Remembering Huey D. Green, Sr.

Graveside services for Huey D. Green, Sr., 89, of Arcadia, LA will be held at 10:00 A.M., Tuesday, January 2, 2024 in Martin Cemetery, Martin, LA. Officiating will be Bro. Louie Foerster.  Visitation will be from 9:00 -9:30 A.M. at Rockett Funeral Home, Ringgold, LA.

Huey was born January 15, 1934 in Coushatta, LA and passed away December 31, 2023 in Coushatta, LA. He was retired from Arkla Gas Company.  Fishing and wood working were his passions, but he could do anything.  Huey was an avid LA Lady Tech Basketball fan, having season tickets for many years.  He also loved the Saints and Cowboys.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Aline Wood Green; grandson, Charlie Thomas; daughter-in-law, Janet Green; and siblings, Bab Bates, Pete Croft, Wayne Green, Bonnie Wood and Patsy Wilhite.

Left to cherish his memory include his daughter, Rhonda Surber and husband, John of Jamestown, LA; sons,  Mark Green of Arcadia, LA, Richard Green and wife, Lynn of Jamestown, LA and Donald Green and wife, Sandy of Arcadia, LA; brothers, Reggie Green and wife, Robin of Coushatta, LA and Ronnie Green and wife, Nancy of Pineville, LA; 12 grandchildren, 26 great grandchildren and a number of other relatives and friends.


Double Trouble

It was March 12, 1951.  For comics aficionados, this date is important.  It was the first time anyone got to experience the chaos of Dennis the Menace.  A few weeks earlier, Ian Chisholm, a comic book editor, visited a music hall and heard the singers perform a song called “I’m Dennis the Menace from Venice.”  The creative wheels in Ian’s brain began to turn.  The title of the song played over and over in his mind.  Ian’s focus was such that the rest of the performance was a blur.  Within a short time, he could visualize Dennis.  Dennis’ character came together so easily that it was almost as if Dennis had always existed.  He had disheveled black hair, his shorts exposed his knobby knees, he wore a red and black striped shirt, and he had a devilish grin.  He created a whole back story for Dennis including his family, friends, and a dog named Gnasher.  Ian had Dennis in his mind.  Now, he just needed him on paper. 

Ian contacted artist Davey Law and described the character so Davey could draw Dennis.  Davey drew Dennis as he understood him and presented his artwork to Ian.  Davey was proud of his work and expected Ian to be exited to see “Dennis the Menace.”  After just a glance, Ian’s face revealed his disappointment.  That was not Dennis.  Ian described Dennis in more detail, and Davey produced another drawing.  Davey thought surely he had gotten it right this time.  Again, Ian was disappointed.  This cycle continued several times until Ian, who was not an artist by any stretch of the imagination, drew a rough sketch of Dennis.  There was “Dennis the Menace.”    

Dennis was a badly behaved schoolboy who, with his dog Gnasher, kept up a reign of terror against a group of well-behaved schoolboys known as “softies.”  The most frequent recipient of Dennis’ reign of terror was Walter the Softy, although Walter sometimes got the last laugh.  “Dennis the Menace” was an instant hit.  In addition to comics, Dennis has been portrayed in just about every form of media including children’s books, Saturday morning cartoons, and feature films.  Dennis has been drawn by a succession of artists since that important date, March 12, 1951.  Children’s author Michael Rosen said, “In most children’s books, a bad child gets made good – but the great thing about Dennis is he never gets better.”  Today, we would call Dennis a bully.            

Wait a minute.  If the “Dennis the Menace” I just described sounds unfamiliar to you, there is a good reason.  The “Dennis the Menace” that we know has blond hair, wears a black and blue striped T-shirt, red overalls, and alternates between wearing white tennis shoes and going barefooted.  The Dennis we know is troublesome but good-hearted.  He always means well but his attempts to help others always turn into chaos.  He is well-liked by the other kids in the neighborhood and could never be described as being a bully.  Hank Ketcham created the Dennis we know and love and based him on his own son, Dennis Ketcham.  Yes, there are two “Dennis the Menaces.”  Both “Dennis the Menace” characters were created independently.  The mean-spirited “Dennis the Menace” originated in the United Kingdom, and the happy-go-lucky “Dennis the Menace” originated in the United States.  Ian Chisholm and Hank Ketcham were completely unaware of each other’s creation until after they were published.  You see, both “Dennis the Menace” characters debuted on the exact same date, March 12, 1951.

Sources:

1.     “Dennis the Menace and Gnasher.” Beano Wiki. Accessed December 31, 2023. https://beano.fandom.com/wiki/Dennis_the_Menace_and_Gnasher.

2.     Bailey, Jonathan. “The Odd Case of Dennis the Menace.” Plagiarism Today. October 18, 2010. https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2010/10/18/the-odd-case-of-dennis-the-menace/.


Orange Breakfast Roll Cake

Orange Breakfast Roll Cake If you are still entertaining family and friends during the New Year week, why not start your day with this yummy cozy breakfast? I promise your day will start off just right. This is a no mix, easy ingredient recipe to layer up and pop in the oven.

Ingredients:

2 cans Pillsbury orange breakfast rolls
1 jar cream cheese frosting
1 yellow cake mix
1 1/2 sticks butter

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9×13 baking dish. Place rolls in pan. Heat cream cheese frosting for a few seconds in microwave and spread over rolls. Do the same thing next with the orange roll icing from the cans. Shake cake mix over evenly (I did not use quite the whole bag of cake mix). Cut butter into parts and spread over cake mix.  Bake until done, 30-40 minutes.

(Ashley Madden Rowton is a wife, mom and published cookbook author who lives in Minden, La.)


Pop(-Tart) goes the Bowl Season!


Cool Old Dude and Tons of Fun guys like me went to bed at a slick 7:30 p.m. New Year’s Eve. Didn’t mean to stay up that late but had forgotten to start the grill and the dead chicken and sausages were later getting done than I had planned. 

Hate it when that happens. Especially on a holiday.

Some of us are old enough to remember when we were crazy enough to actually stay up to watch the ball drop in Times Square — “10, 9, 8… !” —  or when we would be out somewhere with other sickos (meaning other “normal young people”) waiting for midnight to ring in the New Year.

Festive and whatnot. Mainly awake.  

But I was another kind of sick this New Year’s. Something is “going around” and I hate it when that happens too because it usually gets around to me and you. Stuffy head. Ribs hurt. No energy.

On the bright side, New Year’s night I made it to 8 and to the end of Michigan’s win over Alabama. Old-school game, my opinion. Woke up in the middle of the night for bathroom duty — another elderly issue — and saw that Washington had beaten Texas in another thriller. 

“For entertainment purposes only,” the early line has No. 1 Michigan as a 4.5 favorite over No. 2 Washington in Monday night’s College Football Playoff National Championship game from NRG Stadium in Houston at 6:30 (I might can stay up!) on ESPN. I like Washington to cover.

So take Michigan. Because … 

As recently discussed, I can pick winners in games like Germany could pick winners in World Wars. Sleep was easy for me by the time Washington teed it up with Texas New Year’s Night because my hopes of winning the ESPN BowlFest Fantasy competition were as gone as the clouds in yesterday’s sky. An 8-0 start in mid-December was followed by a whirlwind of pitifulness, as predicted, that left me in the 50th percentile of pickers, which included real people but also included turtles, stumps, and some fish. I couldn’t spell ‘win’ if you spotted me the “w” and the “i.”

But this predicted ineptness did not keep me from enjoying, immensely, BowlFest. My favorite bowls, strictly because of names and present company excluded (we’re looking at you, Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl, always No. 1 in our hearts), were these:

The Tony the Tiger Bowl in El Paso, because I love Sun Bowl Stadium and because, well, Frosted Flakes. Notre Dame was ggggggreat and beat Oregon State, 40-8, for the record;

The Cheeze-It Citrus Bowl because Cheeze-Its should be its own food group, and more on that another time. Tennessee beat Iowa 100-2 or something like that. The Vols might still be scoring;

The Duke’s Mayo Bowl because this advertises a Carolina staple I grew up with. West Virginia out-condimented North Carolina in this year’s bowl in Charlotte. Of course, I foolishly had the Tarheels;

The Avocados From Mexico Cure Bowl in, oddly enough, Orlando, where every other bowl game is now played. For some reason, I felt healthier after watching it;

And my favorite of all the bowls, the Pop-Tarts Bowl (from, guess where?, Orlando!), even though Kansas State beat N.C. State, 28-19, and I had (naturally) the Wolfpack. Didn’t matter because:

One of the mascots was edible. True story. The winners ate a giant Pop-Tart after the game. To the winners go the spoils. In light of this development, would you rather play in the prestigious Cotton Bowl or the Pop-Tarts Bowl? That’s what I thought;

Speaking of giants, the non-edible mascot who ran around the sidelines of picturesque Camping World Stadium most of the game showed up by being popped out of a huge toaster on the field. Yes, this is next-level mascot stuff;

The mascot tried to catch a missed field goal with a net. We’re talking about a fruit scone with a net chasing a ball;

And finally, the winning players dumped a couple of coolers filled with Pop-Tarts onto the winning coach as he made his way to midfield to shake hands with the losing and thus non-Pop-Tarts-eating coach immediately after the game. The only other thing this bowl needed was some milk.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu

Getting your sanity back

Today I am going way off topic to give my perspective on what has become my own hot button issue….my sanity! The country we live in today is not one any of us thought we would ever see. The division, turmoil, and lack of respect for one another is off the chart.

People have lost their moral compass and the ability to see clearly. This has led to an erosion of our society and our sanity. But what can we do to change our own mental health? Is there something each of us can do to improve our outlook on life?

America has become a society of selfishness and what can you do for me. Our young generation of Millennials, for some reason, has no regard for our history, nor do they care. Everyone wants to erase our past, both good and bad. They don’t understand that destroying statues and monuments does not change the past. The only thing we can change is the future, by not repeating the same mistakes we made before.

On my weekly radio show, Hook’N Up & Track’N Down that’s been on air for the last 16 years, I made a promise to myself on three things. One, the show would not seek or promote alcohol companies for sponsorship. Two, I would not use the show as a political platform to express my personal viewpoints. I’ve always felt that no one wants to hear MY opinion on how they should think when it comes to political issues or who to vote for. The only exception to rule number two is if there’s a hot topic infringing on our right to hunt and fish.  Three, I would cover all things related to God’s great outdoors by educating and entertaining our loyal fans.

With so much negativity going on in this country, the question is, “How do we maintain our sanity?” I’m going to give some great advice on what you can do to help eliminate the depression and anxiety you feel. It’s a simple answer…. stop watching the news channels! Every day we are exposed to all the bad things going on, not just here in our country, but all over the world. You start to worry and stress yourself on things you have no control over.

Sure, we all want to make a difference, but if our own mental health is not good how can we help others? TV is the root of a lot of our mental health issues. Every single day, seven days a week, we are bombarded with political division, mass shootings, wars, and issues that it seems none of us can agree on or resolve. Every news station like CNN, MSNBC, FOX News, or any of the big three CBS, NBC, or ABC, has their own agenda and want you to think like they do whether it’s a conservative or liberal viewpoint.

A good friend of mine gave me some great advice one day as we talked about some political issues over lunch. Even though we don’t agree on many political viewpoints, I still respect his views because I respect him as a person. Sometimes we both have to agree to disagree, but we don’t hold our viewpoints (however different they might be) against one another. We can actually have a decent conversation about Trump or Biden and not walk away enemies. But one day he gave me some great advice as he told me to stop watching Fox News, even though they seem to fall more in line with my conservative views.

So, I decide to take his advice and take a break from ALL news stations. We should all take this advice and eliminate the fog in our brain that inhibits our ability to reason and make good decisions. After taking this advice, I found my mental outlook improved in a rather short time frame. Now I still watch the news channels, but in small doses. This doesn’t mean you can’t stay up to date on what’s taking place in our world but try watching more shows that promote good mental health.

For me  that would be hunting and fishing shows, along with collegiate and professional sports. For others, it might be cooking and home fixer up programs or if you really want that warm fuzzy feeling, watch the Hallmark channel!! This will always put you in a great mood especially during the holiday season where the leading man or woman ends up meeting the mate of their dreams and living happily ever after….ON EVERY EPISODE!!!!

From now on I’ll try and stick to writing more about my fishing adventures, but today I felt like this was something I needed to get off my chest. Till next time, remember…stop watching all the news channels and watch more programs that make you feel good. Your mind will thank you and you’ll get your sanity back.

Steve Graf                                                                                                              

Angler’s Perspective


Today in History

1496 – References in Leonardo da Vinci notebooks suggested that he tested his flying machine. The test didn’t succeed and he didn’t try to fly again for several years.

1521 – Pope Leo X excommunicated Martin Luther.

1777 – The Battle of Princeton took place in the War of Independence, in which George Washington defeated the British forces, led by Cornwallis.

1815 – By secret treaty, Austria, Britain, and France formed a defensive alliance against Prusso-Russian plans to solve the Saxon and Polish problems.

1823 – Stephen F. Austin received a grant from the Mexican government and began colonization in the region of the Brazos River in Texas.

1825 – The first engineering college in the U.S. , Rensselaer School, opened in Troy, NY. It is now known as Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

1833 – Britain seized control of the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic. About 150 years later, Argentina seized the islands from the British, but Britain took them back after a 74-day war.

1868 – The Shogunate was abolished in Japan and Meiji dynasty was restored.

1871 – Henry W. Bradley patented oleomargarine.

1888 – The drinking straw was patented by Marvin C. Stone.

1924 – English explorer Howard Carter discovered the sarcophagus of Tutankhamen in the Valley of the Kings, near Luxor, Egypt.

1925 – In Italy, Mussolini announced that he would take dictatorial powers.

1938 – The first broadcast of “Woman in White” was presented on the NBC Red network. The program remained on radio for 10 years.

1938 – The March of Dimes was established by U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The organization fights poliomyelitis. The original name of the organization was the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.

1947 – U.S. Congressional proceedings were televised for the first time. Viewers in Washington, Philadelphia and New York City saw some of the opening ceremonies of the 80th Congress.

1947 – In Trenton, NJ, Al Herrin, passed away at age 92. He had claimed that he had not slept at all during his life.

1951 – NBC-TV debuted “Dragnet.”

1953 – Frances Bolton and her son, Oliver from Ohio, became the first mother-son combination to serve at the same time in the U.S. Congress.

1957 – The Hamilton Watch Company introduced the first electric watch.

1959 – In the U.S., Alaska became the 49th state.

1961 – The U.S. severed diplomatic relations with Cuba.

1962 – Pope John XXIII excommunicated Cuban prime minister Fidel Castro.

1967 – Jack Ruby died in a Dallas, TX, hospital.

1973 – The Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) sold the New York Yankees to a 12-man syndicate headed by George Steinbrenner for $10 million.

1980 – Conservationist Joy Adamson, author of “Born Free,” was killed in northern Kenya by a servant.

1983 – Tony Dorsett (Dallas Cowboys) made the longest run from scrimmage in NFL history. Dorsett ran 99 yards in a game against the Minnesota Vikings.

1984 – A woman died at Disneyland after falling from a ride. She had apparently unfastened her seatbelt while on the Matterhorn bobsled.

1988 – Margaret Thatcher became the longest-serving British Prime Minister in the 20th century.

1990 – Ousted Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega surrendered to U.S. forces, 10 days after taking refuge in the Vatican’s diplomatic mission.

1991 – The British government announced that seven Iraqi diplomats, another embassy staff member and 67 other Iraqis were being expelled from Britain.

1993 – U.S. President George H.W. Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed the second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) in Moscow.

1995 – WHO reported that the cumulative total of officially reported cases of AIDS had risen to 1,025,073 in 192 countries as at the end of 1994.

1995 – The U.S. Postal Service raised the price of the first-class stamp to 32 cents.

1997 – Bryant Gumbel signed off for the last time as host of NBC’s “Today” show.

1998 – China announced that it would spend $27.7 billion to fight erosion and pollution in the Yangtze and Yellow river valleys.

1999 – Israeli authorities detained, and later expelled, 14 members of Concerned Christians. Israili officials claimed that the Denver, CO-based cult was plotting violence in Jerusalem to bring about the Second Coming of Christ.

2000 – Charles M. Schulz’s final original daily comic strip appeared in newspapers.

2001 – The ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms) charged the “Texas 7” with weapons violations. An autopsy showed that Office Aubrey Hawkins, killed by the convicts, had been shot 11 times and run over with a vehicle.

2004 – NASA’s Spirit rover landed on Mars. The craft was able to send back black and white images three hours after landing.

2019 – The Chinese probe Chang’e 4 became the first human-made object to land on the far side of the Moon.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit calendar events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com

January 4 (5:30 p.m.)

Slabtown Festival Meeting – Ringgold Annex Building

(New Commissioners needed)

January 4 (6 p.m.)

Bienville Parish School Board Meeting – 1956 First Street, Arcadia

January 10 (9 a.m.)

Bienville Parish Police Jury Meeting- 100 Courthouse Drive, Arcadia

January 13 (6 p.m.)

Public Auction hosted by Faulk Auction Co. – 1968 N. Railroad Ave, Arcadia

January 19 – 20 (8 – 4 p.m.)

Saline SWCD Tree Sale, 2263 Hall Street, Ringgold


Arrest Report

The following arrests were made by local law enforcement agencies.

December 30, 2023

Gregory Fricks Jr., of Ashdown, Arkansas, was charged with driver must be licensed.

December 29, 2023

Lavictor Peterson, 46, of Ringgold, was charged with theft of a firearm (felony).

Michael Palmer Jr., 39, of Ringgold, was charged with hit and run driving with no personal injury (misdemeanor), driver must be licensed, security required, resisting an officer (misdemeanor) and threatening a public official (misdemeanor).

December 28, 2023

Lakeshia Miller, 41, of Coushatta, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear (misdemeanor).

Thomas Parnell, 22, of Dubberly, was charged with no seatbelt (first offense) and driving while intoxicated (first offense) (BAC .08 to .15) (misdemeanor).

Nicholas Fields, 32, of Arcadia, was charged with unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling (felony).

December 23, 2023

Janna Kuhlmann, 36, was charged with operating a vehicle while intoxicated.

Jeremy Gray, 31, of Arcadia, was charged with operating a vehicle with a suspended license; other offenses.

Robin Hampton, 35, of Gibsland, was charged with reckless operation with accident (misdemeanor) and DWI (first offense) (BAC .08 to .15) (misdemeanor).

December 21, 2023

Samone Sanders, 30, of Springhill, was charged with operating a vehicle with a suspended license; no license issued.

December 20, 2023

Kevin Ford, 38, of Homer, was charged with criminal trespass – immovable structure (misdemeanor).

December 19, 2023

Melvin Pete, 45, of Arcadia, was charged with criminal trespass – immovable structure (misdemeanor) and resisting arrest and interference with officers (misdemeanor).

December 18, 2023

Joshua Ponder, 40, of Saline, was charged with domestic abuse battery with child endangerment (felony).

December 17, 2023
DQuayvion Jackson, 23, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear (misdemeanor).

Dalonzico Ty Abney, 24, of Arcadia, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear (execution of sentence).

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.


Notice of Death – January 2

Notice of Death – January 02, 2023

Huey D. Green, Sr.

Jan. 15, 1934 – Dec. 31, 2023

Arcadia, La. 

Visitation: 9 – 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2023 at Rocket Funeral Home, Ringgold.

Funeral immediately following visitation.

Bobby Ray Tell

July 14, 1977 – Dec. 27, 2023

Haynesville, La.

Visitation: 1 – 6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2023, Memorial Funeral Home, Homer, La.

Funeral service: 11 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 4, 2023, Haynesville High School Auditorium, Haynesville, La.

Rose Basco

April 22, 1941 – Dec. 29, 2023

Homer, La. 

Funeral service: 1 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 4, 2023, St. Margaret Catholic Church, Homer, La.

Burial: Sharon Cemetery, Sharon, La., under the direction of Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Homer.

Thomas “Kelly” Warren

Oct. 29, 1947 – Dec. 31, 2023

Haynesville, La. 

Visitation: 1 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 4, 2023, First Baptist Church, Haynesville, La. 

Funeral service: 2 p.m. immediately following visitation.

Burial: Old Town Cemetery, under the direction of Bailey Funeral Home, Haynesville. 

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