Published April 4, 2013
in the Stockton Sentinel
by Nancy Becker
One
of the things I do at the Sentinel is
watch all the area newspapers for interesting and otherwise newsworthy stories
to include in the “Kansas Klips” column of our own paper. This week I was about
to include a story from the Kansas City area until I realized it took place
across the state line in KC, MO, so it didn’t meet the “Kansas” criteria.
Shucks! You won’t get to read about the box of eyeballs that was found in the
trash at a convenience store.
Another
story that I was planning to include was just too cool of a story for Klips.
The story bears retelling one way or another, so I saved it for my Notes. This
was in the Salina Journal one day
last week. It was the story of a birthday party at a McDonald’s restaurant in
Salina where the guest of honor, Keith Lilly, was celebrating his 90th birthday
by eating his favorite meal. It’s probably not too often that an adult chooses
McDonald’s for a birthday party. But that’s not the reason this story hit the
front-page news.
Lilly,
who worked 55 years in the treasurer’s office in Salina, retired in 2005 at the
age of 82. On the day of his retirement, the Salina McDonald’s named their
cheeseburger after him. On that day, patrons of the fast-food restaurant at
2236 Planet in Salina could order a “McLilly.” The honor was appropriate on
their part, because Lilly had enjoyed the same lunch practically every weekday
since the first McDonald’s franchise opened in Salina in 1969: a regular cheeseburger, hot apple pie
and medium Coca-Cola. Through the years, that would have added up to more than
8,500 cheeseburgers, pies and Cokes.
Lilly
was just 23 years old when he began working in the Saline County Treasurer’s
office in 1946. That was nearly a decade before the McDonald’s corporation was
founded and franchised across the country. When McDonald’s came to Salina,
Lilly began eating at the restaurant at Crawford and Ohio because it was close
to the courthouse. It didn’t take long before he established a routine that
rarely varied. Lilly would take lunch precisely at 11:30 a.m., travel to
McDonald’s and go through the drive-through, pick up his never-wavering lunch
and then eat in his car, listening to the radio.
Fast
forward many more years, and Lilly –– together with about 30 members of his
family –– celebrated his 90th birthday at the McDonald’s where he had been such
a loyal customer while consuming about 8,500 cheeseburgers. With a big fuss
being made around him, Lilly enjoyed his birthday dinner, which was, of course,
a cheeseburger, hot apple pie, and a Coke. Why change the menu now?
Lilly,
who lives in Mentor, said he doesn’t get to McDonald’s as much anymore since
retiring. When asked if he prefers eating McDonald’s cheeseburgers to his
wife’s home cooking, Lilly was diplomatic. “When I’m here, I eat here,” he
said. “When I’m home, I eat home cooking.”
Good answer. Lilly, who obviously
knows a thing or two about loyalty, also knows where his first and foremost
loyalty remains.