Forecast: Showers over next few days

Thursday

A chance of showers before 10 a.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 92. Heat index values as high as 103. Calm wind becoming southwest around 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

Thursday Night

A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 a.m. Partly cloudy, with a low around 76. Southeast wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Juneteenth

Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm before 1 p.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 90. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.

Friday Night

Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 74. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.

Saturday

A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 90.

Saturday Night

A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 76.

Sunday

A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 93.

*Information provided by National Weather Service.


Upcoming Events

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

June 18

6 p.m., Concern Citizens of Webster Parish, Main Meeting Room, Webster Parish Library, 521 East and West St., Minden.

June 19

5 until 9 p.m., Juneteenth celebration, MLK Drive, Minden. Food, live music, games and activities for all ages, fellowship, community unity, local vendors. For more information, call Michael Walker at 318-210-1799.

June 20 – 21

Minden St. Jude Diamond Open in memory of Stanton Haynes. Minden Recreation Complex. Call 318-465-1938 or visit http://www.mindendiamondmemorial.com .

June 20

8 a.m. until 3 p.m. Men’s Wellness Fair, presented by Healing from the Heart LLC. Minden Recreation Center. Tickets are $10 and may be purchased at eventbrite or at the door.

June 21

8 a.m. until a p.m., service at 10:45 a.m., Men’s Wellness Fair weekend continues, New Light Baptist Church, Minden.

June 22 – 26

9 a.m. until noon, Earth Camp 2026 at The Farm of Cultural Crossroads, Minden, ages 6 through 9.

1 p.m. until 3 p.m., ages 10 through 16.

6 until 8:30 p.m., Vacation Bible School, North Acres Baptist Church. Register at https://onrealm.org/NorthAcresBapti31149/Registrations/Registrants/e37ca670-d1e0-4d26-8e23-b409010037cd?congregantView=true&connect=true&viewIndividualId=cd5677d8-e681-479f-af07-b3fc012389f5 .

June 25

10 a.m. Elder Fraud Awareness Session, presented by Louisiana Attorney General’s Office. Sibley Town Hall, Sibley, La. Call 318-377-0345 to RSVP.

June 27

Annual Ride for WHO Poker Run. Pre-register to ride at http://bit.ly/3PG71ZH .

9 until 10 a.m. Check in at Cash Magic Springhill for W.H.O. Poker Run. Pre-register at http://bit.ly/3PG71ZH . Benefits Women Helping Others.

2 until 6 p.m., Miller Quarters Park, Minden, Daddies With Angels Cookout. Hearts & Halos event to support grieving fathers.

4 until 8 p.m. Minden Historic District Sip and Stroll, an evening of local shopping, support and community. Vendor market spots are limited.

July 3

7 until 9:30 p.m. Springhill Freedom Fest, Frank Anthony Park, Springhill.

July 9

5:30 p.m. Gather and Grow – Gardening for Pollinators, Webster Parish Extension Office, 1202 Homer Road, Minden. For more information, call 318-371-1371 or 318-927-3110.

July 13 – 17

5:30 until 8:30 p.m., Vacation Bible School, First Methodist Church, 903 Broadway, Minden, ages pre-K through 6th grade. Supper provided. Call 318-377-1483 or visit https://www.facebook.com/100064614286593/posts/1321421020021695/?fs=e&mibextid=wwXIfr&rdid=wKEx4hN4p2w03lR0# for more information.

July 26 – 31

6 until 8:10 p.m. Vacation Bible School, Calvary Baptist Church, 1400 Homer Road, Minden. For more information: calvaryminden.com/vbs .

August 15

9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Rooted Women’s Conference, North Acres Baptist Church, 1852 Lewisville Road, Minden. This is a day for women who strive to be rooted in The Word. Hear from our keynote speaker, Stephanie Smithson, as she focuses on spiritual understanding and biblical literacy along with our multi-generational panel of ladies, who will describe what being rooted in Christ means to them. Come for a day of acoustic worship, fellowship, teaching and food! Your $30 ticket includes the conference, t-shirt, and a light lunch provided by Hugh Wood Catering. Childcare is provided. Registration is open through July 5. Register at https://onrealm.org/NorthAcresBapti31149/PublicRegistrations/Event?linkString=ZTc4OTQ2Y2EtZmM3Ny00MWM2LWE2NmUtYjQzMzAwZmUyZDgx .


Word of the day: Erudite

Word of the day: Erudite

Phonetic: /er· u· dite/
Part of Speech: Adjective
Definition

having or showing knowledge that is gained by studying : possessing or displaying
an erudite scholar

There was the erudite-but-humble professor next door and upstairs.
—Maria Shine Stewart

In the telling of a life lived through books, and in her own sometimes floridly erudite sentences, the deep magic of writing is revealed.
—Nina Renata Aron


Arrest Reports

Tarcus Hawthorne, 55, 1000 block Henrietta White Blvd., Cullen: arrested June 15 by WPSO on warrant for failure to appear on charge of driving under suspension. Bond set $1,000.

Javonte J. Morris, 22, 200 block PecanView, Minden: turned himself in to Minden PD on warrant for aggravated assault with a firearm. Bond set $50,000.

Russell Jones, 47, 100 block Milton, Minden: arrested June 15 by Minden PD on warrants. No bond set.

Lish Antonio Island, 54, 100 block Austins Rd., Minden: arrested June 16 by WPSO for illegal possession of stolen firearms, possession of firearm by convicted felon. Bond set $80,000. 

Devoicee Troyshan Taylor, 20, 2200 block Reynolds St., Springhill: arrested June 17 by WPSO on warrants. 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 – June 17, 2026

Dale Matthews
September 12, 1948  –  January 11, 2026
Sarepta
Memorial service: 2 p.m. Saturday, June 20, 2026, Cotton Valley Cemetery under the direction of Bailey Funeral Home, Springhill.

Frances Ann Lester Posey
October 10, 1937 — May 23, 2026
Minden/Mansfield
Graveside service: 11 a.m. Saturday, June 27, 2026, Mansfield Cemetery.

Patsy Ann Greene Cahoon
August 2, 1943  –  May 26, 2026
Springhill/Shreveport
Graveside service: 1 p.m. Saturday, July 11, 2026, Old Sarepta Cemetery, Sarepta, La., under the direction of Bailey Funeral Home, Springhill.

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.)


Shelley Masog to take over reins of WP Libraries Minden Branch on July 26

Shelley Masog in the place she loves wholeheartedly, the Webster Parish Library in Minden.

By Marilyn Miller

Library Resource Administrator Shelley Masog will step into the role of head Librarian for the Minden Branch of Webster Parish Libraries on July 26, 2026 when current Librarian Savannah Jones moves on to accept a position with her local family-owned business.

She’ll have some big shoes to fill, since nearly 10,000 people found their way into the stately Minden Library in 2025 to take part in many offerings. “We offer many unique services beyond traditional book checkout,” Shelley said. “We provide Outreach and Homebound Delivery, VHS to DVD conversion, meeting rooms, Roku and hotspot checkout, online eBook and audiobook access, a summer Discovery Camp program, children’s and adult programming, and our annual Trunk or Treat.”

Shelley hasn’t always been a part of the Louisiana public library system. She became a middle school teacher after earning her undergraduate degree in English from LSU-Shreveport. She then pursued her masters in Library and Information Science at LSU in Baton Rouge, beginning her library career in 2009 with the New Orleans Public Library. In 2012, she “had the honor of serving as the branch manager of the Norman Mayer Library for the re-opening of the new building constructed after Hurricane Katrina.”

In 2015, Shelley moved to the Shreve Memorial Library, and in 2017 she moved to Webster Parish Libraries. She has served as Library Resource Administrator at Minden since 2019. “I enjoy engaging with patrons and helping them learn something new or finding something they need. Even in background roles, such as Technical Services, the work is rewarding and supports other staff while serving our library community.”

The new librarian expects Webster Parish Libraries to continue thriving with current offerings and services, many instituted under Savannah. But she does have a “couple of new ideas. But it’s too early to announce them. My goal is to continue building on the strong foundation already in place, while looking for new ways to meet the changing needs of our community.”

“I am especially interested in continuing to strengthen access, outreach, programming, technology services and partnerships throughout Webster Parish. Libraries have always been vital to thriving communities. For many people, the library is one of the few places where they can access information, support, and services at no cost. Libraries help strengthen communities by making resources available to everyone.”

In addition to checking out books, libraries provide access to technology, digital resources, research assistance, educational programming, meeting spaces, job search resources, and community connections.

“I do have plans for WPL, but I also believe in taking time to listen, evaluate and work with staff before making major changes. My focus will be on continuing the services our patrons value, supporting our staff, strengthening community partnerships, and identifying opportunities for growth. I want WPL to continue being a welcoming, useful, and forward-thinking library system for all of Webster Parish.”

In 2023, the Webster Parish Library was named the “Community Partner of the Year” by the Greater Minden Chamber. And in 2024, the Mack Memorial Library was named the “Ambassador of the Year” by the Springhill-North Webster Chamber of Commerce.

“I am so proud and honored to be a part of Webster Parish Libraries,” Shelley, who was the 2025 Louisiana Library Association’s Public Librarian of the Year, said. “I have been here nine years now, and I am proud of the services we offer and the staff who make everything possible. We have an amazing team who genuinely cares about the communities we serve.”


Coach Mike: An unwilling star of the movie

By TEDDY ALLEN

Written for the LSWA

(The scene is a cramped meeting room the size of the average American kitchen. Around a small oval table is a girl and two guys, including Scotty, the production manager, dressed in khaki and polo and youthful confidence. Yellow legal pads and paper cups of coffee are involved, pens and markers and laptops, the out-of-place, somewhat lonely Fresca. Scotty speaks …)

“Harvey and the new guy are a couple doors down in Development working on the script, polishing things up — Horatio’s doing some rewrites, a part or two that just didn’t feel right, you know? — but I wanted to get you up to speed on exactly where we are on the doc on Mike McConathy. So me and Larry felt we’d open this way …

“Hey Emmett, please take a sec and skate down to PR and ask them to release that Bossier City native Mike McConathy, the winningest college basketball coach in state history, a prep All-American guard at Airline High and an honorable mention All-American guard for Louisiana Tech before launching a history-making coaching career at Bossier Parish Community College and then Northwestern State, will be enshrined in the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Saturday night, June 27, at the Hall of Fame’s home in Natchitoches. Add that ticket information for the seven events over three days of festivities, June 25-27, is available at the LaSportsHall.com or by calling by calling 318-238-4255 …, and remind everyone it’s always sold out so get on the horn and let’s have some fun honoring the Class of 2026. Appreciate. Take off. Come back with an expresso or don’t come back …

“So Coach Mike is driving his truck down a two-lane road where the trees touch over the middle stripe. Got the Location crew scouting for the perfect spot. He’s right at home, happy as a flea at a dog show because this is the man’s wheelhouse. The guy’s face is practically glowing … He’s either driving to any one of the Louisiana high school gyms he’s been to over and over for 40 years OR he’s wearing that big floppy straw hat and we pan to the weed eaters and gas cans and rakes and mowers in the bed … You see where I’m going? It’s a beautiful open, is what it is …

“So Coach Mike is driving down a two-lane heading to a game because that’s where he’s most happy except it’s probably not gonna be Mike because the guy doesn’t toot his own horn. At all. We’re not gonna be able to get him to say anything about himself. Me and T-Money ate lunch with him in Bossier and we get this: ‘I’ve never thought of myself as being better than anybody else. That’s just who I am. I played and coached with unbelievable people. Fans have been very supportive, always. I just never think of myself that way.’ That’s it. Guy just keeps chewing. Swigs water. Like he’s talking about last week’s weather.

“His wife of 48 years and counting, Connie? Met on a blind date. She didn’t know he played basketball. They’d been dating just six months and the junior high kids she was student teaching told her he’d made all-conference. ‘If the students hadn’t told me,’ she says, ‘I still wouldn’t know.’ True story!

“You know how she found out he was in the Hall of Fame? Family text thread. Michael or Logan, one of the sons. No, for real: hand on my heart …

“So somebody who can sell ‘humble and loyal’ and make it authentic — gotta be authentic — will have to play him; he might not even let us take his picture holding a basketball. I’m thinking Bryan Cranston, funny but can get serious. Russell Crowe and go the’ gladiator’ angle, though that might be too … what’s the word? … gruesome? Sweaty? Too Roman?  Woody Harrelson is a frontrunner since he was in a basketball movie, maybe Keanu Reeves with that certain All-American Dude quality. The perfect guy, the PERFECT guy, is Denzel — but he’d really have to sell it … you feel me? Not sure if Harrelson can still dunk, but Denzel can. Like Coach Mike, Denzel can do ANYthing and still be ‘everyman’ …

(Coffee slurps … the tic-tac of keys on a laptop. Somewhere, a dog barks …)

“But humble and loyal won’t get you into the Hall. Coach Mike has the numbers to go with the soul. Double-threat. Best of both worlds. All like that. The ol’ ‘Nice Guys Finish First’ bit — for a nice change.

“Here’s where the numbers tell the story through the clips with people who know him better than anyone …

“High school early ’70s, Airline in Bossier, son of Northwestern State great John McConathy, the fifth pick in the 1951 draft. We’ve got Airline teammates Terry Slack and Steve Haynes, football stars, talking about Mike having keys to the gym, practicing while wearing ankle weights, jumping rope, always working, getting recruited by Oklahoma and LSU and NSU and more, and eventually deciding to go to Ruston with them, just in a different sport …

“Then Tech teammates Tom Morris and Walter May and Tim Floyd and Jim Woolridge, quick bytes about how he’s the most dedicated athlete they’ve ever seen, and that sweet jump shot, no wasted movement, fluid as water from a garden hose, the 9-1 Southland Conference title his junior year, him getting 25 a game and being the league’s Player of the Year …

(Somewhere, a cat meows …)

“Keith Prince, Tech’s sports information director when McConathy played in 1974-77, tells us how Mike got drafted by the Bulls but the ABA/NBA merger cut out 100-plus pro jobs, how he played some European ball, then how he found his way back to Bossier Parish and brief high school gigs before starting the Bossier Parish Community College men’s basketball team with zip, playing in Airline’s gym, and winning 352 games in 16 seasons. Again, the guy did this from scratch. Didn’t have as much as an air pump …

“Then Shreveport’s Wayne Smith, another Tech all-conference and Tech Athletics Hall of Famer a decade after Mike, saying he saw Mike not only win at BPCC, but make sure, with limited resources, his players had food and some kind of housing and a chance, the one thing they needed the most. “Great player and coach,” Smith says on camera, “five-star man.” Game recognizing game. Sound and Music are seeing if the theme from Rocky might be good here, building to …

“The biggie. Northwestern State. The Demons. Where this Bulldog, this guy the Hall’s chairman and almost forever NSU SID Doug Ireland calls ‘a unicorn of a human,’ was ultimately meant to be. We’re talking 330 wins in 23 seasons, 682 total wins when we add 352 wins in 16 seasons at BPCC: Visual Effects is cooking up some snazzy presentation of the numbers. Meanwhile we’ve got Doug rattling off about Coach doing everything off the court from striping parking lots to pro bono weed eating on campus, a semi-continuance of the side biz he had in Bossier to get his Cavaliers some work and to SEE if they’d work …

“You’ll love this: we even have a Building and Grounds guy talking about how he thought Coach was one of THEM until he went to a game and saw the weed eater guy calling timeouts. Is that beautiful or WHAT?! We even have a couple of local non-profit directors saying with not a little embarrassment that they’d originally thought he worked for THEM. The guy was like a yard guy slash fix-it guy for the parish, AND he coached the basketball team. Only thing he lacked was a cape. (Scotty turns to the kid in J.Crew) Emmett, run down to Costume and see if we’ve got a purple and orange cape … might work that in … he did wear those checkerboard purple and orange pants coaching games.

(Somewhere, a crow caws …)

“A blurb of Greg Burke, NSU AD when Mike was coach, thanking his guy for the $5 million-plus his teams brought in from playing 117 guarantee games — including road wins at Auburn, Oklahoma State, Mississippi State, UTEP and neutral-court victories over Oregon State and 15th-ranked Iowa in the 2006 NCAA Tournament. Burke cries a little, understandable, especially when he gets to the part about 90 percent of the Demon hoopsters graduating. NINETY PERCENT! Believe that? …

“Then Chris Maggio tears up. TearFest, I’m telling you. Maggio, lifelong Natty resident and former NSU president. Former high school coach. Maggio takes us from March 1999, when Mike took over a Demons’ program with only five winning seasons and no postseason trips in 24 years of Division I history, to the Southland championship game that first season. And this without making over the roster! It’s a Demon miracle! Glory! …

“Here’s where Chris Thompson jumps in since Chris played for Mike both at BPCC and NSU. Chris describes the joy of winning the SLC title game Mike’s second season and the program earning the first of four postseason tournament appearances. Then we roll clips from those: NCAA 2001, Opening Round win over Winthrop; NCAA 2006, No. 14 seed First Round upset of No. 3 seed and Big Ten Tournament champ Iowa, a game everyone in Natchitoches swears they watched if they weren’t in Auburn Hills, Mich.; NCAA 2013’s First Round loss to eventual NCAA champion Florida, and the 2014 CIT home game. Video montage of those games with nat sound …

“It’s gold, is what it is. You love it! … I can tell by the way you’re smacking your Juicy Fruit. I do too! …

“And so, The End. On-court buckets and hugs. Sweaty time outs. Family pics. A quick blurb of Mike’s haberdasher saying, “He didn’t invent the mock turtleneck,” — this is courtside through tears after the buzzer-beater over Iowa, “he merely perfected it.” Oh! — almost forgot: some sentimental footage from February 15 last year when they named the Prather Coliseum court after him. THE WHOLE COURT! People DO this sort of thing? Guess we should get that in, amiright? LOL! Good stuff.

“Big Finish, but like Coach Mike, understated. A comment from — get this — the straw hat. The big nasty straw hat he wears when he’s weed eating the world. We’ve got Creative on it now, to make it work. All the hat says, shyly but with gratitude, is this: ‘I know I’m just a hat. A hat that needs an oil change, if we’re being honest. Just an ordinary hat. But when I’m on Coach Mike’s head, somehow, I feel more like a crown.’

(Fade to black. And purple. And orange …)


WHO of North Webster sponsors fundraiser for Springhill woman

By Ramanda Ketchum

On Friday, May 22, our community was shaken when Lacy Wooten was suddenly airlifted to LSU Ochsner Medical Center after suffering a major brain bleed. Since then, she has undergone multiple procedures in an effort to stop the bleeding. During her hospitalization, it was also discovered that she had suffered a stroke. At this time, Lacy remains hospitalized and is expected to face a lengthy recovery that will include extensive rehabilitation. The full extent of her recovery and the long-term effects are still unknown.

Many of you know Lacy as the smiling face behind Raggamuffins in Springhill. She is a devoted wife, loving mother, business owner, and friend to so many. Together, Lacy and her husband Shannon have built a life centered around faith, family, hard work, and services to others. Their two daughters, Chloe and Kipper, are truly the center of their world.

In the midst of this difficult season, Chloe and Kipper have stepped up in incredible ways, taking on the responsibility of helping run their mother’s business while Shannon works tirelessly to keep his own company running and makes the frequent trips back and forth to Shreveport to be by Lacy’s side whenever possible.

Anyone who knows Lacy knows that she was the heart of her home, always caring for everyone around her and making sure their needs were met. Her absence is deeply felt, and the emotional, physical, and financial strain on this family is significant.


Music, food, family fun at free Hall of Fame Rockin’ River Fest Friday, June 26

Friday night is just right for some midsummer magic under the moonlight, free for all, during next weekend’s Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Induction Celebration in Natchitoches.

Specifically, it’s going to happen next Friday evening into night, June 26, on the Rue Beauport stage bordering Cane River Lake smack dab in the middle of the City of Lights’ historic and beautiful downtown district. It’s the free Rockin’ Riverfest party presented by Rapides Regional Medical Center and Louisiana Propane Dealers.

The showcase act is Blue Crab Redemption, a Louisiana bred and fed alt blues/rock band whose major influences include Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan, John Mayer, Stevie Wonder and The Eagles.  Their sound is a raw, classic vibe from ghosts of legends past blended with the soulful influences of the modern rock era.

The opener is Connor Martin, a country artist passionate about creating music that inspires and connects. Recently, Martin has opened for Easton Corbin, Tyler Farr, Parker McCollum, and Keith Urban.

Good times will abound during the riverfront concert, which runs from 6 p.m. to 10:30. One of the highlights: at 9:15, the Hall’s impressive Class of 2026 will be introduced on stage, and celebrated with a 10-minute fireworks show set to sports-themed music over Cane River Lake. Then the music cranks up again for another hour of festivities.

And yes, you read correctly. It’s free to attend.

There will be food and beverage vendors – Girlines Home Cooking, Soulful Wings, Summer Snow To Go and for the grown-ups, Maggio’s, on the riverfront, and of course, Front Street’s always fun watering holes/restaurants are just a few steps away.

MOVE Sport and Spine will set up their sharp-looking apparel line for sale, and Hall of Fame gear will also be available.

It’s family friendly. A free interactive kids zone presented by the New Orleans Saints and Pelicans will include basketball, football, baseball games and inflatables for all ages to enjoy. NSU athletes will be on hand to help the kids have all the fun, and give away some basketballs.

If you want to beat the summer heat and enjoy a tasty collection of Louisiana foods and specialty refreshments, hurry and visit LaSportsHall.com to snap up some of the fast-disappearing $100 tickets to the VIP Taste of Tailgating presented by Hancock Whitney.

That party runs from 7-10 p.m. in the air-conditioned comfort of Mama’s Oyster House and Blues Room that will provide exclusive access to the 12-member 2026 Induction Class.

Join the fun and celebrate some of Louisiana’s sports greats, for free, on Friday evening, June 26, in downtown Natchitoches.

Rockin’ River Fest is one of three free events during the Induction Celebration, starting with the free Welcome Reception Thursday evening, June 25, from 5-7 in the Hall of Fame museum. It’s not a dress-up event, just a come eat and meet the inductees and check out the world-class museum at no charge. The other free event is the Saturday morning June 27 Saints & Pelicans LSHOF Junior Training Camp for kids. Advance registration is necessary at LaSportsHall.com.

For information on all seven events during the June 25-27 Class of 2026 Induction Celebration, visit LaSportsHall.com or call 318-238-4255.

Paid Content


Bake … And Serve

“In Joppa there was a disciple named Tabitha; she was always doing good and helping the poor.” – Acts 9:36

Last week momma wrote to tell me about her day, which included visiting our friend at the retirement home and baking three Italian crème cakes for somebody, I can’t remember who or how many.

Later it was another note that mentioned baking a cake for the Vacation Bible School teachers; my sister was on her way to check on her mother-in-law, whose husband was sick. 

And I got in the mail my monthly newsletter from my uncle and aunt, stats and detailed updates about their ministry to the elderly and shut-in.

I don’t know what I was doing while they were up to all that. Cracking jokes and drinking coffee, most likely. Probably not doing anything of eternal value. Nothing like what Tabitha was doing, as recorded in Acts.

Tabitha was bona fide.

Tabitha was a disciple. She did not lead worship, or singing, or teach Bible study or serve on a committee. She might have done those things, but the way the text in Acts is worded, it leads me to believe she was “support personnel,” a behind-the-scenes force, stealthy to the masses, very visible to the wounded.

When she died, “widows stood around crying and showing him (Peter) the robes and other clothing that (Tabitha) had made while she was still with them.” (Acts 9: 39 NIV) Tabitha sowed the good seeds by sewing. By baking. Helping. Sweeping up.

At Peter’s request, God raised this valuable Jesus follower from the dead. “This became known all over Joppa, and many people believed in the Lord.” (Acts 9: 42 NIV)

It all matters. Sort of like baseball. Sort of like all sports. Sort of like living. The smallest things.

A broom. A mop. Needle and thread. A female disciple of 2,000 years ago, a cook and a seamstress, a maid and a patient ear, was no small fry. And neither are you. Your hands are those of Christ’s. Your hands serve his brothers and sisters, his Father’s sons and daughters.

In the kitchen and in the pulpit, in the laundry room or in the choir loft, we are never more like Christ than we when serve.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu .


The Community Café

The day before we opened The Downtowner in Gulfport, the leadership team and I sat around a table and just talked. Sports. The weather. Who has the best shrimp po-boy on the coast.

That has never happened to me before.

Forty-five years in this business have put me through 27 restaurant openings. The day before the doors swing is usually a fire drill. Somebody is racing across town for a forgotten case of to-go boxes. A cooler quits. The card reader won’t talk to the printer. The punch list grows faster than anybody can punch it.

This time there was nothing for me to do.

It would be nice to tell you that’s because after 45 years I finally have the whole thing figured out. That’s not the case. The credit belongs to other people: the leadership team that runs our restaurant company, the team that runs The Downtowner, and the folks who were hired right and trained right. Even our builder, Dan Hensarling Construction, finished a month early, handed over the keys, and then hung around to make sure we didn’t need anything. That was a first, too.

I’ve thought about that team every day this week. What I didn’t expect was how much I’d think about the building.

The Downtowner sits in the old Triplett Day Pharmacy space, which anchored the heart of downtown Gulfport for more than 75 years, back when downtown Gulfport was the thriving center of the community. Like most drugstores of its era, Triplett Day had a lunch counter, and that counter fed the town. Three shifts of men came in for coffee every morning. The first crew showed up around seven. Another bunch wandered in a little later, and a third before the morning was through. Every one of them was the same-stool, same-order, every-single-day type, and they sat there and argued sports and politics until somebody had to get to work.

A place like that becomes part of the fabric of a community.

Then COVID came. Triplett Day closed, the building was mothballed, and what was left inside eventually got gutted. The space has sat empty ever since.

My eye had been on downtown Gulfport for six years, and Mayor Billy Hewes kept after me about it the entire time. He brought it up whenever our paths crossed and never once let it go. Two years ago we finally pulled the trigger and committed to opening a community cafe in the old pharmacy spot.

Community cafe is a deliberate choice of words. Some folks want to tag us as a diner, and we’re not one. A diner is fast and loud, gum-smacking, order-at-the-counter, usually dressed up in a 1950s theme. We are a community cafe.

There was a time in this country when that’s nearly all there was. Most towns had two restaurants: a community cafe where everybody ate, and a fine dining room, usually run by a French chef serving a French menu, because nobody back then believed American food was worthy of fine dining. Thankfully, that changed. But the cafe was where the town actually gathered. It was the backbone of the place.

That belief has stuck with me my whole career. Anytime travel takes me somewhere new, the first stop is the hotel front desk, and the question is always the same: where do the locals eat breakfast? Take me where the men are talking sports and politics over pancakes. More can be learned about a town at that counter than from any brochure or tourism website ever printed.

Then the 1970s and 80s rolled in. Themed restaurants and corporate chains spread across the country and pushed the local, independently owned cafes out of business, one Main Street at a time. That has bothered me for a long time. Those little cafes in my hometown were the places I loved growing up.

The coast had them too.

My love of restaurants was born on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. My father died when I was six, and my mother raised my brother and me on a public-school art teacher’s salary. We didn’t have any money. Somehow, she scraped together enough to buy a small fish camp on the Pascagoula River, and that’s where my love of seafood was born as well. Weekends were spent fishing and running crab traps and skiing, and many evenings we’d ride out to eat at the restaurants strung along the coast.

I had my first raw oyster at Baricev’s. Fried shrimp meant the Friendship House. The Tiki Room at Mary Walker Marina was the biggest treat of all, because we could get there by boat. Angelo’s had the red gravy, and red gravy was serious business in our family.

That’s the food we serve at The Downtowner. Real breakfast: eggs, biscuits, pancakes. A proper meat-and-three at lunch, which is getting nearly as hard to find as the cafes themselves. Some call that kind of cooking soul food. Some call it country cooking. My name for it is heritage cuisine. It’s the food our grandmothers raised us on, and something that important shouldn’t be allowed to slip away. Those traditions deserve to be carried forward and handed down.

The Downtowner is a sister restaurant to our Midtowner in Hattiesburg, which has been open seven years now. Opening a concept that time has tried to eliminate is a risk, and that much was clear going in. Six days in, the verdict is showing up in people’s faces when they walk through the door. More than a thousand images of historic Gulfport hang on the walls, and the stories keep coming from folks who used to eat downtown and have been waiting years for somebody to turn the lights back on in that building.

Hiring on the coast had me worried, truth be told. The casinos employ half the region, and a historic hotel opened a block away a month before we did. My assumption was that the hospitality talent pool had already been drained dry.

I was wrong.

We have put together as solid and professional a team of hospitalitarians, front of the house and back, as any kitchen of mine has ever fielded. They are the reason there was nothing for me to do the day before we opened.

One of these mornings, three shifts of coffee drinkers are going to claim what they’ll call “the liar’s table” and pick up the argument right where Triplett Day left off. When that happens, my job will be the same one I had the day before we opened.

Stay out of the way.

Onward.

The World’s Last Meatloaf

2 pounds Ground beef

1 Tbl Bacon grease (or canola oil)

1 cup Onion, minced

3 /4 cup Celery, minced

3 /4 cup Bell pepper, minced

1 tsp Garlic, minced

1 /8 tsp Thyme, dry

1 /4 tsp Oregano, dry

2 tsp  Steak Seasoning         

1 Tbl  Salt

1 cup Milk

1 /2 cup Ketchup

1 Tbl Worcestershire sauce

3  Eggs

1 cup Bread crumbs, course

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. 

Heat the bacon grease in a large skillet over medium heat. Sauté vegetables with salt and dry herbs until tender. Allow to cool. 

Combine milk, eggs, Worcestershire and ketchup and mix well. Place ground beef, cooled vegetables and egg mixture into a large mixing bowl. Using your hands, squish the meatloaf until you have mixed everything together and all is well incorporated. Fold in the breadcrumbs last. 

Shape the meat mixture into the form of a loaf on a baking sheet. Using your hand, make an indentation down the center of the loaf (This is where the glaze goes). Bake 50 minutes. 

While meatloaf is cooking make the glaze. Remove from the oven and spoon glaze down the center of the meatloaf and spread over the sides. Return meatloaf to oven, lower heat to 300 degrees and bake 30 minutes more. Allow meatloaf to rest 15 minutes before serving. Yield: 8-10 servings 

Tomato Glaze

Ingredients:

1 tsp. Bacon fat

1 tsp. Garlic, minced

1 Tbl. Onion, minced

¼ cup Brown sugar

2 Tbl. Yellow mustard

1 Tbl. Worcestershire Sauce

1 cup Ketchup

Heat the bacon fat in a small skillet over a low heat. Cook the onions and garlic for 2-3 minutes. Add the brown sugar and allow it to melt. Stir in remaining ingredients.

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


My Appeal to the Voters of Louisiana

By Republican U.S. Senate Candidate John Fleming, M.D.

Now that the incumbent, Dr. Bill Cassidy, has been eliminated from the Republican Party’s runoff election, Louisiana voters need to decide who is the best candidate to represent them in the U.S. Senate.

All voters hear from my opponent, Congresswoman Julia Letlow, is that she “earned the endorsement of President Trump.” However, the endorsement was totally engineered by Governor Jeff Landry through the political back door.

What did Julia Letlow do to earn the endorsement? Was it her lifetime commitment as a liberal academic to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI), policies that President Trump strenuously opposes? Was it her liberal voting record in Congress that was in direct opposition to the President’s Make America Great Again (MAGA) and America First agenda?

Was it her vote to fund the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) during the Biden administration that allocated taxpayer money toward abortions and gender reassignment surgeries overseas?

Was it her staunch support for Biden’s Green Energy and Climate Change agenda, including carbon sequestration?

Was it her record of incompetence, passing no bills into law during her five years in Congress?

In contrast to her history of liberalism and ineffectiveness, I offer Louisiana voters a record of achievement and honest service. I am a physician, military veteran, small business owner, and job creator. I served as a Louisiana Congressman, Deputy Chief of Staff to President Trump, and was Co-Founder of the House Freedom Caucus. Presently, I am honored to serve as your Louisiana State Treasurer.

My voting record is unabashedly conservative, staunchly supporting MAGA and America First policies. I totally oppose the Green Energy and Carbon Sequestration scams.

Unlike my opponent, whose campaign has been referred to both the Federal Election Commission and the Department of Justice for investigation and who admitted to late filings of 210 stock trades, there is no blemish on my record. In fact, as a Congressman, I did not engage in stock trading.

As Julia Letlow’s liberal views are being exposed, her poll numbers are falling. In recent days, her own pollster announced that I am leading in the polls.

The more she drops in the polls, the more desperate and unhinged her attacks become. Her campaign is panicking and issuing shrill statements to confuse and intimidate voters.

Fortunately, Louisiana voters are smart. They know Julia Letlow will not debate me because she cannot defend her record. They know that Governor Landry and his allies are pumping millions of dollars of dark money into this race to support her. These insiders oppose me because they know I cannot be bought, bullied, or bossed.

I am running for the United States Senate because Louisiana needs a senator who will challenge the political establishment, both in our home state and in our Nation’s Capital, not accommodate it.

Louisiana voters face a clear choice in this Senate runoff. You can continue sending politicians like Julia Letlow to Washington who only talk about conservative values, or you can elect me, a proven conservative fighter who has spent a lifetime defending them.

Throughout my career, I have stood unapologetically for limited government, fiscal responsibility, secure borders, energy independence, and the sanctity of life. I have consistently placed principles above political convenience.

Friends, as the only genuine MAGA conservative in the runoff, I am asking for your vote to become Louisiana’s next U.S. Senator.

Early voting continues through June 20, and Election Day is June 27.

Paid Content


Woodworth and Bodcau shooting ranges to be closed June 19 for Juneteenth Holiday

The Woodworth and Bodcau shooting ranges will be closed Friday (June 19) for the Juneteenth holiday. Both ranges will be open Saturday and Sunday (June 20-21) with normal hours.

The Woodworth shooting range is located at 661 Robinson Bridge Road in Woodworth. The Bodcau shooting range is located at 168 Ben Durden Road in Benton.

Information on all LDWF shooting ranges can be found at the LDWF Shooting Range webpage.


A close encounter with Mother Nature

There have been a few close calls for me while fishing the big waters of Toledo Bend and Sam Rayburn. Each of these bodies of water are completely different in terms of how rough and dangerous each can be, whether it’s due to high winds or approaching storms. But one thing is the same; they will both scare you nearly to death. 

Over the years, I’ve had several close encounters that had me kissing the ground once I could put my feet on dry land. Even with these two lakes being close to each other as the crow flies, navigation for boaters can be totally different due to the fact that one has boat lanes and the other is pretty much wide open.

Let’s start with Toledo Bend. Geographically, this lake runs true north and south. So, a wind coming straight out of the south or directly from the north can make for extremely rough boat rides. Even a north or south wind of 5-10 MPH can have this body of water rocking and rolling. 

Sam Rayburn, on the other hand, is a different kind of lake in that runs northwest to southeast. That means if you get a strong northwest or southeast wind, navigation can be really tough. But wind in any other direction allows anglers to run one side of the lake or the other and avoid rough water because there are no boat lanes you have to run, like you do on Toledo Bend.

The problem with Toledo Bend is the fact that you must run the pre-charted boat lanes due to all the underwater stumps and debris that engulf this entire 72-mile-long waterway. Once you get out of the boat lanes you must idle to ensure safe boating navigation. 

But this also puts you at the mercy of Mother Nature and limits your ability to ride the waves that make navigation easier. Nothing is worse than driving your boat and going with the waves rather than against them. 

When possible, it’s always easier to go against the waves, which can sometimes allow you to run from one wave (once on plane) to the next, if the crest of each wave is not too far apart. 

I had one trip a few years ago that turned into one of the worst boat rides of my life. The tournament I was fishing was going out of Fin & Feather Resort on the south end of Toledo Bend. On this particular morning it was bluebird skies with zero wind in the pocket where we took off. 

But oh, how quickly things changed! Unbeknownst to any of us fishing this event, there was a strong 20-25 MPH wind dead out of the south that morning. When you reached the main lake boat road to head either north or south, you were met with 3-4 foot rolling waves. 

It was so rough that anglers were losing rods and reels and anything else on their boats that was not tied down. It was so bad all day that some anglers lost either a trolling motor or their electronic screens off the bow of their boats as they ran back in for weigh-in.  

I personally had fish located in the back of Negreet Creek on the Louisiana side of Toledo Bend and realized quickly that there was no way I was going across the lake in that kind of wind!

Like so many other anglers that day, I quickly switched to Plan B in order to try and salvage my tournament day by pulling into the first cove I found. I was simply going to fish new water and try and catch a solid limit of bass. 

My co-angler for the day asked me if I had ever fished in this pocket before. I looked him straight in the eye and said, “No, but take a good look at it, because you’re going to see it all day.” 

Around 1 o’clock that afternoon, it was time to start thinking about heading in for the weigh-in at 3, even though we were only two miles from the boat ramp. I was thinking it would take at least an hour, as the wind was now getting worse, blowing 30 mph, still out of the south. 

As I came out of the pocket and tried getting the boat up on plane, it was very apparent that this was not going to be possible and that the only way to make it back was to idle the entire two miles. 

One hour and 30 minutes later, we finally made it back to the weigh-in with only a few minutes to spare before we would have been given a late penalty — which was 1 pound for every minute you were late. 

I actually did better than I thought I would as I weighed-in a little over 15 pounds and finished in the top 15 for the day. But there were a lot of sad faces back at the ramp as guys loaded their boats, short a few rods and reels, along with trolling motors hanging off or electronics completely gone.

Tournament directors today have a very difficult job and are very conscious of sending anglers out on a body of water with either high winds predicted or the forecast of severe weather rolling in on tournament day. 

I know some anglers get frustrated when these directors make the call to cancel or postpone an event, but they’re just doing what is in the best interest of the anglers and making sure everyone gets back to their loved ones safely. After all, we do this for fun, not for a living!!!

Contact Steve at sgraf26@yahoo.com


The Alter Estate

By Brad Dison

Herman Jerome “Jerry” Alter and Sara Rita Sinofsky married in 1956 in New York City.  Jerry and Rita both worked for high schools in New York and New Jersey; Jerry was a music teacher, and Rita was a speech therapist.  In 1974, Jerry retired at the young age of 47 and he and Rita bought a 20-acre mesa overlooking a mountain valley near Cliff, New Mexico, about 30 miles northwest of Silver City.  In 1979, they built a ranch-style home on the property overlooking the valley.  Jerry and Rita coauthored three independently published books, all of which were published in 2011.  The first was a blend of fictional and non-fiction adventure travel.  The second was a twist on Aesop’s Fables set in verse.  The third was a book of poetry based on their travel experiences.  The books sold poorly.  In the “about the author” section of the books, Jerry claimed that he had “visited over 140 countries on all continents, including both polar regions.” 

On April 9, 2012, 81-year-old Jerry died of natural causes, followed by 81-year-old Rita on June 5, 2017.  Rita’s nephew Ron Roseman, a resident of Houston, Texas, was the executor of her estate.  Ron contacted real estate agent Ruth Seawolf the following month to sell the property.  In an email discussing the property Ron said, “Ruthie, I’ve gone through the home, and I don’t think there is anything of value, but help yourself.”  Ruthie visited the home in preparation for putting it on the market and noted that it was “a little dated, older home,” but one she thought would “be fairly easy to sell.”  Ruthie contacted the owners of Manzanita Ridge Furniture & Antiques in Silver City, to visit the house to see how best to dispose of its contents.  Everything in the home was old and covered in dust.  When they removed the pictures and paintings from the walls, it was evident by the dust patterns that they had been hanging in the same positions for decades.  The antique store owners saw nothing they considered especially valuable and bought the entire contents for around $2,000. 

The antique store owners carted a few select items including furniture, small art pieces, and paintings back to their store and donated most of the contents to a local thrift store.  David Van Auker, one of the antique store owners, liked one of the paintings which had hung behind the Alter’s bedroom door for decades and intended to display it in his guest house.  Back at the store, customers were drawn to the painting in the cheap gold frame and said they recognized it.  After several customers independently expressed their belief that the painting looked familiar, David did some internet research.  He was stunned to learn that over three decades earlier, on the day after Thanksgiving in 1985, a man and woman who resembled Jerry and Rita stole a Willem de Kooning painting called Woman-Ochre from the University of Arizona Museum of Art in Tucson.  The painting was valued at over $160 million, but David returned the painting to the museum of art and refused a reward.  This was just the first of many valuable paintings that the FBI learned that Jerry and Rita Alter had stolen.  Everyone, especially their friends and family, were stunned to learn that Jerry and Rita Alter were professional art thieves. 

Sources:

1.     “Herman Jerome ‘Jerry’ Alter,” FindAGrave.com, accessed June 7, 2026, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/190759614/herman-jerome-alter.

2.     “Sara Rita Sinofsky Alter,” FindAGrave.com, accessed June 7, 2026, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/190758039/sara_rita-alter.

3.     Arizona Daily Star, November 30, 1985, p.1.

4.     Silver City Sun-News, August 18, 2017, p.A4.

5.     The Santa Fe New Mexican, September 10, 2017, p.A2.

6.     Carlsbad Current-Argus, December 28, 2024, p.3.


Forecast: Rain chances continue through Friday

Wednesday

A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 90. South wind 5 to 15 mph.

Wednesday Night

A 20 percent chance of showers after 1 a.m. Partly cloudy, with a low around 75. South wind 5 to 10 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph.

Thursday

A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 90. Southeast wind around 5 mph.

Thursday Night

A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1 a.m. Partly cloudy, with a low around 75.

Juneteenth

Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm before 1 p.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 88. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.

Friday Night

A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73.

*Information provided by National Weather Service.


Upcoming Events

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

June 17

11 a.m. until 4 p.m. Giving is Groovy blood drive featuring City of Minden Police and Fire departments’ CUFFS & HOSES Drive, 520 Broadway, Minden. Give blood and tell which department to help one of them win the competition, while doing something to benefit others. Donate and receive a special edition LifeShare Groovy tee shirt while supplies last.

June 19

5 until 9 p.m., Juneteenth celebration, MLK Drive, Minden. Food, live music, games and activities for all ages, fellowship, community unity, local vendors. For more information, call Michael Walker at 318-210-1799.

June 20 – 21

Minden St. Jude Diamond Open in memory of Stanton Haynes. Minden Recreation Complex. Call 318-465-1938 or visit http://www.mindendiamondmemorial.com .

June 20

8 a.m. until 3 p.m. Men’s Wellness Fair, presented by Healing from the Heart LLC. Minden Recreation Center. Tickets are $10 and may be purchased at eventbrite or at the door.

June 21

8 a.m. until a p.m., service at 10:45 a.m., Men’s Wellness Fair weekend continues, New Light Baptist Church, Minden.

June 22 – 26

9 a.m. until noon, Earth Camp 2026 at The Farm of Cultural Crossroads, Minden, ages 6 through 9.

1 p.m. until 3 p.m., ages 10 through 16.

6 until 8:30 p.m., Vacation Bible School, North Acres Baptist Church. Register at https://onrealm.org/NorthAcresBapti31149/Registrations/Registrants/e37ca670-d1e0-4d26-8e23-b409010037cd?congregantView=true&connect=true&viewIndividualId=cd5677d8-e681-479f-af07-b3fc012389f5 .

June 25

10 a.m. Elder Fraud Awareness Session, presented by Louisiana Attorney General’s Office. Sibley Town Hall, Sibley, La. Call 318-377-0345 to RSVP.

June 27

Annual Ride for WHO Poker Run. Pre-register to ride at http://bit.ly/3PG71ZH .

9 until 10 a.m. Check in at Cash Magic Springhill for W.H.O. Poker Run. Pre-register at http://bit.ly/3PG71ZH . Benefits Women Helping Others.

2 until 6 p.m., Miller Quarters Park, Minden, Daddies With Angels Cookout. Hearts & Halos event to support grieving fathers.

July 9

5:30 p.m. Gather and Grow – Gardening for Pollinators, Webster Parish Extension Office, 1202 Homer Road, Minden. For more information, call 318-371-1371 or 318-927-3110.

July 13 – 17

5:30 until 8:30 p.m., Vacation Bible School, First Methodist Church, 903 Broadway, Minden, ages pre-K through 6th grade. Supper provided. Call 318-377-1483 or visit https://www.facebook.com/100064614286593/posts/1321421020021695/?fs=e&mibextid=wwXIfr&rdid=wKEx4hN4p2w03lR0# for more information.

July 26 – 31

6 until 8:10 p.m. Vacation Bible School, Calvary Baptist Church, 1400 Homer Road, Minden. For more information: calvaryminden.com/vbs .

August 15

9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Rooted Women’s Conference, North Acres Baptist Church, 1852 Lewisville Road, Minden. This is a day for women who strive to be rooted in The Word. Hear from our keynote speaker, Stephanie Smithson, as she focuses on spiritual understanding and biblical literacy along with our multi-generational panel of ladies, who will describe what being rooted in Christ means to them. Come for a day of acoustic worship, fellowship, teaching and food! Your $30 ticket includes the conference, t-shirt, and a light lunch provided by Hugh Wood Catering. Childcare is provided. Registration is open through July 5. Register at https://onrealm.org/NorthAcresBapti31149/PublicRegistrations/Event?linkString=ZTc4OTQ2Y2EtZmM3Ny00MWM2LWE2NmUtYjQzMzAwZmUyZDgx .


Word of the day: Emblazon

Word of the day: Emblazon

Phonetic: /im-BLAY-zun/
Part of Speech: Verb
Definition

To emblazon something is to decorate its surface, usually with a name, slogan, or picture.
Her favorite souvenir from her trip to the Grand Canyon was a t-shirt emblazoned with a rosy sunset over the famous chasm.


Arrest Reports

Alexdoyle Meek Keathley, 36, 8700 block Hwy. 4 W., Castor: arrested June 13 by Minden PD on fugitive warrant from Conway County, Arkansas. No bond set.

Amanda L. Fish, 50, 400 block Columbia 222, Magnolia, Arkansas: arrested June 12 by Springhill PD for possession of CDS Sch. IV (Xanax) with intent to distribute (two counts), possession of CDS Sch. I (marijuana), possession of drug paraphernalia. Bond set $40,000.

Carolyn S. Dupree, 56, Camelot Dr., Springhill: arrested June 13 by WPSO for unauthorized entry of inhabited dwelling, remaining after forbidden, simple criminal damage to property, aggravated assault. Bond set $500. 

Cody D. Rogers, 36, 200 block Maple St., Springhill: arrested by Springhill PD on warrant for felony theft. Bond set $5,000. 

Dillion Barnette Tatom, 29, 400 block Hickory St., Springhill: arrested June 12 by Springhill PD for possession of CDS Sch. II (methamphetamines), possession of drug paraphernalia, illegal carry of a weapon. Bond set $10,000.

Hallie Watson, 22, 200 block Big Baxter Loop, Springhill: arrested June 12 by Springhill PD on warrant for possession of CDS Sch. II. Bond set $5,000. 

Kourtnee Joy Combs, 37, 200 block Jones St., Shreveport: arrested June 14 by WPSO for violation of protective order. 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 – June 16, 2026

Martin William Cole
May 15, 1970 — June 12, 2026
Minden
Celebration of Life: 10 a.m. Wednesday, June 17, 2026, First Baptist Church, Minden, under the direction of Rose-Neath Funeral Home.

Dale Matthews
September 12, 1948  –  January 11, 2026
Sarepta
Memorial service: 2 p.m. Saturday, June 20, 2026, Cotton Valley Cemetery under the direction of Bailey Funeral Home, Springhill.

Sherry Jo Kirkland
March 25, 1947 — June 11, 2026
Cotton Valley
Visitation: 9 a.m. Wednesday, June 17, 2026, Cotton Valley First Pentecostal Church, Cotton Valley.
Funeral service: 11 a.m. immediately following visitation.
Burial: Gardens of Memory, Minden, under the direction of Rose-Neath Funeral Home.

Frances Ann Lester Posey
October 10, 1937 — May 23, 2026
Minden/Mansfield
Graveside service: 11 a.m. Saturday, June 27, 2026, Mansfield Cemetery.

Patsy Ann Greene Cahoon
August 2, 1943  –  May 26, 2026
Springhill/Shreveport
Graveside service: 1 p.m. Saturday, July 11, 2026, Old Sarepta Cemetery, Sarepta, La., under the direction of Bailey Funeral Home, Springhill.

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.)


BREAKING NEWS: Man dies while in MPD custody; independent investigation underway

By Pat Culverhouse

Investigators are currently looking into the death of a 23-year-old Homer man who died while in custody at Minden police headquarters.

Chief of Police Jared McIver said Webster Parish Sheriff’s Office detectives have have been called in to handle the case of the death of Demonta Reshawn Tate, who apparently hanged himself early Tuesday morning in the MPD’s holding cell.

“Our officers had stopped him around midnight for the minor traffic offense of running a stop sign and learned he was wanted on warrants from Claiborne Parish,” McIver said. “We contacted Claiborne and they asked us to hold him.”

McIver said Tate was compliant during the traffic stop and showed no signs of anxiety or distress when he was taken to police headquarters.

“We followed all standard procedures when he was booked, and at no time did he display any signs that he was troubled,” the chief said. “After he was placed in the cell, he asked for water and appeared to be handling the situation well.”

Holding cells at the station are monitored by surveillance cameras at the dispatch desk, and McIver said nothing seemed out of the ordinary.

“The person monitoring the surveillance cameras noticed Tate appeared to be standing beside the cell’s cot, which didn’t seem unusual. But after noticing he appeared to be standing very still for longer than usual, the dispatcher notified an officer and requested a check on Tate,” McIver said.

When the officer arrived, he reportedly found Tate had hanged himself with a blanket taken from the cot inside the cell. Attempts to resuscitate proved unsuccessful.

“I immediately called Sheriff (Jason) Parker to initiate an independent investigation and his detectives were on the scene in just a few minutes,” McIver said. “The coroner’s office was also notified.”

Parker said the investigation is still in the early stages, but his detectives have found nothing to indicate anything other than Tate took his own life for unknown reasons.

“We will continue to look into this and hopefully we can find some answers to why he would decide to end his life like this,” Parker said.