
Friday Night Free Concert: Mike Lundeen


Paul Franklin Carlson, 90, of Birmingham, Alabama, passed away April 1, 2020. He was born March 1, 1930, at the family home on 705 Clark Street, Fort Scott, Kansas, and was the third of seven children.
He was preceded in death by his parents Arthur F. and Lorena M. (Ballou) Carlson, sister Mildred L. (Carlson) Askew, brothers Norman R. Carlson, Larry D. Carlson, and daughter Paula Jo (Carlson) Gearity.
He is survived by his best friend and wife Rebecca Peters-Carlson, two granddaughters Christine Gearity and Kathy Gearity, and one great-granddaughter Katarina; brothers Ralph J. (Saundra) Carlson, Donald J. (Mim) Carlson, and Gerald L. (Donna) Carlson, 16 nieces and nephews, and numerous great and great great nieces and nephews.
Paul attended Eugene Ware School, Fort Scott; Gravette Holiness Bible School, Gravette, Arkansas; and graduated from Mt. Zion Bible School, Ava, Missouri, in 1948.
Based in San Diego, California, Paul proudly served his country for four years in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War. Paul was a lifetime member of the NRA.
In 1959, he moved to Birmingham, Alabama where he remained until the time of his death. Paul received a commendation from the Governor of Alabama for his dedication and good work for 20 years as photographer for the state organization NAMI-Alabama (National Alliance on Mental Illness-Alabama).
Paul joyfully served Christ Jesus as his Savior and Lord for many years. He was an ordained Christian minister, preaching and distributing countless Bibles and other Christian writings to people across the United States.
The service is open to the public.
The family will conduct the memorial service at 11:00 a.m., Friday, July 2, 2021, at the Fort Scott National Cemetery with full military honors following.
Memorials are suggested to Jailhouse Rock Ministries, Inc., P O Box 880, Stockton, MO 65785.
The Fort Scott City Commission will meet on Tuesday, June 22nd, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Hall Commission Meeting Room at 123 S. Main Street, Fort Scott, Kansas to hold a work session to discuss the 2022 budget. This meeting is open to the public, but no action will be taken.
The work session will also be available on the City’s YouTube channel.
Updated – The LandBank meeting will be held on Tuesday, June 22nd, 2021 at 5:20 p.m. at City Hall in the City Commission meeting room. There will be a majority of the City Commissioners present, but no City Commission business will be conducted.
This meeting will be made available via the City’s you tube channel at City of Fort Scott.
The City Commission will meet for a special meeting at 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, June 22nd, 2021 at City Hall in the City Commission meeting room at 123 South Main Street, Fort Scott, Kansas. The City Commission will meet to consider a fireworks ordinance.
This meeting is open to the public and will be shown on the City’s you tube channel.
Fort Scott Forward is being moved to a new day and time. After surveying residents, the monthly meeting will be held on the fourth Thursday of each month at 5:30 PM at the River Room Event Center, 3 W. Oak St. Dave Lipe, proprietor of Sharky’s Pub & Grub, Luther’s BBQ, and the River Room Event Center has donated the use of the space for this event. All are welcome to attend, and refreshments will be provided.
The next Fort Scott Forward event will be held on Thursday, June 24th at 5:30 PM. The topics to be covered at this meeting will be a street improvement update, a City budget update and an overview of Codes processes.
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Craig Campbell is retiring from his 39-year career as a pharmacist on June 30.
A chance conversation with a relative changed the course of his life when deciding on a career.
“By chance, I was visiting with my great uncle who was a pharmacist,” he said. ” Willard Higbee, he was the brother of my grandma, Bernice Campbell.”
“I confided in him that I was working on a chemical engineering degree but did not think I could get through the math requirements,” Campbell said. “He said I would love pharmacy, so I visited with Ken Asher and Bob Tuchscherer, local pharmacists at the time, and they agreed that pharmacy was a wonderful profession.”
Technology advancement has changed his job as a pharmacist.
“Technology has advanced so much with the electronic medical record,” Campbell said. “It brings into view so much more information that lets you know more about the patient, not just in the present moment but what has gone on before.”
“Prescriptions are so much safer now that we do not have to figure out the doctor’s handwriting,” he said. “Sorry doctor friends. Pharmacists are an integral part of the patient care team now, since when I started in the fall of 1982.”
He has most recently been Mercy Health System’s Director of Pharmacy Performance, St. Louis, since November 2014. But his office is located in a wing of the former Mercy Hospital, although during the COVID-19 pandemic, he has worked mostly from home, he said.
From 1999-2018 Campbell served as Mercy Hospital Fort Scott’s Pharmacy Director, before that from ’92-’99, was a staff pharmacist at Mt. Carmel Hospital (now Ascension Via Christi) in Pittsburg.
Campbell worked from1983-1992 for four pharmacy’s starting with his first job in Texas.
Campbell completed a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy at Southwestern Oklahoma State University in Weatherford, OK, and an associate of arts degree in pre-pharmacy from Fort Scott Community College.
For Campbell, the best part of his career was being a part of patient care teams, which come up with the best plan to improve patient health, he said.
“That has been rewarding,” Campbell said. “While at Mercy Fort Scott…my hometown, I was able to care for a lot of friends and family.”
“I once went into the room of an elderly teacher I had in the seventh or eighth grade,” he said. “The patient taught math. The patient said I must have been a student, but could not recall my name. I told who I was. The patient asked what I did for a living and I said I was a pharmacist. The patient smiled and said, ‘I must have been a pretty good teacher.’ Yes, the patient was a good teacher.”
The COVID-19 Pandemic has been the biggest challenge of his career.
“In the six years I have worked for Mercy at the system level, the main responsibility is to make sure each hospital has the medications they need when they need them,” Campbell said. “COVID was the most difficult time as we were competing with every hospital in the country to have enough meds to treat patients, especially those on ventilators. There were many 20 hour days in April and May 2020.”
What is on the horizon for you?
My wife (Jane) says I am trading one OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder) for another,” he said. “I would really like to help the city and county improve the overall quality of life through organizing volunteer groups to help our neighbors with whatever they need.”
Campbell is chairman of the Good Neighbor Action Team, which helps people with work on yards, house painting, etc.
“The community has three big events coming up next year with Big Kansas Road Trip in May, Good Ole Days, and the Fort Scott High School all-class reunion next June. We really have an opportunity to show off our great town and county.”
“We will also travel some and see more of the grandkids’ activities,” he said.
Campbel has four children: Ryan (who is deceased); Brett and wife, Kayla, Pittsburg; Trevor and wife, Jami, Overland Park; and Jenna Campbell and her fiance Devin, Fort Scott. His grandkids are Mackenize Campbell, Spokane, WA; Brecken and Landry Campbell, Pittsburg and Kennadie, Rush, Austyn, and Larkin Campbell, Overland Park.
