In August 1889 the office moved into another building on Main Street, opposite the Fairview Hotel, which allowed enough room for the growth of the paper.
The railroad was complete and furnishing incoming and outgoing business for the rapidly developing town.
W. E. Moore was mayor; G. O. Grosbeck, Police judge; Thomas Gillan, Willis Scouten, J. F. Joss, W. C. Meyers and Dell McCarthy were councilmen.
In 1914 Charles Buck became owner and he built a building just south of the hotel for the paper office.
Mrs. Parman continued as owner and publisher until she leased the paper to Leaine Fanning in 1939, and she married Merle Fish and moved to a farm near Powhattan.
The paper resumed printing in February 1988 with a brand new method of printing—a computer, laserprinter and a copier.
Leaine’s sister Louise Fanning stepped in and became editor and publisher of the paper.
Rolland died February 14, 2011, and Patsy on November 7, 2014, at which time the paper ceased being printed.
A rebirth of The Fairview Enterprise happened in March 2015 when David Floyd Lambertson of Winchester, KS and Larry Gilbert of Kansas City, KS, both having grown up in Fairview, came together to keep the paper alive.
Not living in the town, they rely on local volunteers to report the current events to them.