Home of El Cuartelejo
Home of El Cuartelejo
32 Pages • Four Sections
Volume 24 • Number 21
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Published in Scott City, Ks.
$1 single copy
Look Inside
Pastor Scott Wagner and Deb Lawrence look over the plaque that was unveiled at the First Christian Church. (Record Photo)
Sports Beavers add to their championship tradition during ‘16 Page 17
First baby prizes.......... 9 Youth/Education........ 11 Public notices.......12-13 LEC report................. 12 Church services......... 15 Deaths....................... 15 Health care...........16-17 Sports...................19-24 Don’t Drink, Drive...... 22 Farm section.........26-27 Classified ads.......29-31
Deaths Beverly Goodman Bonnie Pickett Gerald ‘Fred’ Sheaks II
406 Main, St. Scott City • 620-872-2090 www.scottcountyrecord.com
Agriculture Lack of biodiversity a factor in habitat loss, extinctions Page 26
Medicare Part A, Part B prices changes will be taking effect Page 11
Health Health perceptions aren’t always in sync with reality Page 16
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The A.B. Timmerman building as it was being constructed between 1905 and 1907.
it rolling,” says Patsi Graham, president of the historical society. “When I travel and I see historical signs and plaques I will frequently stop to see what they’re about. I don’t know if the locals will do that, but I hope they do,” she adds with a laugh. “As more plaques go up around town, I hope people will be surprised at what they learn about our past. I think they’ll be impressed.”
406 Main, St. Scott City • 620-872-2090 www.scottcountyrecord.com
Opinions...................4-7 Calendar...................... 7
Preserving History While some buildings have been lost to all but the history books, and other
buildings will eventually meet the same fate, Lawrence has made it her mission to identify as many buildings as possible that existed in Scott City’s past and which are still standing today. She’s researching when buildings were built, when they were destroyed by fire or other means, where those that no longer exist were once located, what businesses have been located in various buildings over the years, and more. “I’ve compiled the ages of most every building in downtown Scott City,” Lawrence says. (See HISTORIC on page eight)
top stories of 2016
Once-in-a-lifetime wheat harvest As impressive as it was to watch this year’s wheat harvest, it’s what Shayne Suppes didn’t see that made an even bigger impression as combines were rolling through fields in Scott and surrounding counties. “It’s so thick you can’t even see the wheat rows,” he said from the cab of a tractor pulling a grain cart. Like many farmers in the area, he was amazed at yields which rarely dipped below 70 bushels and, on occasion, ventured over 100 bushels according to the monitoring equipment in their combines. “Everything was perfect this year,” he observes. “We’ll prob-
ably never get the stars to align like this again - not in our lifetime.” Yields of 100 bushels or more aren’t isolated. “They’re happening all over,” says Lane County farmer Vance Ehmke, who has seen some yields on his ground far exceed that impressive number. “In past years, you might have a field that will yield 85 (bushels) and you can’t explain it. But, this year we’re seeing it from one end of the farm to the other. “We had a cutter opening up a field and the video was running on his yield monitor that he sent to us. It was showing 100, 120 and up to (See HARVEST on page 25)
406 Main, St. Scott City • 620-872-2090 www.scottcountyrecord.com
Index
When the former A.B. Timmerman building was destroyed by fire in downtown Scott City in September of 2014, it left not just a hole in the business landscape, but in the community’s history, as well. “I’d always intended to get photos inside the building,” says Deb Lawrence, a lifetime resident and a long-time real estate agent. “I sold the Timmerman building a couple of times over the past 35 years and when you were upstairs it was like walking back in time. It had several individual offices, similar to what you see on the second floor of The Majestic.” She described the second floor as a “time capsule” which had been used primarily as storage for most of the last seven decades. The main floor was home to Braun’s Butcher Block at the time of the fire. Shortly after the Timmerman fire, Lawrence posted old photos of the building’s exterior on her Facebook page and got such a good response she started a regular feature known as “Scott City: Then and Now” which features old photos and gives a brief history of buildings - many of them still occupied today. “I’ve tried to find what history I can, but some of it’s been lost forever,” she says. The Scott County Historical Society is also very supportive and appreciative of Lawrence’s efforts. “It’s an excellent idea and we’re excited that she was determined enough to get
406 Main, St. Scott City • 620-872-2090 www.scottcountyrecord.com
Education Knights raise nearly $4,000 for USD 466 special ed services Page 11
Plaques recognize current, former historic sites in city
406 Main, St. Scott City • 620-872-2090 www.scottcountyrecord.com
State New regs require more training for child care providers Page 11
Shayne Suppes was among area farmers harvesting wheat that yielded 100 bushels per acre and more last summer.