CHAMBER TO HOST COMMUNITY CONNECTION PANELIST LUNCHEON on Oct. 25

 

The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce will be hosting a Community Connection Panelist Luncheon on Wednesday, October 25th, from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Empress Event Center, 7 N. Main St. Chamber members and the community are invited to attend for updates by the City of Fort Scott, Bourbon County, Fort Scott Community College, USD-234, USD-235, and Bourbon County REDI.

 

There will be a 7-minute update from each of the following panelists, ending with time for questions:
City of Fort Scott City Manager Brad Matkin
Bourbon County Commission Chair Jim Harris
FSCC President Jason Kegler
USD-234 Superintendent Destry Brown
USD-235 Superintendent Vance Eden
Bourbon County REDI Executive Director Rob Harrington

Moderator for the event will be Bailey Lyons of Lyons Realty Group, 2023 Chamber Board Chair.

Contact the Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce at 620-223-3566 for more information or visit fortscott.com.

Winter Hours of Operation for Fort Scott National Historic Site 

 

 

Fort Scott, Kan. – The leaves are changing for fall and winter, so are the hours of operation at Fort Scott National Historic Site. Beginning Wednesday, November 1, the park’s historic structures will be open daily from 8:30 am–4:30 pm through March 31, 2024. The buildings are closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. The park grounds, walkways, and parking lot continue to be open from ½ hour before sunrise until ½ hour after sunset daily.

 

Fort Scott National Historic Site is a fee free park that offers a glimpse into the growth of our nation through a short film, interactive audio-visual programs, displays, museum spaces, and historic objects. A walk through the fort reveals the significant role it played in the opening of the West, the Civil War, and the strife in the State of Kansas that preceded it.

 

Park Rangers are on hand and happy to help you learn more about the area and plan your visit. To find out more or become involved in activities at the Fort before your visit, please contact the park at 620-223-0310 or visit our website at www.nps.gov/fosc.

 

-NPS-

42nd Annual Candlelight Tour Tickets On Sale November 1

Be an Active Part of History this Holiday Season

 

Wednesday, November 1, 2023, tickets for Fort Scott National Historic Site’s 42nd Annual Candlelight Tour go on sale. Tickets are available by calling the fort at 620-223-0310 (with a major credit card) or by stopping by the Visitor Center on Old Fort Blvd. Tickets are $8.00 per person and non-refundable, children 5 and under are free. It is recommended that you get your tickets early to ensure your choice of tour times, as this event frequently sells out.

 

The 42nd Annual Candlelight Tour is Friday and Saturday, December 1 and 2, 2023. Tours on December 1 will begin at 6:30 pm and leave every 15 minutes until 9 pm. On Saturday, December 2, the tours will start at 5 pm with the final tour leaving at 9 pm. Please arrive 10 minutes early to allow time to park, present/pick up your ticket, and get oriented. Participants are advised to please dress for the weather and conditions, as the entire tour will be outside and on sidewalks.

 

1,000 candle lanterns illuminate the site and reenactors (including you) bring the fort to life.

This year’s tour is about Health and Wellness. During the tour, you will be immersed in ways people have historically been provided the opportunity to be healthy and embrace happiness, despite their struggles.

 

From November 1-March 31, Fort Scott National Historic Site, a unit of the National Park Service, will be open for its winter hours of operation.  The site exhibit areas and visitor center are open daily from 8:30 am-4:30 pm. The park grounds are open daily from ½ hour before sunrise until ½ hour after sunset. For more information about Fort Scott National Historic Site programs or become involved in the candlelight tour, or other activities, please contact the park at 620-223-0310 or visit our website at www.nps.gov/fosc.

 

-NPS-

 

Credit Photos as: NPS Photo/C. Brenner

Opportunities to Meet Bourbon County Candidates for the 2023 Election in November

There will be two dates that the community can interact with local candidates for the upcoming November 2023 elections.
Ellis Fine Arts Center on the campus of Fort Scott Community College, 2401 S. Horton.
Session 1: Wednesday, Oct 25,5:30 doors open, 6 pm, at the Ellis Family Fine Arts Center on the campus of Fort Scott Community College: candidates for FSCC bd of Trustees, USD 234 Board of Education and the, Fort Scott City Commission.
Uniontown City Hall.
Session 2:  Thursday, Oct 26, 6:30 p.m. at Uniontown City Hall, Uniontown: candidates for FSCC bd of Trustees, USD 235 Board of Education, and city council candidates for Uniontown, Bronson, and Redfield.
Submitted by Deb Martin for the Bourbon County Republicans.

Nieces Are Working to Renovate the Payne Building At 6th and Main

 

Al and Luanna Niece outside their new purchase, the building at 6th and Main Street, Fort Scott.

Al and Luanna Niece, from Blanco County, TX, purchased the dilapidated building at 6th and Main in June 2023 to renovate.

The Nieces have plans for building at 6th and Main: two apartments, an ice cream shop, and a gentleman’s bar. The building is across the street from the Fisher Park Ballfield.

 

Al Niece owns Niece Equipment of Kansas and has had a plant in Fort Scott’s Industrial Park, since 2012. The company manufactures, sells, and leases water trucks, fuel/lube trucks, and water towers, according to its website.

“We fell in love with Fort Scott, the community, the downtown,” Luanna said. “We are trying to give back.”

The building was built in 1889, with A. B. Payne as the owner. It was built for apartments and a printing shop, Luanna said. The name of the building was Shultz and Paine.

The Shultz-Paine Building from a postcard in the 1880s. Luanna Neice said Ann Rawlins at the Old Fort Genealogical Society was a great source of information on the building and provided this photo.

One interesting fact discovered in looking at the history of the building: “The building’s owner was friends with Mark Twain,” she said. Twain was a humorist, journalist, lecturer, and novelist who died in 1910.

The Nieces plan to make two apartments on the top floor, one for themselves and one for a rental.

The street-level floor will be renovated to make an old-fashioned “soda jerk fountain and ice cream shop” with candy and “simple foods like hot dogs”, she said.

Luanna and Al Niece stand in front of the future ice cream shop on the south side of the first floor of the building. This entrance will be reconfigured, Al said.

The basement will be Al’s hangout, “Like in the movie ‘Speak Easy’, a gentleman’s bar,” she said. “It will be his mancave, probably called ‘Al’s’.”

From the basement looking up the two stories during demolition. Submitted photo.

“We hope to have renderings (of the future building plans) in about a month,” Al said. They met with the builder last week and hope to be open by next summer, he said.

Koen Construction is the builder, Al said.

What attracted the Nieces was that “this building is a stand-alone one,” she said. “And it has a lot next to it, land. About 6,000-10,000 square feet.”

Looking south from Main Street, the building’s lot is lower than the sidewalk on the left side of this photo.
Some relics from the demolition are the old elevator shaft and gears. Submitted photo.

The Nieces also own the building that houses the Brickstreet BBQ Restaurant, the River Room Event Center, and the Healthy Bourbon County Action Team office on North National.

Brickstreet BBQ is located at the corner of Oak Street and National Avenue on Fort Scott’s northside. The Healthy Bourbon County Action Team office is north of the restaurant.  The River Room Event Center is located on the second floor. Al Niece also owns this building.

 

 

 

Local Author, Patty LaRoche: Book On Kindle App Announced

The cover of Patty LaRoche’s new book: A Little Faith Lift…Finding Joy Beyond Rejection. Submitted graphic.

I am so excited to share that my book A Little Faith Lift…Finding Joy Beyond Rejection is offered, starting tomorrow, for 99 cents on the Kindle App.  This is a limited-time offer, and then the price will become $9.99.

Patty LaRoche. 2023.
Author: A Little Faith Lift…Finding Joy Beyond Rejection
www.alittlefaithlift.com
AWSA (Advanced Writers & Speakers Assoc.)

 

The reviews have been exciting:

Reading this book makes me smile! Patty LaRoche’s wisdom laced with humor is always refreshing. I laughed. I cried. But in the end, I was left with a deeper sense of God’s great love for me.

When I bought the book, I thought I would find it a light read but in fact it has so many gems of wisdom that I found it hard to put down. Emotionally, it was a rollercoaster ride from outright belly laughing to swiping tears from my eyes. It reminded me that we are all on the same rollercoaster ride and we can choose to let the opinions of others put us on the sidelines of life or we can get on with living.

I absolutely loved this book. It was quite embarrassing as I was laughing my butt off on a plane several times, much to the annoyance of my neighbor… However, at the end of the flight, he wanted to know all about the book so he could read it as well. 

Inside A Little Faith Lift you will discover invaluable strategies to:

  • Discover a renewed confidence in the God-given abilities you have been ashamed to cherish
  • Delve into the destructive thought processes designed to keep you in a game of comparisons
  • Recognize Satan’s devious tactics, convincing you to use others’ opinions to determine your value
  • Fall deeply in love with God as you begin to understand how valued you are
  • Learn to laugh at situations instead of allowing them to destroy your self-worth

To take advantage of this offer, simply go to this Link: https://www.amazon.com/Little-Faith-Lift-Finding-Rejection-ebook/dp/B0CJ9NDJC5 and purchase the digital version of A Little Faith Lift…Finding Joy Beyond Rejection.

If you like this offer and/or like what you’ve read in my book, please, please share this with all of your friends.  I can’t do this without YOU!  Thank you so much for your support.

 

Agenda for the Bourbon County Commission for This Evening, Oct. 23

 

Bourbon County Courthouse

210 S. National Ave Fort Scott, KS 66701 Phone: 620-223-3800

Fax: 620-223-5832

Bourbon County, Kansas

Nelson Blythe

1st District Commissioner

Jim Harris, Chairman

2nd District Commissioner

Clifton Beth

3rd District Commissioner

 

 

Bourbon County Commission Agenda 210 S. National Ave.

Fort Scott, KS 66701

October 23, 2023 5:30 p.m.

 

 

  1. Call Meeting to Order
  2. Flag Salute Followed by Prayer
  • Approval of Consent Agenda
    1. Approval of Minutes from 10/16/2023
    2. Approval of Payroll Totaling $342,018.24
    3. Approval of Accounts Payable Totaling $694,895.54
  1. Public Comments
  2. Jennifer Hawkins, County Clerk
    1. Letter of Support for CHC SEK Transportation
    2. Approval of 2024 Calendar
  3. Jennifer Hawkins-Executive Session KSA 75-4319(b)(1)
  • Department Updates
    1. Public Works
  • Commission Comments
  1. Adjourn Meeting

 

 

 

 

 

Executive Session Justifications:

 

KSA 75-4319 (b)(1) to discuss personnel matters of individual nonelected personnel to protect their privacy.

KSA 75-4319 (b)(2) for consultation with an attorney for the public body or agency which would be deemed privileged in the

attorney-client relationship.

KSA 75-4319 (b)(3) to discuss matters relating to employer/employee negotiations whether or not in consultation with the

representative(s) of               the body or agency.

KSA 75-4319 (b)(4) to discuss data relating to financial affairs or trade secrets of corporations, partnerships, trust and individual     proprietorships

KSA 75-4319 (b)(6) for the preliminary discussion of the acquisition of real property.

KSA 75-4319 (b)(12) to discuss matters relating to the security measures, if the discussion of such matters at an open meeting would jeopardize such security measures.

 

Attachments:

Payroll 10-20-2023 1 of 2

Accounts Payable 10-20-2023

Payroll 10-20-2023 2 of 2

Outrunning a Horse by Carolyn Tucker

Keys to the Kingdom

By Carolyn Tucker

 

 

My Dad was a horseman and he taught my daughter and I to ride and love horses. I always rode my Missouri Foxtrotter at one of two gaits; either a foxtrot or running walk. I don’t recall ever coaxing my horse into running so I could experience the powerful speed of the animal. I’ve watched a lot of Western films where the bank robbers ride out of town at breakneck speed and soon a posse leaves close behind them. No man ever headed out of town on foot when he was in a hurry — he always rode a horse.

 

God’s prophet Elijah had just called out all the false prophets of Baal. Everyone watching found out that Baal was not the great god his followers thought he was. Elijah made certain the people understood that Jehovah God, and not Baal, was sending the rain to end the three-year drought. The showdown at Mount Carmel was like a called-out gunfight in the street of Dodge City — and God had Elijah‘s back.

 

After Elijah’s prayer, God answered by fire, which proved He was (and still is) Almighty God. Then the false prophets of Baal were led down to the Kishon Brook and Elijah killed all 450 of them. “Then Elijah said to King Ahab, ’Now, go and eat. I hear the roar of rain approaching.’ While Ahab went to eat, Elijah climbed to the top of Mount Carmel, where he bowed down to the ground, with his servant, ‘Go and look toward the sea.’ The servant went and returned saying, ’I didn’t see a thing.’ Seven times in all Elijah told him to go and look. The seventh time he returned and said, ’I saw a little cloud no bigger than a man’s hand, coming up from the sea.’ Elijah ordered his servant, ’Go to King Ahab and tell him to get in his chariot and go back home before the rain stops him.’ In a little while the sky was covered with dark clouds, the wind began to blow, and a heavy rain began to fall. Ahab got in his chariot and started back to Jezreel. The power of the Lord came on Elijah; he fastened his clothes tight around his waist and ran ahead of Ahab all the way to Jezreel [about 25 miles]” (1 Kings 18:41-46 TEV).

 

Only once in the Bible do we find a man outrunning a horse. Elijah was given added strength by the Lord to outrun a chariot. I’m impressed. Do we really pause to think about what these scriptures mean? It takes a lot of energy to kill 450 men by yourself. It takes a lot of faith to pray seven times about the same thing until the expected results happen. It takes a lot of energy to outrun a king’s horse for 25 miles. Either we believe our God is big enough to give us what we need, or we do not.

 

Tough experiences in a believer’s life are comparable to a showdown between the devil and Jesus. Isaiah 43:2-5 states “when” you go through deep waters, rivers of difficulty, and fire of oppression, not “if.” It’s during these tough times that God will give strength and grace for the task — if you ask. I have buried my parents, my husband, and my brother, and I look back on those experiences and ponder, “How did I do that and not crack into a million pieces?” The answer is GOD. He promises to give what you need when you need it. If Elijah could outrun a chariot, we, too, can outrun a broken heart or any other problem in life. God’s Word tells us that what starts as mourning can end in joy (Jeremiah 31:13). If we will continually look to Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith, we will find increased strength and grace to face everything that comes our way.

 

The Key: The prayer of faith provides grace and strength to outrun a horse (problem).

Donations Needed For the Homeless

Frankie’s Mission is having a drive and will be set up at Ft. Scott Walmart, on Saturday, October 21st from 10 am to 6 pm .

“We are trying to get items for the homeless,” said Vickie Crowe. “Everything helps. We help the homeless and less fortunate with items they need like hygiene items, blankets , coats , gloves , hats , snacks ,water etc.”

“I started the mission in honor of my son who passed away last year,: she said.

Recognizing Farmers/Landowners For Outstanding Conservation Practices

Chad Guthrie
District Extension Agent, Crop production and Forage Management
Southwind District
210 S. National
Fort Scott, Kansas 66701
Office: 620-223-3720
Cell: 308-991-8415
[email protected]

The Southwind Extension District, along with the Bourbon County Conservation District, Kansas Department of Wildlife, and Kansas Bankers Association, will again be holding the Conservation Awards Program for 2023. This year, we will be giving awards in the following categories: Energy Conservation, Water Quality, Water Conservation, Soil Conservation, Windbreaks, and Wildlife Habitat.

The purpose of this program is to stimulate a greater interest in the conservation of the agricultural and natural resources of Kansas by giving recognition to the farmers and landowners who have made outstanding progress in practicing conservation on their farms. Public nominations can be made by any person in the county. They can be sent to the Southwind Extension office by November 10, 2023. Please visit http://www.agronomy.kstate.edu/extension, or contact Chad at the Southwind Extension Office in Fort Scott: 620-233-3720.