West Frankfort man arrested on sex charges

Press release from Franklin County Sheriff, Don Jones

Franklin County Deputies assisted by the Benton Police Department and the United States Marshall Service in the arrest of Kyle A. Ridlen, age 27, of rural West Frankfort at 4:00pm on June 30, 2017 at his residence.

Ridlen was taken into custody on a Franklin County warrant charging him with Child Pornography and Grooming.

The case is part of an ongoing investigation by the Franklin County Sheriff’s Cyber Crimes Unit. Ridlen later was released from custody after posting $5000.00 cash bond. 

Jose Canseco to appear at Rent One Park

From the Southern Illinois Miners

The Best of the Ballparks Final is too close! So we’re having ANOTHER GIVEAWAY!

MARION, IL – On July 16th, Jose Canseco will be at Rent One Park! And this is your chance to meet him up close! We are asking fans again to like, comment, and share this post – but more importantly VOTE – to enter for a chance to win a Meet-and-Greet with Jose Canseco himself!

If you voted yesterday, you can vote again today! You can vote on multiple browsers as well! Spread the word! This is a once in a lifetime chance! Don’t miss out!

In my opinion, the Cardinals should be in a holding pattern

by Steve Dunford

You have heard me harp and gripe, this six game stretch between the Diamondbacks and the Nationals will be the turning point of the Cardinals season.

The Cardinals whipped up on the Nationals, and former Southern Illinois Miner, Tanner Roark 8-1 last night.  Rookie sensation Paul DeJong hit his sixth homer on the season.  He is hitting .277 and slugging .505.

Tommy Pham, Jedd Gyorko, Yadier Molina, and Greg Garcia picked up two hits.  Mike Leake was stellar on the mound, pitching eight innings allowing one run, five hits and striking out four.

Last night’s game is a microcosm of how the Cardinals have played in the recent stretch.  The defense has been much better.  There stupid mistakes on the bases has been fewer.  With Leake being a pitch to contact guy, solid defense behind him, is the key to his success.

I am going to be honest, I have some notes on a yellow legal pad for the Cardinals to become sellers.  I figured 2-4 would be optimistic, as dismal as they have been playing coming into this stretch of the season.

Now I am going to take a lets see how the upcoming series with the Marlins and Mets go.  The Marlins can put runs up on the board, but have suspect pitching.  The Mets are probably the most underachieving team in baseball,  are a train wreck.

I am going to have to get my yellow legal pad out tonight and prepare for the Cardinals to be buyers.  There is one move I think the Cardinals need to make.  It will cause some of you to do flip flops, and some of you will give me an angry icon, when I share this on social media.

With Gio Gonzales, 7-2 – 2.87, going against Michael Wacha  – 4-3 4.50, I am pessimistic of St. Louis picking up another win.

Here is my take on Wacha.  He has had stamina trouble his whole MLB career.  No matter what happens tonight, move him to the bullpen.  He could have closer stuff.

In what was the first of the year a seven inning shortened game with Rosenthal in the 8th and Oh in the ninth, is not the case.  Both have been terrible.  I might have to break out the Charlie Brown cartoon again for both of them.

A month ago, I would not have said this, but Brett Cecil has been the most reliable arm out of the pen as of late.  I would like to pull up the stats since he switched his number to 27, Jhonny Peralta’s old number.  That is when the tide turned for him.

If Wacha needs to be replaced in the rotation, I would go with Luke Weaver or Jordan Swagerty.  Marco Gonzales did not look fully recovered in his only start.   Michael Mayers (pronounced Myers, which is the second pitcher the Redbirds had by that name) has been awful.  He had the disastrous start on ESPN last year against the Dodgers.  In his one appearance out of the pen he gave up one run on one hit and was hit hard.  I know it is a small sample size, but his ERA was lowered to being north of 24.00.

Hopefully I will be writing my recliner GM strategy as a buyer in the next two days.  Matt Scherzer against Carlos Martinez will be a classic tomorrow night, as John Rooney calls it, the game of the world.

Tonight’s lineup for the Cardinals will be posted below.  Matt Carpenter and Stephen Piscotty have the night off.

CF   Pham

LF   Grichuk

RF   J. Martinez

3B  Gyorko

C   Molina

1B  Voit

SS  DeJong

2B  Mejia

P   Wacha

I will be playing remote control aerobics, flipping back and forth between the NASCAR race.  Racing is on weekly,  the Cardinals are on daily.

Thank you for the positive feedback on the summaries.  I will do them on a daily basis.

 

 

President Trump’s weekly address

Press release from Donald Trump, President of the United States

My fellow Americans,

This week, I was joined at the White House by American families whose loved ones were killed by illegal immigrants.

Many of these illegal immigrants had extensive criminal records and had been repeatedly deported.

Every single one of these deaths was preventable.

These beautiful American lives were stolen because our government refused to do its job.  If the government had simply enforced our immigration laws, these Americans would still be alive today.

That is why, since the day I took the oath of office, I have been restoring the enforcement of our immigration laws and the protection and defense of our borders.

These courageous Americans joined me at the White House to call on Congress to pass two bills that I campaigned on during the election.  If enacted, these bills will save countless Americans lives.  The first bill, Kate’s Law, is named for Kate Steinle, who was killed by an illegal immigrant who had been deported five times.  This law will enhance criminal penalties for those who repeatedly re-enter our country illegally.

The second bill, the No Sanctuary For Criminals Act, will block federal grants to jurisdictions that shield dangerous criminal aliens from being turned over to federal law enforcement.

On Thursday, I am glad to report, these two bills passed the House of Representatives.  This represents a crucial step toward ensuring our public safety and national security.

I want to thank Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte for his dedicated work on these critical bills, as well as other crucial legislation that will soon be considered as well.  I also thank Leadership for advancing these life-saving measures.

I now call on the Senate to take up these bills and send them back to my desk for signature – as soon as possible.  We need security.  We need safety in our country.  And I call on members of both parties to stand united with victims to stop these terrible and senseless crimes from ever happening in the first place.

This legislation presents a simple choice: either vote to save and protect American lives, or vote to shield and comfort criminal aliens who threaten innocent lives – and they’ve been shielded too long.

As we head towards the Fourth of July, we remember now more than ever to cherish our freedom.  The foundation of freedom is the rule of law.  It forms the bedrock of our Constitution and the cornerstone of our way of life.

So this Independence Day, while we’re enjoying treasured time with our friends and loved ones, let us not forget the families who have an empty seat at the table this year.

And let us pledge that from now on, we will protect, defend and save American lives.

Thank you.

Ewing High School “Warriors”

http://www.illinoishsglorydays.com/id605.html

EWING, IL  –  (Illinois High School Glory Days.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

The cornerstone of Willard Hall, which sits in front of where the Ewing-Northern grade school is today. (James Horaz, Illinois High School Glory Days photo.)

Ewing (population 310) is located in far south central Illinois in the northeast portion of Franklin County.  Ewing is situated about 6 miles northeast of Benton.  County Highway 1 is the main roadway to and from Ewing and connects it to Illinois Route 37 just three miles to the west.  Interstate Highway 57 lies just to the west of Route 37.  Rend Lake is about four miles west of Ewing as well. 

A nice history of the town of Ewing was found at the web address of http://www.lib.niu.edu/ipo/1995/ihy951223.html.  In summary, this article states that Ewing was established in the mid-1800s and was a basic rural Illinois community. The early 1860s brought some prominent local men together who decided the area needed a high school.  In 1867 Ewing High School was established.  This was a pretty forward-thinking view at the time as most rural communities simply established a school for grades 1 – 8 and did not establish a high school until years later.  
Soon after the establishment of the high school the local people discovered their high school was not legally recognized.  These folks took things one step further, they decided to establish a college.  Ewing College was established in this very rural setting and attracted many more people and businesses to the area.
The population of Ewing rose to about 1,000 residents in the early 1900s, with the college enrollment a steady 300 students.  World War I and economic hardships caught up with Ewing College.  The school was closed in 1927 leaving the townspeople with heavy hearts.

Mt. Vernon Rams – 1921 Benton District Tournament champs

NOTE –  I finally stumbled across this page.  I will start sharing the scores of IHSA postseason tournaments from the past involving Franklin County Schools

Benton

Nashville 56-9 Galatia

West Frankfort 50-12 Thompsonville

Mount Vernon 39-10 McLeansboro

Pinckneyville 34-15 Christopher

Eldorado 28-27 Marissa

DuQuoin 24-14 Nashville

Mount Vernon 34-25 West Frankfort

Pinckneyville 32-22 Eldorado

Benton 74-10 Sesser

Mount Vernon 33-25 DuQuoin

Pinckneyville 22-21 Benton (2 OT)

Mount Vernon 37-16 Pinckneyville

 

MOUNT VERNON (37): Miller 21, Estes 8, Young 4, Forsyth 4.

PINCKNEYVILLE (16): Edwards 8, Gruner 4, Woolsey 4.

 

 

July 2nd, 1980 Derecho that hit Franklin County

by Steve Dunford

The cloud signature of a formation of a Derecho in Oklahoma in 2011. (Storm Prediction Center photo.)

NOTE:  I wrote this piece for a blog that I used to have called Steve’s Ramblings in 2013.   It was only one of the few things in a Google search that came up for this storm.  Next year, I will do some microfilm research of the Benton Evening News, West Frankfort Daily American, The Southern Illinoisan, and Marion Daily Republican.

On June 29 1980 Southern Illinois was hit with a derecho with high winds.  I am writing this from memory because I was only 10 at the time.  I believe that Jackson County was the hardest hit.  WCIL lost their tower in the storm.  I remembered they did not go to full power for a long time.

In Thompsonville, we were without power until the next Monday morning.   This was the beginning of miner’s vacation.  The economy in Franklin County was built around the coal mines at the time.  The UMWA always had a scheduled shutdown around the Fourth of July.

The June 29 wave hit about 11 pm that evening.  Our neighbor at the time Gene Lager lived in the house that Gary Fravel lives in now.  B.G. and Cindy Dial lived there for years.  This was on Main Street in Thompsonville.

Mr. Lager had cattle.  The cattle tried jumping the fence.  It was the same action they did during the Thompsonville tornado on April 27, 1971.  My dad remembered this and had us get in the hallway of our house.  There were trees uprooted and no phone service or power.

My dad was also the pastor of Rescue Free Will Baptist church at the time.  Up in the Whittington/Ewing area, the damage was not as bad. We spent the afternoon with Tom and Jane Harmon and Paul and Cathy Lingle.

We went to Nashville the next morning for a couple of days.   We went to Opryland on July 1, and it was unbearably hot and humid.  The temp was around 100 with high humidity. The motel swimming pool was the highlight of the trip even though it was hot.

We pondered on staying at Kentucky Lake a day or two on the way home.  We stopped and ate at Kentucky Fried Chicken in Calvert City.  People began talking about how bad the weather was supposed to get in there.  We decided we better head back to Franklin County.  At the truck stop, we filled up at on the way home, the thermometer was showing 107 outside.  This is where the Pilot and Arby’s is now.  At the time this was the KFC and the truck stop were the only two establishments right off of I-24 there.

Going up Interstate 24, W3D began what they called their weather watch back in those days.  They always played music in the background that sound like doomsday was coming.  I remember that Randolph County was under a Tornado Warning.  This was during the days that Tornado Warnings were not issued very often.

They began continuous weather coverage with Tom Redicas (sp?) Dutch Doelitz, and I believe Jay Pearce and Steve Land.  The sky had a terrible look to it, and we stayed ahead of the storm.   Pulling in our driveway, Franklin County was put under a severe thunderstorm warning.  The power went off half way while the garage door was closing. We had to shut it manually.

Within ten minutes round two hit.  That was July 2, 1980 around 4:30 pm.  We were huddled in the hallway of our house with a guy that was on a motorcycle heading to Pittsburgh.  The house was cracking and popping.  Trees were being uprooted.  Marion was also taking a big impact.  I remember the NWS (don’t know if it was Cairo or St. Louis then) upgraded all the Severe Thunderstorm Warnings to Tornado Warnings.

There were several unconfirmed sightings of Tornadoes throughout Southern Illinois.   I remember suggesting we start praying.  All at once we hear some explicatives on W3D that was not FCC material.  The tower came crashing down in the middle of the station and silence was heard.

There were straight line winds of 80-100 mph that lasted 45 minutes.  We were without power and phone service for several days.  The following days did not bring any relief from the heat.   The Thompsonville festival was postponed.   We went and checked on my maternal grandparents and my relatives that lived north of Akin.  It took a while getting there dodging trees.  Damage was severe, but they did not take the brunt of the storm like we did.

My paternal grandpa Charles, was an EMT with the old Thompsonville Ambulance Service.  They had a cabin out at West Frankfort Lake at the time.  After getting home from Akin, I rode out at the lake with him.  He was on standby to go to West Frankfort for mutual aid.  There were some injuries there.

He kept hearing reports on his radio how bad Zeigler was as well.    There was crappie that was on the ground everywhere.  We picked up the ones that were alive and he took them home and cleaned them.  There was parts of two five gallon buckets full.

After he made sure the cabin was ok, we went to Zeigler to check on my uncle Chuck and his family.  There were check points at the city limits of both West Frankfort and Zeigler.  They let him go through because he was an EMT.

I remember there were businesses with blown out windows on Main Street.  The Farm Fresh sign was out in the road.  They were building the shopping center at the time.  K-Mart was nearly completed.  There was still enough daylight left to see the twisted steel of Kroger, in which they recently started construction on.

The six mile stretch on Route 149 between West Frankfort and Zeigler was a long one, dodging downed trees and power lines.  My uncle and his family had some damage, but was OK.

I remember that ice was being distributed at the Thompsonville Fire Department.  We had a big feast on the fourth, trying to salvage what we could of a cow that was in the freezer, the crappie, and fixed homemade ice cream with a old style crank freezer.

We also stopped at a fireworks tent in Tennessee on the way home from Nashville, and shot off what we purchased.   It was strange as it was total darkness with no street lights, etc.

Jackson, Williamson, Southern Franklin, Saline and Southern Hamilton County had extensive damage. (The same areas impacted by the May 2008 storm) There were trees uprooted, homes lost roofs and windows.   There was not one television antenna standing.

In fact, the only local station that was able to broadcast was WQRX (now WQRL) at the time.  They were operating on emergency power, and I remember Jake Seymour was the outlet of information that we had.

I would like to get any information on this storm possible for next year.  Feel free to share any pictures etc.

Homestand Highlights July 1st

Press release from the St. Louis Cardinals

Saturday, July 1, 2017 – Cardinals vs. Washington Nationals (6:15 p.m.)
FOX National Broadcast
Gates open at 4:15 p.m.

  • Replica 1942 World Series Championship Ring Promotional Giveaway: The first 30,000 ticketed fans, ages 16 and older, will receive a wearable 1942 World Series Replica Ring in honor of the 75th anniversary of the Cardinals World Series victory over the New York Yankees, courtesy of Edward Jones. (#CardsPromo)
  • Saturday Signings at the Museum: Cardinals Hall of Fame catcher Ted Simmons will sign autographs at the Cardinals Museum from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. In addition to having a valid admission to the museum, fans must have an autograph line ticket, which are free and will be distributed beginning at 9:30 a.m. at the Busch II Infield outside Cardinals Nation. Visit cardinals.com/museum for more information. Presented by Heartland Coca-Cola Bottling Company. (#CardsMuseum)
  • Honorary First Pitch: Recently crowned Miss Missouri 2017, Jennifer Davis, will throw out a ceremonial first pitch before tonight’s game. Jenn will compete for the title of Miss America in September.
  • Cardinals Care 50/50 Raffle: Fans 18 and older may play the Cardinals Care 50/50 Raffle by going to any of the seven ticket kiosk locations throughout the stadium from the time gates open until the middle of the 7th inning. One lucky fan will receive 50 percent of the gross proceeds from the game’s raffle ticket donations and the other half will benefit Cardinals Care. For past winning raffle numbers and kiosk locations, visitcardinals.com/5050.
  • MLBPAA Auction: The Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association will conduct a baseball-themed silent auction by Gate 1 (Section 137), Gate 3 and in the Cardinals Club from the time gates open through the fifth inning. All proceeds will benefit Cardinals Care and the Players Alumni Association, a non-profit group that strives to preserve the game of baseball while supporting

Spotlight Saturday Returns on July 1st with special SATURDAY NIGHT FIREWORKS!

From the Southern Illinois Miners

MARION, IL – Spotlight Saturday presented by Southern Illinois Healthcare and KFVS 12 returns on Saturday, July 1st as the Miners take on the Normal Cornbelters at a special Saturday Game time of 7:05 pm.

It’s also Scout Night and we will honoring all scouts in the area with a parade the field and much more!

Be the first 500 fans through the gate to receive a Miners Lunch Box courtesy of Southern Illinois Healthcare and don’t forget to stay after the game as we will shooting off special Saturday Night fireworks along with having a post game concert by Kristen Kearns at the stage in the Hot Corner: presented by Buffalo Wild Wings.

For more information on Spotlight Saturday or Scout Night, contact the Miners Box Office at 618-998-8499

 

Two West Frankfort men arrested in stolen firearms case

http://www.kfvs12.com/story/35790507/2-west-frankfort-men-arrested-in-stolen-firearms-case

WEST FRANKFORT, IL –  (Alicia Dombrick, KFVS TV.  Please click on the link for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Two men from West Frankfort are in the Franklin County Jail in connection to the theft of two firearms in Franklin County, Illinois.

Dustin Russell, 23, and Dylan Russell, 22, were both arrested in connection to that crime.

Some of the stolen guns have been recovered. Two other adults have been arrested and a juvenile has been charged in connection to the case.

Jones said the investigation is on going. He said more arrests are expected

 

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News