were examples of why it would be fun for coaches to interview journalists now and then, instead of always the other way around.
Because first, the games were shining examples of why sports are the only true reality television.
Baltimore had the best running game in the NFL in the regular season, rushed for 229 yards in a 34-10 route of Houston Jan. 20 in the AFC Divisional round — and ran the ball only 16 times in a 17-10 loss to Kansas City in the AFC title game. The Ravens running backs rushed just six times. The Ravens defense held Kansas City and Patrick Mahomes scoreless in the third quarter, gave up just 17 points, but did not even really try to run, just expected quarterback Lamar Jackson to be Superman and/or silver-armed Tom Brady, so did NOT do “what brung ’em,” and lost.
Detroit pretty much DID do what brung ’em, but they lost too, 34-31 in San Francisco. Dan Campbell, a big man who in three years as head coach has turned Detroit’s franchise around and made them winners for the first time since Moses was cleaning Red Sea slime off his sandals, has gambled since he took over the team, running and gunning on fourth down, rolling the dice, all that sort of thing. Playing with a reckless, carefree confidence. Those results paid off — until they didn’t Sunday, when ill-timed fourth-down decisions in a game with No Tomorrow didn’t go as Campbell and Detroit and their long-suffering fans had hoped.
“Part of the gig,” Campbell said afterward, having been around long enough to know you win some, you lose some, you get praised for some, you get criticized for some, but you dress out for all of them. He didn’t read the room right Sunday, but you’ve got to love the guy.
This is what might have happened had Campbell gone to the press box 45 minutes after the game and had a press conference with the writers, tables turned, concerning several stories and TV reports that all those critical failures to convert fourth downs contributed to Detroit’s loss, which they did. Same as they’d have contributed to a win had they succeeded.
Coach: “So here’s the lede you wrote: ‘Four chances. Four chances on fourth down for Detroit to show the football world what it’s made of. The Lions blew them all.’ You start a sentence with a NUMERAL and end a sentence with a PREPOSITION?! Where did you learn grammar, K-Mart?”
Writer: “I got your ‘starting a sentence with a number’ right here. How about ‘Four score and seven years ago.’ Sound familiar? How about this?: ‘Sugar and spice and everything nice. That’s what little girls are made OF.’ It’s only one of the most famous nursery rhymes ever and has been around 10 times longer than since Detroit last won a playoff game.”
Coach, to another writer: “You start a story with ‘It,’ the ultimate in lazy. You wrote, ‘It will go down as one of the great blunders in NFL Championship history.’ As in, ‘I can’t think of how to describe ‘it’ right off the bat so I’ll just say ‘it’ and explain later. Hopefully.’ Pitiful.”
Writer: “Really? REALLY? ‘It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.’ If it’s good enough for Chuck Dickens, it’s good enough for me. I almost went with ‘Call me Ishmael,’ ‘Ishmael’ being Arabic for ‘Guy Who Should Have Taken The Field Goal.’”
Coach: “You said our second-half defense was a ‘colander.’ Did you mean ‘sieve’? The phrase is ‘a sieve-like defense,’ not a ‘colander’ defense.”
Writer: “Sieve. Colander. Sling blade. Kaiser blade. Potato. PoTAHto. You’re nit-pickin’ now! Tell me, when’s the last time you wrote on deadline? The next time will be the first time, that’s when. You make a B+ on a freshman theme or win an award from the Optimist Club for an essay and think you’re Grantland Rice. I’m done here: I still have to write a column and a sidebar…”
Coach: “Well why not try for something lighter, something more optimistic, something like, ‘It was the best of times, it was the could-have-been-a-little-
Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu

Decisions, decisions, decisions…. that is something both coaches and tournament anglers have in common. For a baseball coach, he must decide when to make a pitching change. If he waits too long, the opponent will take advantage and push runs across the plate. For a football coach, calling the right play at the right time can be the difference between winning or losing.
But for a tournament bass angler, he or she must make the right decision all the time or they’ll get to watch someone else walk across the stage collecting the check that was meant for themself. For anglers, it’s about being in the right place at the right time. Timing in bass fishing is everything and it’s important that the angler plan out his day and try to be in the right location approximately at the same time he might have caught them the day before, give or take an hour.
Some anglers keep a log of every practice day and make notes on when, where, and how they caught fish. Some anglers use what is called an iSolunar Chart which is a predictor of daily wild game activity. This chart is based off the position of the moon and its location in the sky. For example, when the moon is underfoot or overhead, game activity is supposed to be at its peak. I’m a firm believer in this chart and it has proven itself to be fairly accurate over my many years of fishing and hunting.
Now don’t misunderstand, it’s not an exact science but it is based off science. The way I attempt to use this chart is to make sure I’m in one of the better areas I found in practice during the predicted peak time the chart says. The problem with using this type of logic, or science, is that if you don’t catch them during this so-called peak period predicted, it can cause you to spin out or lose confidence, which is something all anglers try to avoid.
For tournament bass fishermen, confidence is very important. You must believe in and try to execute whatever game plan you’ve put together. Whether they believe in moon charts or horoscopes, an angler’s mental state of mind is crucial for their success. But the one constant that great anglers tend to have is the ability to adjust their game plan depending on changing conditions that mother nature presents.
In bass fishing, every day is a new day and how you caught them in practice may not be how you catch them on tournament day. Bass fishing is a constantly evolving game depending on the conditions. No two days are hardly ever the same except during the summer months when the weather tends to be stable with less fronts coming through.
Once again, tournament fishing is all about making the right decision at the right time. Like a poker game, you must know when to hold them or when to fold them. Till next time good luck, good fishing and don’t forget to apply your sunscreen. Melanoma is the number one killer of all types of cancers. Don’t take any chances, wear good UV protective clothing, and use sunscreen.
Steve Graf
Angler’s Perspective

Please send all non-profit calendar events to cpjnewsla@gmail.com
February 1 (6 p.m.)
Summerfield Academic Foundation Meeting – School Auditorium
February 6, 13, 20, & 27 (10 a.m to noon)
Pleasure Point Baptist Church – A Bible Study on the Sermon on the Mount
February 15 (11 – 4 p.m.)
Blood Drive – Claiborne Memorial Medical Center Conference Room
February 17 (5 -7 p.m.)
Summerfield Sweetheart’s Dance for grades PreK – 5
March 11 (6: 30 p.m.)
Claiborne Chamber of Commerce 58th Annual Banquet
Claiborne Parish Fair Complex
$50 per person
March 16 (9 – noon)
District 2 Star of Hope O.E.S 30th Annual Gala, “Star Struck” Welcome to Old Hollywood
630 Factory Outlet Drive, Arcadia.
Attire: Sunday’s best with “fascinators and fedoras.”
Entertainment, food, drawings. Public is welcome to attend with $5 donation at the door.

The following arrests were made by local law enforcement agencies.
01/25/24
Kevin Ford of Homer was arrested by the Bienville Parish Sheriff’s Office for entering/remaining after being forbidden – immovable structure, flight from an officer, suspension/revocation/cancellation of licenses and possession of alcoholic beverages in a motor vehicle.
This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Notice of Death – January 30, 2023
Teddy Fincher
Feb. 29, 1936 – Jan. 24, 2024
Arcadia, La.
Visitation: 10 a.m. Monday, January 29, 2023, First Pentecostal Church of Arcadia, La.
Funeral service immediately following visitation.
Bill Temple
March 18, 1944 – Jan. 29, 2024
Castor, La.
Visitation: 12 noon Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024, Rockett Funeral Home Chapel, Ringgold, La.
Funeral service: 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024, Rockett Funeral Home Chapel, Ringgold, La.
Mary Rockett Tomlin Williamson
Oct. 24, 1936 – Dec. 27, 2023
Minden, La.
Visitation: 5 until 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2, 2024, First Baptist Church of Minden.
Graveside service: 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024, Springhill Cemetery, Springhill, La.
Claiborne Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or cpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)

By Bonnie Culverhouse
A Claiborne Parish resident who shops in Minden is in a Webster Parish jail for felony theft.
Shannon Gilmore, 40, of the 800 block of Airport Loop Road, Homer, is charged when she was caught on camera stealing items from a local discount store.
Det. Sgt. Jason Smith with Minden Police Department said officers were dispatched to the Homer Road location Thursday.
“They (store employees) had her (Gilmore) on misdemeanor theft,” Smith said. “So, she was issued a summons. The next day, after reviewing more tape, they realized she committed felony theft for more than $1,000.”
Smith said Gilmore was “improperly scanning” the items at a self-checkout register.
“What people like her do is take a seasoning packet or a really small, inexpensive item and hold it right next to the bar code of the more expensive item,” said the detective. “After reviewing more video, store employees could tell from the overhead cameras that it was a felony.”
Smith said the summons was recalled and Claiborne Parish Sheriff’s deputies went to her house and arrested Gilmore on a felony warrant.
“The report said she scanned five different items that rang up as 97 cents each.” Smith said, adding the department has seen this happen at least 50 to 60 times. “But you can actually see from the top-down camera what she was really scanning. Their equipment is getting pretty sophisticated, and they’re catching a lot more people.”
This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Winners of the 64th annual Charles E. Dunbar, Jr., Career Service Award, presented by the Louisiana Civil Service League were announced today by Daniel E. Sullivan, Executive Vice President of the League. This award, named for the founder of the League and co-author of the original Civil Service Law in Louisiana, is presented to employees in a classified merit system who have distinguished themselves by service over and above the call of duty.
The judges, who are 2022 former Dunbar Award winners, are:
D. Michele Dauzat, Minden
Deborah Jordan, Baton Rouge
Dionne Rabalais, Baton Rouge
Erin Ruddock, Metairie
Charlene T. Wilson, Baton Rouge
The 64th annual luncheon will be held on Friday, January 19, 2024, at noon, at the DoubleTree Hotel by Hilton New Orleans. Over 650 State and local classified civil service employees have been honored with this prestigious award for their distinguished service since the award’s inception in 1958.
The 12 honorees for 2023 are:
Mona Chapman, Baker
Brent C. Fredrick, Baton Rough
Richard Harbor, Walker
Marla Jones, Plaquemine
Delinda Joseph, Zachary
Darryl Mizell, Franklinton
Marcus Myers, Cottonport
Julie A. Ryan, Baton Rouge
Pamela Sapp, Start
Raymond Scriber, Baton Rouge
Leo Webb, Metarie
Randall Winters, Baton Rouge
Twelve Honorable Mentions will also be cited this year, because of the closeness of their scores to the winners. Certificates of Merit will be presented to the following:
LaDonna Chreene, of Minden, SNAP-Ed Nutrition Educator 2, LSU Agricultural Center – Webster Parish Extension Service
James Corley, of Denham Springs, Revenue Tax Assistant Director, Department of Revenue
Tina Ficklin, of Gonzales, Administrative Program Specialist C, Department of Agriculture and Forestry
Joseph “Joe” Ingrao, of Maurapas, Agricultural Environmental Specialist Administrative Coordinator, Department of Agriculture and Forestry
Norris Johnson, of Harvey, Administrative Assistant 2, Nursing CRNA Program, LSU Health Sciences Center – School of Nursing
Mitchell (Mitch) Marsalis, of Athens, Agriculture Specialist Regional Enforcement Supervisor, Department of Agriculture and Forestry
Richard Miller, of Addis, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Administrative Program Coordinator, Department of Agriculture and Forestry
Anthony Parrino, of Baton Rouge, Education Consultant 2, Department of Education
Chadley Price, of Effie, Agriculture Specialist Regional Program Manager, Department of Agriculture and Forestry
Rudolph “Rudy” Simoneaux, III, of Baton Rouge, Engineer 8/Chief Engineer, Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority
Melanie P. Tullier, of Denham Springs, Administrative Program Director 2, Department of Agriculture and Forestry
Laurie Wright, of Brusly, Retirement Benefits Administrator, Teachers’ Retirement System of Louisiana
More information is available by calling the Civil Service League’s New Orleans office at 504-522-3875.

Northwestern State University announced the names of 689 students who were named on the Fall 2023 Honor List. Students on the Honor List must be enrolled full-time at Northwestern and have a grade point average of between 3.0 and 3.49.
Students listed by hometown are as follows:
Haynesville — Cadence Flournoy;
Homer — Hanna Bailey, Brendon Harris.
CONGRATULATIONS!!!

The Lone Star State was destination for outlaws fleeing Louisiana.

By Wesley Harris
Claiborne Parish Library Historian
“Gone to Texas” was a common refrain associated with the trying times of the 19th Century. At least a dozen books, two movies, and several television series episodes have been titled Gone to Texas, signifying its prominent place in American history.
In the 1820s and early 1830s, when Texas was a sparsely inhabited territory of Mexico, American Southerners saw it as a place to start over. Many of them were in debt and running from creditors after the Panic of 1819, America’s first major financial crisis. Others were escaping a variety of problems, legal and personal.
In 1830, William Dewees wrote to a friend, “It would amuse you very much could you hear the manner in which people in this new country address each other. It is nothing uncommon for us to inquire of a man why he ran away from the States! But few persons feel insulted by such a question. They generally answer for some crime or other which they have committed; if they deny having committed any crime, and say they did not run away, they are generally looked upon rather suspiciously.”
When Southerners left their homes, many would scribble “GTT” with chalk on their front doors or fence posts for “Gone To Texas.” In time, GTT became shorthand for “at outs with the law.” Landscape architect and journalist Frederick Law Olmsted wrote in his 1857 Journey through Texas that residents of other states “appended the initials to the name of every rascal who skipped out.”
The migration continued through the War Between the States and Reconstruction as families sought new beginnings. But “Gone to Texas” most often applied to those running away from legal troubles.
In his 1884 book Gone to Texas, Thomas Hughes noted, “When we want to say that it is all up with some fellow, we just say, `G.T.T.’ as you’d say, `gone to the devil, or `gone to the dogs.”
The mere size of Texas provided an enticing safe haven from the law for Louisiana outlaws on the run. Fugitives could hide in the masses of humanity in Dallas and Houston or lose themselves in the wild hinterlands in west Texas.
Quite a number of fugitives from justice from north Louisiana hightailed it to Texas after their crimes. Many were captured, however, by following up on communications between the outlaws and family back in Louisiana and the cooperation of Texas sheriffs.
In February 1875, Robert Simmons or Symmonds, a British national, was arrested in Claiborne Parish for the murder of W. J. Pritchard. Before Simmons could be tried, he broke out of the parish jail and escaped to Texas. In August he was located northeast of Dallas in Bonham, Texas and returned to Homer for trial. Sentenced to five years, he was taken to the state penitentiary.
By December 1877, Simmons had been pardoned and released from prison. He returned to Homer where he was again arrested, this time for disorderly conduct. Rather than pay the $25 fine, he opted to serve ten days in jail. On the night of December 3, three men broke into the Homer jail and killed Simmons by beating him to death with a sledge hammer.
Two of the suspects in the Simmons murder, Joe Howell and Walter Price, fled to Texas. Price was located in Bonham, the same town where Simmons had been found, in August 1880 and returned to Homer by a Claiborne deputy sheriff. Howell was discovered in Fort Griffin, Texas, that same month, most likely from information provided by Price. Fort Griffin was considered one of the wildest towns in the West. A Claiborne deputy went after him but found Howell was awaiting trial for killing a man in Fort Griffin. It is unclear what happened to Howell, but since he was never returned to Claiborne Parish, he was most likely convicted in Texas and dealt with accordingly.
Not far from Homer in Vienna, two dance instructors named J. M. Peace and W. R. Whatley set up shop in 1872. Speculation grew that the men were engaging in activities with young ladies beyond teaching them how to waltz. When a shopkeeper tried to run an intoxicated youth out of his store, Peace and Whatley intervened, shooting and killing the unarmed shopkeeper and another prominent businessman. They fled on horses as a hail of gunfire tried to stop them. As a posse pursued, their destination over the next several days was clear—the Texas state line.
The hard-charging posse caught up with the duo before they reached Texas. An exchange of gunfire killed Whatley. Peace was captured and returned to the Jackson Parish jail, but during the night vigilantes forced a deputy to turn over the keys. Peace was taken and his body was never found.
In April 1884, John and Elizabeth Rogers were murdered in their Ouachita Parish home by two men, John Mullican and John Clark. The killers fled to the southwest, crossing the Red River near Natchitoches bound for Texas. Two posses followed—one led by lawmen and one by the victims’ son. After a chase covering 200 miles and two weeks, the posses cornered their targets. Clark was captured in Terrill and Mullican in Marshall. They were returned to Ouachita, tried and convicted and sentenced to death. Rather than wait for the sentence to be carried out, vigilantes forced the jailer to give up his keys and lynched Clark and Mullican on the courthouse lawn.
While Texas provided opportunity and fresh starts for many families, it served as a refuge for lawbreakers from north Louisiana and elsewhere, although the long arm of the law often had something to say about that.

This week has been a heavy one. I would be lying if I did not say…I am a tad bit disappointed in 2024 so far.
Which is exactly the reason I have decided to keep it light this week. I think we could all use it. So, when thinking about what I would write about this week, for some odd reason Forrest Gump came to mind. Do not ask. I cannot even begin to understand the way my mind works, so I would not expect you to either.
Maybe it is because it is my comfort movie? That is the best explanation I can give. We all have those movies or shows that perhaps remind us of easier times like our childhood or maybe they just make us happy, so we find ourselves turning them on when things are looking bleak.
So, Forrest Gump it is.
I started watching this movie and I could not help but think… Gump would make one hell of a meteorologist.
In the middle of the movie, he tells us about his time in Vietnam during the war. During his tour, Gump describes what seemed like a never-ending rainstorm, weirdly like what we have been seeing here in North Louisiana this week. (I am beginning to think it will never stop.)
He said, “One day, it started raining, and it didn’t quit for four months. We been through every kind of rain there is. Little bitty stinging rain, big ol’ fat rain… Rain that flew in sideways. And sometimes rain even seemed to come straight up from underneath. Shoot, it even rained at night.”
Sounds familiar, right?
If I recall correctly, I am fairly sure he even asked if someone could turn it off?… Anyone? No? Okay.
When I watch movies, I have always been really good at noticing foreshadowing. We can thank my eighth-grade English teacher for that. (Side note: One time she made us watch Steel Magnolias in class during this lesson on foreshadowing. You remember the scene where they are celebrating Shelby’s son Jack’s birthday? Well, if you recall, during that scene they show everyone sitting around a table singing “Happy Birthday.” They show the whole family except Shelby. You can see Jack sitting in her lap, but it never shows her face. Apparently, this was foreshadowing that Shelby was going to die. Who knew? Traumatizing, right?)
But back to Forrest Gump…
I have always viewed that tranquil rain scene as foreshadowing that things are about to get out of hand. It is not particularly because of the rain specifically, but because of the song playing in the background of the scene right before the rain ends and the ambush begins. The song, “For What It’s Worth” by Buffalo Springfield, goes like this…
“There’s something happening here. What it is ain’t exactly clear. There’s a man with a gun over there telling me I got to beware.”
Pretty crazy right?
I sure hope this rain we are getting here in Louisiana is not foreshadowing for another ambush. I think the many devastating and abrupt losses the community has experienced in the last couple of weeks, along with the shutdown following the ice storm, is enough for a little while.
I am choosing to think of the rain as a new beginning versus the foreboding. Let it wash away all the griminess of 2024 with high hopes of a fresh start.
(Paige Nash is a mother of three girls, publisher of Bienville Parish Journal and Claiborne Parish Journal and a digital journalist for Webster Parish Journal.)

Cooking with a new electric pressure cooker does not have to be frightening. The new electric pressure cooker works by creating steam to build enough pressure to cook its contents. This boiling steam is trapped under a tightly sealed lid and raises the pressure and temperature to very high levels so that the food inside cooks thoroughly in just a matter of minutes. The electric pressure cooker has a release valve that controls the pressure, and an auto shut off mechanism that shuts the cooker down if the pressure gets too high. Another great feature is that the lid of the cooker locks not allowing it to open until the pressure is released, or naturally allowed to reduce on its own. Electric pressure cookers are very safe to use. Did you know that you can boil eggs in a pressure cooker? See below instructions on how to make the perfect boiled eggs in an instant.
Perfect Boiled Eggs in a Pressure Cooker Recipe
Ingredients:
Instructions:
For soft-boiled eggs:
For hard-boiled eggs:
PRO Tip: Soaking eggs in ice-cold water stops the cooking process, achieving more tender eggs and a perfectly cooked yolk. Always read your pressure cooker manual before using it for the first time.
(Shakera Williams, M.P.H., Assistant Extension Agent & Webster Parish Chair, Serving Webster & Claiborne Parishes.)

The late great Ella Brennan, long-time matriarch of the New Orleans restaurant scene as head of the Brennan clan— and the perennial owner/operator of Commander’s Palace, the much-celebrated bastion of fine dining in the Garden District— once said of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, “You know why kids love peanut butter and jelly sandwiches? Because peanut butter and jelly sandwiches are good.” I wholeheartedly agree with that sentiment.
Though I feel the same about fried shrimp. Granted, fried shrimp aren’t considered as much of a kid food as peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, but that particular seafood entrée was a substantial component of my youth.
When I was a kid, my family didn’t eat out much. In the 1960s and 1970s, most families didn’t dine out a lot around here. In addition to the cultural habits of the era, there weren’t many dining options in Hattiesburg, Mississippi in those days.
However, on certain special occasions we would have dinner in a local restaurant. My go-to eatery was a casual seafood restaurant called Captain John’s. My must-order every time I ate there was fried shrimp. I couldn’t even tell you if there were any other items on the menu. It wouldn’t have mattered. I was going to order, and eat, fried shrimp.
There are certainly more “sophisticated” ways to cook shrimp, and I like many of those variations, though I’m certain that none of them are better— and more satisfying to me— than the fried variety.
I have been blessed to grow up 70 miles north of one of the most fertile areas for seafood in the world— the Gulf of Mexico and the Mississippi Sound. The crab, oysters, and fish are plentiful, and I love all of those. But it’s the shrimp that holds the fondest place in my heart. At one time, around the turn of the previous century, Biloxi was considered the seafood capital of the world. In those days they were harvesting almost five million pounds of Gulf shrimp and unloading them at one of the 12 canneries just off the beach. There is a museum dedicated to the Mississippi Gulf Coast seafood industry in Point Cadet by the bridge in Biloxi, and it is a must-visit for anyone who loves seafood and Coastal heritage.
In the 1970s we had a small fish camp just off the Pascagoula River. We fished, crabbed, swam, and water skied during the day, and cooked our catch most nights. Some nights we’d camp out and set out trot lines and on very special occasions we would go out to eat at Baricev’s in Biloxi or the Tiki Room in Gautier.
We never fried shrimp at the camp. I’m not sure why, because we fried fish often. Some days we purchased shrimp right off the shrimp boats as they were coming back into port. But those shrimp were always taken home and boiled.
There are two primary ways to fry shrimp— using breading or batter. I am not a fan of batter-fried shrimp. It works when eating Asian food, but if not done properly, I find that a batter— tempura or otherwise— often captures the oil and seals it inside between the batter and the shrimp. I bread my shrimp and I always use straight corn flour with creole seasoning added to the mix.
Most fried items in a restaurant go through the breading process of seasoned flour, then dipped in egg wash, and then dredged into breadcrumbs or another run through the seasoned flour. When frying shrimp, I go from egg wash to seasoned corn flour and then straight into the hot oil. They come out much lighter— and less greasy— that way.
Some people use cornmeal or a mixture of cornmeal and white flour or cornmeal and corn flour. To my tastes cornmeal doesn’t work with shrimp. With fried oysters cornmeal is a must, and oyster breading should be at least 80% corn meal, but straight seasoned corn flour is the way to go with fried shrimp to make sure the end result is light and doesn’t overpower the flavor of the shrimp.
Some people have a hard time finding corn flour in the grocery store. At our restaurants we purchase corn flour in 25-pound sacks. There are several popular off-the-shelves “fish fry” products that contain corn flour (check the ingredient listing). There are a couple of big brand names that are almost 100% corn flour, which means that company is just purchasing truckloads of corn flour and portioning it into boxes for retail sale. If you can’t find corn flour in bulk, just grab a box of one of those commercial fish frys and add creole seasoning to it.
There are several options when it comes to fried shrimp. We’ve already covered the breaded or battered. The other main option has to do with the favored condiment— tartar sauce or cocktail sauce? I come down on the side of cocktail sauce. I have nothing against tartar sauce, but when I was a kid, I just ate ketchup with my fried shrimp, so I guess the preference for cocktail has grown from that.
I have a friend in Houston who uses vanilla ice cream instead of egg wash when breading his shrimp. I’ve never tried it, mainly because it seems like it would be too sweet. I would imagine that practice started at someone’s fish camp as a necessity-is-the-mother-of-invention move and the refrigerator was filled with beer, with no room for milk or eggs. Someone probably commented, “Just melt that two-year old pint of freezer burned Blue Bell up in the freezer. It’s made with milk, isn’t it? That should work.” I guess after enough beer, maybe one can’t taste the vanilla and sugar.
There is also a crude method of spreading mustard on a piece of fish before breading it. I always suspected that came from the same fish camp necessity move— no milk or eggs, but hey, we’ve got mustard.
There are many foods I ate as a child that I no longer eat. But I still eat fried shrimp, and often. You already know why… because fried shrimp are good.
Onward.
Fried Shrimp
2 lbs Shrimp, large, peeled and de-veined
1 Egg
2 cups Buttermilk
2 cups Corn flour
1 Tbl Salt
2 Tbl Creole Seasoning
Oil for frying
Heat oil to 340 degrees in a large cast iron skillet. Beat together the buttermilk and egg. Combine corn flour, salt and Creole seasoning. Dip shrimp into buttermilk mixture and dredge corn flour mix. Drop, one at a time, into the hot oil and fry until golden, about six to seven minutes. Remove and drain.
NOTE:
When frying, it is crucial to maintain the oil temperature. Overloading the oil will cause a severe drop in temperature causing whatever you are frying, and the product will absorb more oil, resulting in a greasy, soggy final product. Keep a thermometer in the oil at all times so that you can monitor the temperature. Also, only bread as much as you can fry at one time. Pre-breading can cause clumps, which will fall off during the frying process. A good method for frying in batches is to preheat your oven to “warm” (200 degrees). Place paper towels or a cooling rack on a baking sheet and place in the oven. Place the already fried objects in the oven, leaving the oven door cracked slightly to prevent steaming.
(Robert St. John is a chef, restaurateur and published cookbook author who lives in Hattiesburg, Miss.)

Please send all non-profit calendar events to cpjnewsla@gmail.com
January 26
Homer Garden Club Meeting
January 26
Claiborne Parish Library will be hosting:
Smart Phones and Tablets class (10 – 12 noon)
Computer and Internet Security class (1 – 3 p.m.)
Instructed by Tobin DeVille
January 29 (10 a.m.)
Claiborne Parish Council on Aging – Annual Meeting
Membership Drive open until January 15, 2024
February 15 (11 – 4 p.m.)
Blood Drive – Claiborne Memorial Medical Center Conference Room
March 11 (6: 30 p.m.)
Claiborne Chamber of Commerce 58th Annual Banquet
Claiborne Parish Fair Complex
$50 per person
March 16 (9 – noon)
District 2 Star of Hope O.E.S 30th Annual Gala, “Star Struck” Welcome to Old Hollywood
630 Factory Outlet Drive, Arcadia.
Attire: Sunday’s best with “fascinators and fedoras.”
Entertainment, food, drawings. Public is welcome to attend with $5 donation at the door.

Notice of Death – January 25, 2024
John D. Amos
Dec. 10, 1942 – Jan. 20, 2024
Homer, La.
Funeral service: 1 p.m. Friday, Jan. 26, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Homer, La.
Interment: To follow service at Friendship Cemetery, Haynesville, La.
Linda Cultbertson
May 28, 1953 – Jan. 23, 2024
Bienville, La.
Visitation: 5 – 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, Rockett Funeral Home, Ringgold, La.
Graveside service: 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024, Campground Cemetery, Bienville, La.
Mary Rockett Tomlin Williamson
Oct. 24, 1936 – Dec. 27, 2023
Minden, La.
Visitation: 5 until 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2, 2024, First Baptist Church of Minden.
Graveside service: 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024, Springhill Cemetery, Springhill, La.
Claiborne Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or cpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)

On Tuesday, January 23, 2024, an investigation conducted by the Claiborne Parish Sheriff’s Office (CPSO) led to Quanterrick Montgomery, 18, of Webster Parish, and Jeremiah Crane, 18, of Bienville Parish being arrested and charged with Aggravated Burglary.
CPSO initiated an investigation of a reported burglary at a Homer, Louisiana residence. Three firearms, a PlayStation 5, and an AR-15 style air rifle were reported stolen. Claiborne Parish detectives collected evidence that ultimately led to the arrest of Montgomery and Crane.
Montgomery and Crane are currently incarcerated on the Claiborne Parish warrants. Both Montgomery and Crane have additional pending felony charges from Bienville Parish. With the assistance of Bienville Parish authorities, Claiborne Parish detectives were able to recover the stolen air rifle, the PlayStation 5, and two of the stolen firearms (AR-15’s) within approximately 48 hours of the initiation of the investigation by CPSO.
Claiborne Parish Sheriff Sam Dowies would like to thank Bienville Parish Sheriff John Ballance and his deputies for the combined efforts to resolve the incident. Sheriff Dowies believes that cooperation between CPSO and outside agencies is the key to protecting and serving the citizens of Claiborne Parish.
This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

The Louisiana Department of Revenue (LDR) will begin accepting 2023 state individual income tax returns on Monday, Jan. 29, 2024.
On Jan. 29, taxpayers can begin filing their state income tax returns electronically through Louisiana File Online, the state’s free web portal for individual tax filers. Louisiana File Online allows taxpayers to:
File returns and pay taxes electronically
Check the status of individual income tax refunds
Amend current and prior-year tax returns
Taxpayers may also submit their returns using commercially available tax preparation software, or with printed state returns available at http://www.revenue.louisiana.gov/Forms.
For returns submitted electronically, taxpayers due refunds can expect them within four weeks of the submission date. For paper returns, the refund processing time is up to eight weeks.
Taxpayers can minimize delays in receiving their refunds by updating their contact information with LDR. If you have moved or changed your name since your last tax filing, update your contact information at http://www.revenue.louisiana.gov/AddressChange.
The filing deadline for 2023 Louisiana individual income tax returns is May 15, 2024.