Hers Bridal is turning 50; let’s have a Fashion Show!

The owner of Hers Bridal, Alicia Adams, has been welcoming clients and roaming her shoppe. She dips down onto her comfortable couch with a satisfied smile. “She’s 50,” she declares, with a turn of her head. “She needs a little facelift.”

She’s right. Hers Bridal is 50. She’s one of Louisiana’s longest-standing bridal boutiques, with a record of calmly expanding, with new trends, events, and community offerings. But not only does Alicia have a physical facelift in mind for her shoppe — to celebrate the occasion, she’s put together the “Hers Bridal, Vogue & Bows 50th Anniversary Fashion Show.”

The Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025 Fashion Show is not just a bride’s event, it’s a celebration for the entire community! “Hers Bridal proudly unveils the Vogue & Bows Fashion Show – a luxe, fun runway experience designed to bring big city fashion energy to the heart of Minden,” Alicia said. “Fashion lovers, and the whole community, will enjoy a night of couture gowns, iconic boutiques, statement bows, signature cocktails, high-fashion photo moments, and an elevated runway show produced by Hers Bridal, Say Baby, Simply Chic, Sloan’s Formalwear, and the newly-created addition to Hers Bridal – His Department – a “speak easy” men’s formalwear upper floor section.”

The Vogue & Bows Fashion Show will take place at 728 Main Street, Minden, LA 71055. VIP Admission begins at 4 p.m., with a cocktail hour (at a price of $70). General Entrance starts at 5:30 p.m. General seating is priced at $25. The runway show commences at 6:30 p.m.

“The focal point of the evening will be high-energy Vogue and Fun glamour, with an iconic bow-inspired twist,” said Alicia, who has been described as “a young, local female entrepreneur who has been vested in revitalizing a multi-generational bridal institution.”

The evening will be live-streamed by SB Magazine. Professional photography and videography will be available, with photo installations provided. VIPs will receive Swag Bags and other giveaways will include a grand prize of $400 towards the purchase of a formal from Sloan’s Formalwear.

A Cash Bar and appetizers will be hosted by Under Dawgs. The runway show will be 45+ minutes in length. For the guy VIPs who aren’t interested in pink carpet runways and fashion, there will be a very exclusive and limited-seating speak easy in His Department, featuring a bourbon bar, mash potato bar, and cigars, from the swag. Contact Thomas Adams at Main Street Barbershop for more information on this.

Purchase tickets at hersbridalminden.com or on their Facebook Event page (click Vogue and Bows).

Funding for this unique evening is “provided in part by the Webster Parish Convention & Visitors Commission.

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Happy Thanksgiving; See you next week!

To our readers and advertisers:

Webster Parish Journal will not publish Thursday or Friday of this week, in order to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with our families.

We will return to your inbox Tuesday, December 2 with all the news from Webster Parish.

Thank you for being loyal to us. We wish you a Happy Thanksgiving Day!

Your friends at Webster Parish Journal


Attempted I-20 traffic stop leads to high-speed pursuit that ends in Caddo

By Pat Culverhouse

An attempted traffic stop on Interstate 20 near the Minden exit Tuesday morning turned into a high speed chase that ended in Caddo Parish when spike strips were successfully deployed to end the pursuit, and the 21-year-old driver is in police custody.

Chief of Police Jared McIver said Drake Edward McKinney, a resident of the 300 block of Warriner Ave. in Blanchard, was booked on an arrest warrant for flight from an officer and is being held on a $20,000 bond.

He is also looking at additional charges of illegal carrying of weapons, violation of open container ordinance and no insurance after officers enforced a search warrant for his vehicle.

McIver said Officer Cody James was on Safety Traffic Enforcement Program (STEP) patrol shortly before 9 a.m. when he reportedly clocked a speeding vehicle (90 in a 70 m.p.h. zone) in the westbound lane of the Interstate.

When James activated his lights, the driver reportedly accelerated and began to pull away from the officer. Officer James reportedly observed the Dodge Challenger traveling at speeds up to 130 miles per hour and passing traffic on the shoulder of the roadway multiple times.

James reportedly maintained radio contact during the pursuit, but lost visual contact at the intersection of Interstate 20/Interstate 220 in Bossier Parish. After the officer self-terminated the pursuit at that point, information was shortly received that Louisiana State Police troopers had successfully deployed spike strips on I-220 at the Benton Rd. exit.

Despite the successful deployment, the vehicle continued westbound on I-220 until it  became disabled on the Interstate in Caddo Parish. Although the driver had managed to leave the scene, he was located on Ed’s Blvd. and taken into custody.

McKinney and his vehicle were returned to Minden where officers obtained a search warrant. Inside the vehicle, officers reportedly found a Taurus 9MM handgun and magazine, plus an open bottle of Tequila.

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 heart of Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving shifts on you as life goes on. But the earliest memories stay put.

Our family used to drive to Brooksville, a little town in east Mississippi where my grandfather grew up. Several of my great-uncles still lived there, and cousins wandered in from all directions. That drive from the Pine Belt toward Noxubee County always signaled the holiday. Somewhere around Shuqualak the tall pines gave way to hardwoods, and through the rear windshield of my mother’s yellow Plymouth, the world changed colors. Pinecones and straw in my neighborhood were replaced by piles of crinkly, multicolored leaves in Brooksville. Playing in those leaves at my great-uncle Harrison’s house made the whole trip worth it.

The food never disappointed. It was the classic lineup every year—turkey, dressing, sweet potatoes, and homemade rolls. The rolls may have come from the Mennonite bakery down the road. Nothing fancy. Nothing “elevated.” Just straightforward country cooking from people who knew feeding your family well is one of the clearest ways to show love.

As the years rolled on, Thanksgiving moved from Brooksville to my grandmother’s house on Fourth Avenue in Hattiesburg. My grandmother, Eunice Holleman St. John, was the undisputed hostess of that era. She had traveled the world, but you wouldn’t know it unless you asked. Her lunches were formal but never stiff. She listened more than she talked. She cooked with skill and served with ease. Any early form of gratitude I managed to show probably came from her. My mother taught manners. My grandmother taught the deeper side of it.

Even now, thirty-five years after her passing, she stays at the top of my daily gratitude list. Before my feet hit the floor most mornings, I run through a silent list of the people and things I’m grateful for—something I picked up in recovery forty-two years ago and still practice today.

My kids always make the list. Their health and happiness. My wife and best friend. Our team members. My friends around town and across the country. But I’ve never once recited that list without my paternal grandmother near the top. Her influence is still that strong.

I’ve spent a fortune on business seminars and coaching sessions, professional industry consultants, gaining advice from experts who operate at a high level. But none of it ever topped the examples my grandmother set and how she lived her life. She was selfless. She was compassionate. She was strong and gracious without fanfare. In movies, someone always calls his grandmother a saint. I relate to that. Mine literally carried the name St. John, but she lived it long before any of us thought about the symbolism.

My twenties were a blur, and I can barely recall many Thanksgivings from that stretch. By my late twenties, my first restaurant was open. I spent ninety hours a week in the kitchen behind the line. We closed on Thanksgiving Day, but I’d still drive up to the restaurant, fire up the fryer, drop a turkey, and use the ovens to bake the sides. It was easier than navigating one small oven at home. So, there I was cooking Thanksgiving lunch in an empty restaurant kitchen under fluorescent lights that reminded me I was the only person in town working on Thanksgiving, unless you count the crew earning triple pay at the Waffle House.

For the past three decades, I’ve been responsible for the family Thanksgiving meal. In the early days I cooked every dish. But for the past decade or so, since I’m not on the line as much, our prep crew at the restaurants does the heavy lifting. They appreciate the extra work, and I’m grateful for the help. I roast the turkey, make the gravy, heat the casseroles, and it all comes together. 

I’ve also reached an age where gratitude isn’t something I keep to myself. I’ll call someone out of the blue just to say thank you. Maybe they set an example that shaped the way I parent. Maybe they helped me through a hard season. Maybe they’ve simply been steady. Every time I make one of those calls, that’s my grandmother talking.

Life looks different now, but the work still connects it all. These days I own a bakery that is becoming the bakery I always hoped Hattiesburg could have. Loblolly has been on a tear this past year. Chef Linda Roderick—who has worked beside me for more than twenty-five years—has spent the past several months filling every freezer and shelf with Thanksgiving casseroles. Cornbread dressing, sweet potatoes, mac and cheese, squash, asparagus, green bean casseroles, dinner rolls, and even the gravy.

Everything but the turkey. We took orders right up through Sunday. It’s been a ride.

About that gravy. You may think gravy is just gravy. Wrong. When we were developing Christmas recipes for the new cookbook, Linda, my son Harrison—fresh out of the Culinary Institute of America—and I worked through the gravy until it landed exactly where it needed to be. Out of all the recipes in the book, that gravy may be the one I’m proudest of. It’s listed alongside this column.

Last week I flew home after two months overseas. The very next night we held the book launch at Crescent City Grill. The place was packed, and the signing ran long. Chef Nevil Barr cooked dishes from the book, including the Barq’s root beer ham and the roasted turkey with gravy. People kept stopping by the table talking about that gravy. Out of everything there, it stole the show.

When it was over, I finally walked over and tasted it. Nevil said, “We just followed your recipe.” I didn’t remember it being that special, but when you taste a hundreds of dishes in recipe testing session, things can blur. This one stood out.

Thanksgiving looks different these days, but the core of it is still the same. Those leaves in Brooksville, the hardwoods past Shuqualak, my grandmother’s table on Fourth Avenue, the years in the kitchen when I was young and bulletproof—all of that lives in me. It comes back every November, not as a faded memory but as a reminder of how much there is to be grateful for right in front of me.

Those early years laid the foundation, but they aren’t better than what sits in front of me now. A wife who’s also my best friend. Children who’ve grown into adults any father would be proud to claim. Friends who’ve been there longer than I deserve. A team that believes in what we’re doing. A community that has supported me— through victories and failures— and longer than seems reasonable. The older I get, the more I appreciate it.

People try to find happiness in a lot of places. Gratitude is what finally held me in place. My grandmother lived that way without saying a word about it. She worked in her kitchen grateful for her family, her faith, and her day. I didn’t understand it then. Recovery made it clear, and it’s been the one thing I can count on.

So, as Thanksgiving gets close and I think about the meal and the people who’ll be at the table, it’s clear that every stop along the way and every person who helped me brought me to this point. Gratitude isn’t a task for the morning. It’s the whole thing. And if I’m blessed with fifty more Thanksgivings, they don’t have to look like the ones in Brooksville. The best parts are right in front of me today.
Onward

Christmas Turkey
There’s nothing like a well-roasted turkey to anchor a holiday table, and no one made it quite like my grandmother. She didn’t wait until Thanksgiving to serve it. She’d roast a turkey once a month throughout the year, never mind the occasion. It was a staple at her table. 

My mother, on the other hand, always made a formal Christmas Eve dinner, complete with turkey, dressing, and gravy. As kids, the excitement of Christmas Eve was almost too much to bear. Those big dinners felt like the beginning of Christmas itself. It’s a memory that comes to mind every time I cook a turkey or make gravy. And a good gravy can make or break the meal. Making sure the roux browns just right and finishing the gravy with a touch of lemon juice or fresh herbs are tricks worth remembering. A little extra attention to the gravy goes a long way.

Serves 8 to 10
1 each 16-18 pound turkey, fresh or thawed
1 stick salted butter
3/4 cup chicken or turkey stock, slightly warm
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons poultry seasoning 
1 tablespoon kosher salt
1 small onion, large dice
1 rib celery, 1/2-inch slice
1 Honey Crisp apple, 1-inch dice
Turkey Gravy – recipe follows
One day in advance:
Remove the neck and giblets. Using a sharp knife, remove the wings (we’re going to use them for gravy). Store refrigerated overnight until ready to use.
Dry the turkey well.
Place the butter in a microwave-safe dish. Heat until the butter just begins to melt. Mix the butter and stock on low in a blender until emulsified. Inject the turkey thoroughly until all of the butter mixture is used up. Place the turkey in a roasting pan or on a platter and refrigerate uncovered overnight.

Pull the turkey two hours before roasting. The turkey will cook more evenly when allowed to sit out at room temperature before roasting.

Preheat oven to 325° F
Rub the turkey with the olive oil. Combine the poultry seasoning and kosher salt. Rub the turkey with the seasoning. Stuff the cavity with the onion, celery, and apple. Tie the legs together with butcher’s string. Position a roasting rack inside a roasting pan. Place the turkey, breast-side-up on the roasting rack.

Roast for two hours then begin basting the turkey every 30 minutes until done. If the skin starts to get darker than you prefer, tent the turkey with foil.
Roasting time will vary depending on the size of the turkey. As a general rule, the turkey needs to roast for 14 to 16 minutes per pound if pulled out two hours before roasting.
A 16-to-18-pound turkey will take four to four and a half hours to cook. Remove from the oven when the turkey reaches an internal temperature of 165° F. Let the turkey rest for 30 minutes before serving.

Turkey Gravy
This gravy technique uses professional tricks to deepen flavor and ensure a smooth, luxurious consistency. Roasting the bones and deglazing the pan with white wine provides complexity, while a final touch of lemon juice brightens everything up. For best results, strain the gravy before serving.
Makes 21/2 cups

Preheat oven to 375° F
Neck and wings from turkey
1 small onion, diced
1 rib celery, diced
1 carrot, diced
3 cups turkey or chicken stock, heated
1/4 cup dry white wine (optional, but recommended)
3 tablespoons pan drippings or clarified butter
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
11/2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon fresh thyme, chopped
1/4 teaspoon sweet basil
1/4 teaspoon fresh lemon juice (to finish)
When you pull your turkey from the refrigerator to bring it to room temperature, start the gravy.
Place the turkey neck, wings, onion, celery, and carrot in a one and a half-quart oven-proof skillet or saucepot. Roast for 30 minutes then using tongs, carefully turn them. Return them to the oven and roast for 30 to 40 minutes, until golden brown.

Place the skillet or saucepot over medium heat and stir in the stock. Use a wooden spoon to scrape the bottom of the pan to release all the flavorful browned bits. Add the wine and bring to a simmer. Cook for 30 minutes.

Hold in a warm place while the turkey roasts.

Once the turkey has finished roasting and is resting, strain the stock through a fine-mesh strainer and discard the solids.
Place the pan drippings or clarified butter in a small skillet over medium heat. Stir in the flour to make a roux. Cook for four to five minutes, or until it reaches a light caramel color.
Bring the strained stock to a boil over high heat. Carefully whisk in the roux and continue simmering for five minutes until thickened. Stir in the salt, thyme, sweet basil, and lemon juice. Taste and adjust seasoning if needed.

Serve warm.
(Robert St. John is a chef, restauranteur and published cookbook author who lives in Hattiesburg, Miss.)


LSP arrests two I-20 travelers for illegal narcotics

By Pat Culverhouse

A traffic violation on Interstate 20 in Webster Parish has netted a pair of Mobile, Alabama men allegedly traveling in tandem to deliver a large quantity of illegal narcotics.

Louisiana State Police reportedly arrested 26-year-old Kyle Brendan Cass on charges of conspiracy to distribute CDS Sch. I (marijuana) and distribution/manufacture of CDS Sch. I (marijuana) following the traffic stop just before 7 a.m. Friday.

Also in custody is Tremaine Devon Martin. He is facing a charge of conspiracy to distribute CDS Sch. I (marijuana).

According to incident reports, Trooper Ryan Phillips attempted to stop the vehicle driven by Cass, but noticed a Dodge Ram pickup truck following the first vehicle and speeding up apparently in an attempt to block the trooper from making the stop.

After pulling Cass’ vehicle over, the trooper reportedly observed suspicious behavior during questioning. The trooper reportedly requested and received both verbal and written permission to search the vehicle.

Troopers reportedly found several large black trash bags containing a large quantity of marijuana in the trunk of the vehicle. During their search, troopers reportedly overheard Cass talking to a subject on his cell phone.

When Cass reportedly gave apparent deceptive answers to whether he was traveling with or being followed by someone, troopers obtained information on the vehicle which had apparently attempted to screen the traffic stop.

Information received during further investigation determined Cass and the other vehicle were together. At that time, ass reportedly admitted he was paid to drive his vehicle from Dallas, Texas back to Mobile and the other driver was paid to follow him.

A “be on the lookout” broadcast on the pickup truck, which had continued east on I-20, and Martin reportedly was stopped by state troopers in Ouachita Parish. He was booked into the Ouachita Parish Correctional Center and later transferred to Troop G headquarters for questioning.

Both Cass and Martin are now being held in Bayou Dorcheat Correctional Center. Bond has not been set for either man.

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.


Wanted: Christopher Shinall

Christopher Dakota Shinall is wanted for an offense that occurred on July 10 of this year.

Minden PD detectives secured an arrest warrant as a result of their investigation into the incident. The following is the charges associated with the incident:

• Theft (Misdemeanor): Bond set at  $500 surety.

Anyone with information on Christopher Dakota Shinball is asked to please contact Det. Matthew Hicks at 318-639-7776. All information will be strictly confidential.

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 moment that quieted every doubt

You guys already know… if there were an Olympic event for second-guessing yourself as a mom, I’d be bringing home the gold. Daily. I’m forever wondering: Am I doing enough? Saying the right things? Setting the right boundaries? Raising them to stand firm in a world that seems louder and messier every time I blink?

And if you listen long enough, the world has plenty to say about this generation coming up:

“They’re glued to their phones.”

“They don’t care about anything.”

“They’re too soft… too influenced… too disconnected.”

But over the weekend, I got a front-row reminder that maybe – just maybe – it’s not the generation at all. It’s how we raise them.

Emerson wanted to see a different movie with her friends, so I took my younger two to watch the new “Wicked” while she went into the theater next door. Her movie let out early, and when I walked over to find her, I spotted a group of girls sitting at a table outside the ice cream shop.

Not laughing.

Not scrolling.

Not gossiping.

But sitting there, hands linked, heads bowed, praying softly over a friend who’d just gotten news about being sick.

And right then… in the middle of a noisy sidewalk between a movie theater and an ice cream shop… every ounce of second-guessing inside me quieted.

This world has its influences – temptations, noise, opinions, etc. We can’t protect our kids from all of it, and honestly? We’re not supposed to. They’re going to need strength that comes from standing firm, not sheltering forever.

But who they are? Who they become?… That starts at home.

It starts with the things we model. The boundaries we set. The conversations we have at bedtime or in the car line. The reminders to be kind, be brave, be honest. Making sure they’re in church and know where their foundation is. Teaching them to put God first – above everything else the world tries to hand them.

I tell Emerson all the time how important it is to have good friends… but also to be a good friend. To show up. To pray. To care. To be the one who brings light when someone else feels lost in the dark.

And seeing her surrounded by girls who choose prayer over drama, compassion over convenience, and faith over fear… that was the reminder my mama heart didn’t even realize it was begging for.

I’m so grateful… for her heart, her circle. Grateful that in a world full of noise, these girls are choosing prayer!

And if you’re a mama doubting yourself today, wondering if anything you’re doing is sticking, let me just tell you: the seeds you’re planting are taking root. Even when you can’t see them yet.

One day, out of nowhere, you’ll catch a glimpse (just like I did) and every doubt will fall silent. It won’t stay that way for long. Us moms, we always find something new to worry about, but it will be enough to push you to keep moving forward, I promise you!

(Paige Gurgainers is a mom of three girls, digital journalist for Webster Parish Journal.)


Juniors in South Webster receive ‘Honesty & Integrity’ Awards

Holding Honesty & Integrity certificates are (from left) Gage Williams, Lakeside; Landry Merritt, Glenbrook; Matthew Anderson, Minden High; Maggie Pesnell, Minden High; Beverly Perez, Doyline, and Maxwell Marcantel, Doyline. Not pictured is Riley Bates. Justice McCallum is pictured on the back row with red bow tie. (Photo by Marilyn Miller)

By Marilyn Miller

“Honesty and integrity are rare, rare commodities,” according to Justice Jay McCallum of the Louisiana Supreme Court.

Last week, Justice McCallum visited with the Minden Masonic Lodge No. 51 and the Temple Lodge of Bossier City to present the annual “Honesty & Integrity” awards to a young man and young woman from each secondary school in south Webster Parish.

The award winners are selected from among the Junior classes by adults (teachers, church people, business people) who “are so impressed by you that they only say good things about you,” the judge said. “They also select a student who wants to only set a good example in life. At the end of life there are only two destinations. You will set a good example and be destined for eternal life.”

“I encourage you to set that example for others.”

Justice McCallum then presented the awards to each student on behalf of the lodges and the parents and families, to Doyline students Beverly Perez and Maxwell Marcantel, Lakeside students Riley Bates (not in attendance) and Gage Williams, Minden High students Matthew Anderson and Maggie Pesnell, and Glenbrook students Landry Merritt and Mollie Thurman.

Pointing to the Bible which is permanently on display in the Masonic Hall, Justice McCallum stated that “true light and true wisdom come from here.” He encouraged them to read the Bible, and to know that Jesus did it for us, lived a subsidiary (supplementary) life for us.” He set the example.

Each award winner was also given a $100 bill on behalf of the Temple Lodge.


WHO serves dinner to more than 600 hungry people

By Zoë Pickett

A huge outpouring of community spirit was on display last weekend as WHO of North Webster, supported by dozens of dedicated volunteers, served a free Thanksgiving meal to more than 600 people.

Organizers said the volunteers worked with incredible energy and heart, taking on every task that needed doing and welcoming guests with warm smiles. What attendees saw as a smooth, cheerful event was made possible by countless hours of hands-on effort behind the scenes.

The gathering became far more than a shared meal. It was a true community Thanksgiving, built by people who genuinely care about their neighbors and about strengthening North Webster Parish.

WHO of North Webster expressed their deep gratitude to every volunteer who made the event possible and shared how proud they were of the teamwork that unfolded.

A special thanks was also given to First Baptist Church, Springhill for generously hosting the event and providing the space for the community to come together.


Pet Project: Meet Jessie

Sponsored by McInnis Insurance Agency.

Intake # 26016 “Jessie” is an approximately 5 yr. old female cur mix at the Minden Animal Control. She is available for rescue through 501c3 group or approved adoption.

Adoption fee $50 (covers spay, microchip, vaccines, worming)

Jessie is light heart-worm positive and will need a treatment plan in place.  She loves people, other dogs, and cats. She is very treat motivated.

For more information, call 318-525-3999. Adoption application-forms.gle/TfS5pe939gbP4t2i6

Jessie

How to thaw a frozen turkey safely

As Thanksgiving approaches, proper turkey preparation is key to ensuring both safety and quality. One of the most important steps is thawing the turkey correctly. While a frozen turkey is safe, once it starts to thaw and its temperature rises above 40°F, bacteria that may have been present before freezing can begin to grow, increasing the risk of food-borne illness.

To reduce this risk, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recommends three safe thawing methods. These guidelines also apply to hams and other meats. Never thaw food in unsafe places such as a garage, basement, car, dishwasher, plastic garbage bag, or outdoors on the porch. These locations cannot maintain a safe temperature, which can lead to harmful bacterial growth.

Method 1: Thawing in the Refrigerator

The safest and most recommended method for thawing your turkey is in the refrigerator. This method allows for a slow, controlled thawing process, keeping the turkey at a safe temperature. Here’s how to do it:

  • Step 1: Leave the turkey in its original packaging and place it on a shelf in your refrigerator. It’s a good idea to place a pan underneath it to catch any juices that may leak out.
  • Step 2: Allow about 24 hours of thawing time for every 4 to 5 pounds of turkey.
  • Step 3: Once the turkey has thawed, it can be stored in the refrigerator for up to two additional days before cooking.

Here’s a more detailed breakdown of thawing times based on the weight of the turkey:

  • 4 to 12 pounds: 1 to 3 days
  • 12 to 16 pounds: 3 to 4 days
  • 16 to 20 pounds: 4 to 5 days
  • 20 to 24 pounds: 5 to 6 days

Method 2: Thawing in the Microwave

The microwave is another option for thawing a turkey, but it requires careful attention. Every microwave is different, so it’s important to follow the manufacturer’s instructions for defrosting poultry. Here’s how you can thaw in the microwave:

  • Step 1: Remove the turkey from its packaging and place it in a microwave-safe container.
  • Step 2: Follow the defrosting instructions provided by your microwave manufacturer. Most microwaves have a special “defrost” setting that will automatically adjust based on the weight of the turkey.
  • Step 3: Since microwaving can cause parts of the turkey to begin cooking while others remain frozen, it’s important to cook the turkey immediately after thawing to prevent bacterial growth in partially cooked areas.

Method 3: Thawing in Cold Water

Cold water thawing is faster than the refrigerator method but requires more attention to ensure safety. Here’s how you can thaw a turkey using cold water:

  • Step 1: Keep the turkey in its original packaging and fully submerge it in cold tap water.
  • Step 2: Change the water every 30 minutes to ensure the turkey remains at a safe temperature. This is important because water temperatures can quickly enter the “danger zone” (41°F to 135°F), where bacteria multiply rapidly.
  • Step 3: Plan for about 30 minutes of thawing time per pound of turkey. After thawing, cook the turkey immediately.

Thawing times for cold water defrosting are as follows:

  • 4 to 12 pounds: 2 to 6 hours
  • 12 to 16 pounds: 6 to 8 hours
  • 16 to 20 pounds: 8 to 10 hours
  • 20 to 24 pounds: 10 to 12 hours

Additional Support

If you have any questions about meat, poultry, or egg products, the USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline is available year-round to assist. You can call them toll-free at 1-888-MPHotline (1-888-674-6854). The hotline is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET, with support available in both English and Spanish. The USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline will be open on Thanksgiving Day, typically from 8am to 2pm Eastern Time.

For additional help and questions, you can also contact Dr. Shakera Williams, Associate Extension Nutrition & Community Health Agent for Webster/Claiborne Parishes, at 318-371-1371 or by email at sswilliams@agcenter.lsu.edu.Remember, keeping your turkey safe as it thaws is essential for a successful and healthy holiday meal.

The LSU AgCenter and LSU provide equal opportunities in their programs and employment.


Bright lights chisel away the bad stuff

Normally when a man or even a woman or child pulls a knife on me in a drugstore, I call “time out” and hustle to another drugstore. When it comes to getting my business, a person – especially an employee — pulling a knife is generally a deal-breaker.

Not so this time, a fondly remembered holiday weekend when some helpful retail employees turned Black Friday into Bright Friday.

To help explain why, we give you one of our greatest Americans, Paul Harvey, a man those of a certain age will remember as closing every optimistic broadcast with his trademark and upbeat, “Goodday!”

God bless and rest his vocal cords.

The late newsman used to remind us that when we give directions, we’re more likely than not tell a person to “go to the red light and …”

“But,” Paul Harvey would say in a lyrical voice that rose until reaching a perfect crescendo at sentence’s end, “that light is GREEN as often as it is RED!…”

(Heard him say it once in the Monroe Civic Center during a Sunday afternoon “concert.” Will never forget it. We exploded like Swifties on speed. Paul was the man, which is another story. America could use him these days…)

Paul Harvey reminded us often on his daily radio show that we humans are flawed and strange creatures, and that we are mostly, by nature, pessimists, with no real reasons to be. (I fooled myself for a long time into thinking I was an optimist, but really I’m no more than pessimist with a decent attitude. It’s a start!)

Paul Harvey was — and remains — right. We’d do well to start seeing the bright side of things or at least give life – and people — the benefit of the doubt.

Consider this recent overheard observation from a consumer who complained with amusement that the employees in one drugstore were nice but that the employees in the same chain drugstore five miles away made the Wicked Witch look like Glinda.

It’s never the store or the organization. Those things are made up of us. Of humans. We are the light that shines or the darkness that fails.

My granddaddy always told me that it’s not the world that’s messed up: it’s the people in it.

But … now and then, when you least expect it, Providence will drop you a reminder that good and decent people are everywhere. They’re trying to do the right thing, and with no big hidden agenda. Most people are just like you and me, trying to get by, not meaning any harm, trying to do the next right thing in spite of being part of a warped species.

Some people don’t just see the green light. They are light. At least on certain days. We all have our moments.

So when I walked into the out-of-town drugstore at dusk on a post-Thanksgiving Friday, all I needed was a phone charger to replace the one that had just died an untimely death. Without a phone charger, I can’t listen to the college football games on the way home. Or anything. This was a big deal to a tired and troubled me, in a foreign town, five lonely hours from home.

The lady at the register was Alisha. Showed me just what I needed. Told me to keep my receipt and try it out in my car.

This one little piece of plastic was keeping it from fitting. They didn’t have any others for me to try. That’s when Jonathan showed up flashing his knife. It appeared in his hand like a handkerchief from a magician’s sleeve. I wondered what this guy was doing working back in the photo lab when he could have a career on stage. Or with the CIA.

“Bet I can fix yours like I fixed mine,” he said, and less than a half-minute later, little plastic shavings were on the glass counter, his knife had disappeared, and a happy customer headed back to Louisiana, all charged up.

They might have wanted to do anything other than work the late shift at the evening drugstore that day. But they seemed genuinely happy to help a guy they didn’t know, a man who’d spent less than $15 in their store. I’ll probably never see them again. All I could do when I got home, fully charged, was write their manager to say thanks.

From now on, whenever I read of Black Friday fistfights, I’ll think of Alisha and Jonathan, and how they made a stranger’s day, gave him a little light at the start of a long, dark drive. I hope they caught every green light on their way home.

I vote for more Bright Fridays.

Goodday!

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu .


The new neighbor

By Brad Dison

In the summer of 2021, a new neighbor moved into what had been a peaceful mobile home park in Coon Rapids, Minnesota, a suburb just north of Minneapolis.  Until then, the residents of the mobile home park held regular barbecues and other outdoor gatherings when the cold Minnesota weather allowed.  Their kids played outside and walked to and from the bus stop without the slightest hint of hesitation.  The trailer park residents got along well with each other.  That all changed when the new neighbor moved in.         

The new neighbor was a bully who victimized the residents of the mobile home park.  The bully chased them, taunted them, and sometimes attacked them.  The residents were unable to relax even when they were inside their own homes because the bully peaked through their windows and made sounds that they said became terrifying to them.  One day, 41-year-old Rachael Gross was carrying her groceries from her car to her home when the bully dropped down from her roof and knocked her to the ground.  During the struggle that followed, the bully ripped her jacket before Rachael was able to escape into her house.  Her groceries lay scattered on her front lawn.  The bully even followed Rachael to the nearby nursing home where she worked and to her favorite local restaurant.  Each time, Rachael rushed inside to safety.  The bully always stopped just shy of following her in.  During another attack, Rachael slung water from her water bottle onto the bully.  The shock from the water gave her just enough time to get inside before the bully ran back toward her.  After numerous attacks, Rachael and her neighbors began to carry sticks, brooms, golf clubs, and baseball bats anytime they went outside.  Rachael and her neighbors called the authorities on several occasions, but the bully continued to terrorize the neighborhood.  Because Rachael was most often the target of the bully, her neighbors began to suspect that she was somehow helping him despite her emphatic denials.      

Rachael felt trapped.  She said, “I’m pretty stressed out and pretty anxious all the time.  I can’t even have peace.  I’m so exhausted.  I hope this gets a solution and somebody comes to help so I don’t have to deal with this anymore, and so that we can all have a peaceful summer with our kids and our grandkids and actually have a barbecue and just relax.”   Summer turned into fall and there was no relief from the bully.  Parents had to walk their kids to and from the bust stop armed with a variety of weapons.  The kids used their backpacks as shields.  The neighborhood cancelled all of their usual outside activities including trick-or-treating at Halloween.  For two years, the residents of the trailer park lived in fear of the bully.  In the fall of 2023, reports of the bullying ended.  Rumors persist that someone in the mobile home park murdered the bully.  Perhaps they were all involved in the murder conspiracy.  Some of the rumors go as far as to say that there is no evidence to be found because the residents ate the bully during a Thanksgiving celebration.  The new neighbor which plagued that mobile home park was a wild turkey.  Happy Thanksgiving!

Sources:

1.     Kirsten Mitchell, “‘This turkey has literally taken over our life’: Wild turkey terrorizing neighbors in Coon Rapids,” CBS News, January 21, 2023, accessed November 16, 2025, https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/wild-turkey-terrorizing-neighbors-in-coon-rapids/.

2.     The Gazette (Cedar Rapids, Iowa), March 5, 2023, p.5M.        


Upcoming Events

Send non-profit calendar events to wpjnewsla@gmail.com .

Nov. 28

Knight Services LLC will be closed Thanksgiving Day. Thursday’s routes will run this day. (Friday).

Nov. 29

9 a.m.until 3 p.m., Hot Cocoa Crawl, Main Street, Springhill.

Shop Small Saturday in Minden. Check out the event on Facebook at Small Business Saturday-Minden and be sure to follow shop Small-Minden  for updates, promotions, and participating businesses.

City of Minden Trash Pick-Up will be this day, rather than Friday, November 28.

Dec. 5

5:30 until 7:30 p.m., Santa, Hot Cocoa & Fireworks, Sibley Town Hall, 345 N. Main Street, Sibley. (Fireworks at 6:30 p.m.)

6 p.m. Minden Medical Center’s 12th annual Rehab Reindeer Run. Sign up at runsignup.com/Race/LA/Minden/RehabReindeerRun

Dec. 7

7 p.m. Minden Community Cantata Choir, under the direction of Dr. Dan Gibbs, presents “The Road to Bethlehem,” at First Methodist Church, 903 Broadway, Minden. Featuring a full orchestra and Legacy Dance Studio of Shreveport. The public is invited to attend.

Dec. 12

6 until 9 p.m., Holiday Trail of Lights Hayride, downtown Minden.

Dec. 12 and 13

Presents on Pearl Vendor Market, downtown Minden.

Dec. 13

5 p.m., A Hometown Christmas Parade, downtown Minden. Rain or Shine!

5 p.m. Doors Open, 6 p.m., Fun starts, LaMa Animal Rescue Santa Paws Village Game Night. Games, concessions, Christmas Costume Contest, BINGO, raffles and more. $20 entry fee. Springhill Civic Center, 101 Machen Drive, Springhill.

Dec. 14

1 until 6 p.m., Christmas Tour of Homes. For tickets and information, call 318-377-4240 or visit greatermindenchamber.com/christmas-in-minden .

Dec. 18

6 p.m. Kid’s Night, Joe LeBlanc Food Pantry, 814 Constable St., Minden, pre-registration required, donations of cereal, bread, canned soups or blankets much appreciated.


Forecast: mostly sunny; rain returns over weekend

Wednesday

Sunny, with a high near 59. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Wednesday Night

Mostly clear, with a low around 36. Calm wind.

Thanksgiving Day

Sunny, with a high near 58. Calm wind.

Thursday Night

Mostly clear, with a low around 37.

Friday

Partly sunny, with a high near 57.

Friday Night

A 20 percent chance of showers after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44.

Saturday

Showers likely. Cloudy, with a high near 59. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent.

Saturday Night

Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm before midnight, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.

Sunday

A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 58.

Sunday Night

A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a low around 45.

Monday

A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high near 56.

*Information provided by National Weather Service.


Another Tomlinson wins Pick’em Contest

Hannah Michael (right), with title sponsor Under Dawgs, hands over $100 to Joe T. Tomlinson, winner of the final week’s contest.

Congratulations, Wayne “Joe T.” Tomlinson of Sibley, La., our week 12 and final winner of Webster Parish Journal’s 2025 Pick’em Contest. Tomlinson’s wife, Candice won in week 11, and he said he could not let her “beat him.”

Tomlinson tied with 1 other player who had nine correct picks and won with the tie breaker.

Congratulations to ALL our winners and thanks for all who played and sponsored our contest. See you next Fall!


Sick and tired of cheaters in bass tournaments

Sports has been a huge part of my life, especially when it comes to baseball and football. I’ve always taken pride in the fact that I never used any form of performance-enhancing drugs to play at a high level. In my mind, this would be a form of cheating, and I made a conscious choice to never be a part of that culture of athletes. 

I saw first-hand how some athletes abused and became victims of decisions and choices they made. It was a huge eye-opening experience my first spring training with the Montreal Expos organization as I saw how many players were using enhancers to perform at a high level. 

I saw the organization basically turn a blind eye to what players were doing to become  better. Oh, it was no secret, and most players did not try and hide what they were using as it was on full display in their lockers. It was just another form of cheating!

Cheating has now become rampant in the tournament bass fishing world. It seems that in every tournament, someone breaks a rule, fails a polygraph test and gets disqualified. 

In the past three years, it has gotten worse — from professional anglers getting caught to amateur anglers trying to win specialty events like big bass tournaments. What happened to the days of anglers going out and fishing with honesty and following the rules?

Why has there been such a surge in anglers’ cheating? The first answer is probably the amount of money tournaments are putting up. Even the lower levels of MLF (Major League Fishing) and the B.A.S.S. organizations have anglers fishing for hundreds of thousands of dollars and opportunities to advance up the ladder of professional bass fishing. 

Even big bass events have anglers fishing for over $100,000 for catching one fish! Like anything else, when there’s a lot of money on the line, it seems to bring out the worst in people. Just like in any form of criminal activity, just follow the money. 

Some anglers will say that there are just too many rules. We all know that the more rules you have in any sport, the more that must be enforced. This makes a bass tournament director’s job even more difficult.

So how do we hit the reset button and get anglers to find their moral compass and follow the rules? I’m not sure we can put the genie back into the bottle, as our society in general has so many people with no morals who will do whatever they can in order to win or get ahead in life.  

I think the first course of action must be making the punishment fit the crime. Organizations must come down harder on these individuals who think it’s OK to cheat! Guidelines need to be established for the severity of the rule or rules that have been violated. 

We aren’t looking for anyone to go before the firing squad, but suspending anglers for the entire season would be a great start. The harder you come down on these anglers, the more they will think twice about cheating. 

Maybe we need to go the legal route, as cheating in a bass tournament is considered fraud. By making a few examples with prosecution, it will probably make others think twice about bending the rules.

These are sad times we live in and it’s a shame we have so many anglers that think it’s OK to cheat. This is one of many reasons why tournament participation is down nationwide. But with more severe punishment, maybe we can reset the course of tournament bass fishing.


Weekly Filings

The following civil suits were filed with the Webster Parish Clerk of Court the week of Nov. 21 through Nov. 25:

Nov. 21
Betty Sue Sanders Tate, succession under $125K.
Zoila BV Horton, succession over $125K.
Natasha Gayle Bailey vs. Samantha Bailey, divorce w/children.
Taylor Alexis Landry vs. Zachariah James Landry, protective order.
Credit Corp. Solutions, Inc. vs. Mardarius Frazier, monies due.
Capital One vs. Joshua C. Pruitt, monies due.
Portfolio Recover Associates vs. Chrystal Guin, monies due.
PennyMac Loan Services vs. Grace Elizabeth Carson, executory process.

Nov. 24
Capital One vs. Emily Martin, monies due.
Home Federal Bank vs. Jamaica Johnson, executory process.

Nov. 25
Mahlon Ray Taylor, succession under $125K.
Terry Hoof, Mayor Of Cullen vs. Fran Pearlette Gipson, protective order.
Kristine Griffin vs. Benjamin Griffin, divorce, no children.


Arrest Reports

Rakish Alexander, 31, 100 block Nora Ave., Cotton Valley; arrested Nov. 24 by Probation and  Parole for parole violatio, on fugitive warrant from Springhill PD for home invasion, simple battery of the informed. Bond set $120,000.

Mary Lee-Rosana Cole, 52, 200 block Nursery Rd., Sibley: arrested Nov. 25 by WPSO on warrants. Bond set $5,000.

Bobby Lee Parks, 53, 2900 block Peach St., Shreveport: arrested Nov. 24 at Bayou Dorcheat Correctional Facility on warrant for resisting an officer. Bond set $500.

Devon Michael Stiles, 25, 100 block N.E. 1st Ave., Sibley: arrested Nov. 25 by Minden PD for simple robbery. Bond set $10,000.

Ravi Andrelavere Flournoy, 49, 800 block McCausland St., Minden: arrested Nov. 25 by Minden PD for possession of CDS Sch. II (crack cocaine). Bond set $2,500.

Charles Edward Howard, 39, 700 block Wood St., Minden: arrested Nov 25 by Minden PD for flight from officer, improper lane usage, expired drivers license, possession of drug paraphernalia. No bond set.

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 – November 25, 2025

Walter A. Humphrey
April 11, 1930 — November 22, 2025
Dubberly
Graveside service: 2:30 p.m. Friday, November 28, 2025, Fellowship Cemetery, Dubberly, under the direction of Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Minden.

Rev. Wayne Young Reeves
November 1, 1931  –  November 24, 2025
Heflin/Springhill
Visitation: 10 until 11 a.m. Wednesday, November 26, 2025, Bistineau Baptist Church, Heflin.
Funeral service: 11 a.m., immediately following visitation.
Burial: Bistineau Baptist Church Cemetery under the direction of Bailey Funeral Home, Springhill.

Lisa D. Chism
June 20, 1970 — November 22, 2025
Minden
Memorial service at later date.

Michael S. Calhoun
August 27, 1970 — November 21, 2025
Minden
For information, contact Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Minden.

Webster Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or wpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)


MPD wrecks rec smoker

By Pat Culverhouse

One man’s idea of recreation has landed him in hot water with the law after the vehicle he occupied was noticed parked in the street beside a “No Parking” sign at the city’s recreation center.

Minden Chief of Police Jared McIver said 24-year-old Jaloyld Jamesterrio Kimble is now parked at the parish prison facing one charge of possession of CDS Sch. I (marijuana) plus being the subject of a pair of outstanding warrants.

McIver reportedly was checking vehicles illegally parked on the recreation center’s roadway when he observed an individual sitting in the back seat of one car which nearly blocked one lane of traffic. When the Chief approached, he noticed the strong odor of marijuana coming from inside.

When questioned, Kimble reportedly admitted he was in possession of a “doobie” in his pocket. He reportedly complied to a request to empty his pockets, and removed just over eight grams of natural marijuana.

Officer Jessica Thompson, who arrived to assist, reportedly discovered Kimble also had on active bench warrant through MPD and was wanted on a fugitive warrant from the Webster Parish Sheriff’s Office.

He reportedly is being held at Bayou Dorcheat Correctional Facility under a total bond of $40,000.

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.