Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune from Chillicothe, Missouri • Page 12

Location:
Chillicothe, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 12-CHILLICOTHE, MISSOURI-64601 CONSTITUTION-TRIBUNE THURSDAY. JUNE 9,1988 ecords Around Town Hospitalized Dismissed from Hedrick Medical Center were Marjorie Canning, 1810 Clay Ola Lester of a and Mrs. Grady Raymo and daughter of Princeton. Exercise Class The Livingston Health Center is offering a water exercise class for persons with arthritis from 11 a.m. to 12 noon Monday, June 13.

Classes arc also available from 1 to 2 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. The class is open to the public. At Home Verda Jacobs, 248 Graves St, is now at home recovering from surgery at Research Hospital in Kansas City. Health Clinic The Livingston County Health Center will have an immunization clinic from 7:30 to 10:30 a.m.

Thursday, June 15, at the center office, 530 Park Lane. The clinic is open to the public. Autumn Leaves Autumn Leaves will meet at 11 a.m. Monday, June 13, at the Coburn building. The Rev.

Gene Hatcher of the Full Gospel Church will give the devotional. Bingo will be played in the afternoon. Persons are to bring a prize. Prewitt Reunion Prewitt family and friends are invited to attend their annual reunion at 1 p.m. Sunday, June 19, in the Coburn building.

There will be a carry-in dinner. Family Reunion The Colton-Kissick-Littrell family reunion will be Saturday, July 2, at Simpson Park. A catered i will be served at 1 p.m. Persons are to telephone Connie Epperson at 646-1311 by Wednesday, June 15, with dinner reservations. Square Dancing The Peppy Promenaders square dance club will meet at 8 p.m.

Saturday, June 11, at the 4-H Fairgrounds. Theme is "Soda Jerk" dance. Caller will be Wiley Hutchinson. In the Area Pressure Clinic The Livingston County Health Center will conduct a blood pressure clinic from 11:30 a.m. to 12 noon Monday, June 13, at the Chula Community Center.

The public is welcome. At Church First Christian Friday activities: 11 a.m. Rachel Circle, 12 noon, CWF salad luncheon, 1 p.m. CWF meeting and installation of officers. Mt.

Pleasant ML Pleasant Baptist Church will have Vacation Bible School from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Monday through Friday, June 13 through 17, for children four years old through eighth grade. Weather Temperatures Around the Nation Local Weather Tonight clear and chilly. Low near 50. Diminishing winds.

Friday sunny. High 75 to 80. OFFICIAL TEMPERATURES Yesterday's Maximum 85 Yesterday's Minimum 56 Overnight Low 55 River Stage 3.6 YEAR AGO TODAY Maximum 84 Minimum 70 EXTENDED FORECAST Mostly sunny days Saturday through Monday. Highs near 80 Saturday, warming to 90 by Monday. Fair nights.

Low 55 to 65. Mo. Temperatures KANSAS CITY. Mo (AP) High low icmpenturts and precipitation lor the 24 noun ended ai 7 a Cipe Girardeau 93 .13 Columbia 93 $4 Joplin 96 61 Kmsas City 94 62 Kd 93 60 KiAswlle 74 51 .03 Monett 93 60 .40 SL Joseph 92 59 St-Louis 92 55 1.26 Spnngfield 93 61 .26 Vichy 92 56 Wet Plains 93 59 .03 Albany, NY Albuquaque Amanllo The Weather Ebcwhere By The Axoclaled Preij Thuraday TemperattuM indicate prcviouf day' high ind overnight low to 8 a.m. EOT.

Ill Prc OUk 72 50 cdy 88 53 cdy 97 65 clr Anchorage 64 50 cdy Asheville 89 55 cdy 94 69 cdy Atlantic City 67 53 70 cdy Austin 95 70 cdy Baltimore 76 57 75 clr Billings 95 54 cdy Birmingham 94 67 cdy Bumarck 96 57 clr Boise 70 47 cdy Boston 76 54 clr Brownsville 95 75 cdy Buffalo 62 42 cdy Burlington, VL 65 38 cdy Casper 93 52 cdy Charleston.SC 85 72 .01 rain Charleston, W.Va 92 54 .02 clr Charlotte, NC. 94 66 cdy Cheyenne 89 57 cdy Chicago 73 49 clr Cincinnati 93 51 .24 clr Cleveland 70 50 cdy Columbia, SC. 93 62 02 rain Columbus, Ohio 91 48 .37 clr 71 46 cdv Dallas-Ft Worth 97 71 clr Dayton 94 49 .43 clr Denver 92 67 cdy Dei Manet Detroit Duluth El Paso Evantville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Kapidi Great Falls Greensboro, NC. Hartford Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapohs Jackson, MM Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City LinleRock UK Angela Lomavule Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Mtdhnd-Odeua Milwaukee Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk. Va.

North Plttte Oklahoma City Omaha 86 52 70 40 55 31 94 59 96 57 76 81 42 74 34 69 41 71 43 92 67 75 50 76 41 87 74 93 74 93 51 96 71 89 72 60 52 93 60 86 59 92 69 77 58 94 53 102 62 95 71 79 69 103 67 63 48 77 47 94 65 93 75 75 53 80 64 97 62 100 71 89 58 .56 .02 .39 .70 .01 .05 .01 clr clr ck clr clr clr clr clr clr cdy cdy clr .18 .48 24 05 .66 cdy clr clr run cdy clr clr clr clr eli clr .18 clr 118 ran clr dr clr clr cdy 01 cdy cdy ck clr clr Orlando 90 72 Philadelphia 70 56 .03 PhcW 100 74 Pittsburgh 79 47 .73 Portland, Maine 71 43 Portland, Ore. 70 50 Providence 75 56 Ratagh 93 66 RapidCity 99 62 Reno 67 41 Richmond 89 59 01 Sacramento 76 54 St Louis -Salt Lake City 77 51 San Antonio 96 73 San Diego 70 56 San Francisco 68 53 San Juan, PR. 94 77 St Sic Mane 63 34 Seattle 67 48 Shrevepoit 97 70 Sioux Falls 94 53 Spokane 64 41 Syracuse 67 40 Tampa-StPtrsbg 88 76 Topeka 92 59 Tucson 101 63 Tulsa 99 66 81 56 70 Wichita Wakes-Barn rain cdy clr clr cdy rain ck cdy cdy cdy cdy 92 55 126 ck ck cdy cdy cdy clr ck cdy cdy clr cdy cdy rain clr clr clr clr clr cdy ck 01 30 01 Lake Stages KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Lake of the Ozadcs 658.1, 1.9 feet below normal level; up 0.2. Pomrae de Tern 840 1 0 foot over normal level, no change.

Stockton 866.0, 1.0 foot below normal level, down 0.2. Taneycomo 700.75, .25 foot below normal level up .10. Truman 705.7, 0.3 foot below normal level, down 0.1. Bull Shoals 65341, .59 foot below nornial level, down .31. Table Rock 912.33, 2.67 feet below normal level, down .12.

Beaver 1120.29, .29 foot over normal level, down .17. 102 66 Wilmington, Del 71 56 National Temperature Extremes High at Altus, Okla Loi Friday. 21 at West Yellowstone, Mont. Mo. River Stages ST LOUIS (AP) River Stages MISSOURI Kansas City 4 0 -02 Boonwlle 86 Jefferson City 90 -01 Hermann 70 00 St.

Chades 116 Hannibal 91 Louuiana 107 00 Clarksville 13 0 402 Winfield 133 St. Louis 2.7 Cape Girardeau 84 -07 Ambulance calls. Boonville man believed to have shot rial, transport estranged wife and man, then self June 8, 7:25 a.m., Livingston Manor to Hedrick Medical Center, transport. June8, 11:02 a.m., 1129 Arcadia to Hedrick Medical Center, emergency. June 8, 4:55 p.m., Momingside Center to Hedrick Medical Center, transport.

8, 8:34 p.m., Hedrick Medical Center to Liberty Memo- BOONVILLE, Mo. (AP) A Boonville man believed to have killed his estranged wife and another man Wednesday night apparently killed himself in a rural area about 10 miles away, police said. A 12-gauge shotgun believed to have been used in all three shootings was found beside the body of Harold Heckman, 36, in a remote area about 10 miles southwest of Boonville, Cooper County Sheriff Charles Smith said About three hours earlier, police found the bodies of Glenda Heckman, 34, and Ronald Eugene Deuser, 27, in her apartment Police were called to the apartment about 8:30 p.m. when neighbors reported hearing a number of gunshots. Wilma Cooper, the chief dispatcher of the police department, said neighbors repotted seeing Heckman leave die apartment after the gunshots were fired.

Obituaries Susan Kay Pogge ee, five-week-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George ied Wednesday, June 8, 1988, at Belton Research Susan Kay Pogge of Belton, Hospital. The baby was bom May 4, 1988, in Olathe, the daughter of George and Karen Alter Pogge. She is survived by her parents, a half sister, Jodie Sue Pogge of Belton; a maternal grandmother, Marilyn Guilford of Hale; a maternal great-grandmother, Pauline Alter of Hale; maternal great-grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Ora Rounkles of Tina; and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Pogge of Lawrence, Kan.

Graveside service will be at 7:30 p.m. Friday, June 10, at the Lakeside Cemetery in Sumner with U. S. Air Force Chaplain James Ritchie, JRTC, of Little Rock Air Force Base, officiating. The family will receive friends at the cemetery at 7 p.m.

Friday preceding the service. Funeral arrangements were under the direction of the Lindley Funeral Home. Dayton Hughson Dayton Hughson, 87, of Braymer, died Wednesday, June 8, 1988, at the Golden Age Nursing Home in Braymer. Mr. Hughson was a farmer in the Braymer area all of his life.

He was bom in Braymer October 1, 1900, the son of Alfred and Sally Dillman Hughson. He married Rita Kelly on February 27, 1927, and she died June 4, 1982. He was a member of the Braymer United methodist Church. He is survived by three sons, Dean of Excelsior Springs, and Robert and Gerald, both of Braymer, eight grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. He was also preceded in death by a daughter.

Funeral service will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 11, at the United Methodist Church. Burial will be in the Evergreen Cemetery. Persons may call after 9 a.m. Friday, June 10, at the Pitts Funeral Home in Braymer.

Family visitation will be from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday. Memorials to (he Braymer United Methodist Church may be left at the funeral home. Forest Bartlett Green Funeral service for a former Brcckenridgc resident, Forest Banlctl Green, was conducted at 2 pjn. today (Thursday) at the Pius Funeral Chapel in Brcckenridge.

Mr. Green, 46, died Sunday, June 5, 1988, at the DcPaul Hospital in Cheyenne, after a short illness. He was a resident of Cheyenne. Mr. Green was a truck driver and a member of the Teamsters Union.

He was a member of the National Rifle Association and a gun collector. He was bom September 1, 1941, in Hamilton, the son of Marshall and Doris Cicvcncer Green. On September 5, 1959, he married the former DarJenc Joy Barrett He is survived by his mother and stepfather, Doris and Paul Sanson of Brcckcmidge; three sons, Gregory Alan and Forest Banlca, both of Su Joseph, and Jaymc Leigh of Beverly Hills, a daughter, Daria Jean Rasmussen of Lancaster, three half brothers, Leo and T. J. Sanson of Breckcnridge, Tom Sanson of Chillicothc; throe sisters, Dolly Durnill of Bpgard, Ruih WheeTbarger of Trenton, and Kathy Hansen of Alliance, and six grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his father and a brother, David Lcc Green. The Rev. Donald Prothro officiated. Organist was Mary Warren and soloist Gcorgeanna KictMcy. Burial was in Roschill Cemetery in Brcckenridgc.

Pallbearers were Nick Nichols, Larry Basseit, Larry Linville, Raymond Johnston, Rex Reynolds, Busier Mclntire, Kenny Warren and Bifl Sharp. Arrangement's were under the direction of Pius Funeral Chapel. Norman-Wagy-Singer Serving The Community For 70 Years 434 Locust-6464417-ChiIficothe Rocket fuel plant resuming production HENDERSON, Nev. (AP) The only remaining U.S. plant manufacturing a critical fuel component used in military rockets and the space shuttle has announced it will resume production next week.

Kerr-McGee Corp. said Wednesday it will resume manufacture of ammonium perchlorate Monday at its Henderson plant, which shut down under public pressure May 12 after an explosion destroyed a competitor's plant nearby. The announcement came after Rep. Robert Rowe, told a hearing in Washington that the May 4 blast at the Pacific Engineering Production Co. plant and the shutdown at Kerr-McGee put the nation "on the brink of a national emergency." The House Committee on Science, Space and Technology was told that demand for ammonium perchlorate, a fuel oxidizer, would rise from 37.8 million pounds this year to more than 60 million pounds in 1989.

The bulk of the fuel would be used by NASA, the Army, Navy and Air Force and the rest for commercial, export and other uses. Anita Bridges, a Kerr-McGee spokeswoman, said company officials have resolved their differences with the Clark County Fire Department and slate officials over the plant's safety and are ready to resume production. Fire department officials did not immediately return telephone calis for comment Ms. Bridges said the company hired a team of independent safety experts to inspect Uic plant and has "done everything humanly possible to iry alleviate the fears and concerns of our operation." The explosion al Pacific Engineering killed two people and caused an estimated $73 million damage. Ammonium perchlorate is ased in such rocJcels as the MX and Minmeman missiles and in the space shuttle.

resets wft a Want Ml June 8, 7:08 p.m., Hedrick Medical Center to Morningside Center, transport. June 8, 9:26 p.m., Hedrick Medical Center to Independence Regional, transport Fire alarm The Chillicothe Fire Department reported that they were called to Morningside Center at 9:28 a.m. Thursday. Upon arrival they found a smoke detector malfunction but no fire. No equipment was used.

Police blotter Police reported that an assault occurred in the Corner Lounge parking lot at 10 p.m. Wednesday. Geraldine Anne Becherman said she was struck in the head and fell against the side of the building. She told police she was suffering from hearing problems arid was taken to Hedrick MedicaI Center by a private vehicle. CORRECTION 1 Price for Hy-Vee Ice Fudge Bars 20 CT 1.89 instead of 1.29 as stated in Wednesday's ad.

The Constitution-Tribune must have a 24-hour notice for news sports photos for meetings, donations, tournaments, sports events, etc. between 8.30 a.m. 5.30pm. 24 hrs. before you need a photo taken.

EMPLOYEE CWNTO FOOD STORES CASH IN YOUR ATTIC? Sell Those Surplus Items. Someone Will Pay You CASH For These and Other No-Longer Needed Items. ANTIQUES CLEANUP! 646-2411 THE CONSTITUTION TRIBUNE THE OLIVE BRANCH Will Minister At CORNER STONE CHURCH Hwy 65 North SATURDAY JUNE 11TH 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY JUNE 12TH 10:30 A.M. Olive Branch does original music, set exclusively to the scriptures.

Their vocal presentation combines contemporary and old world music styles with an exotic array of instrue- ments to produce a sound that is uniquely theirs. 'ALL YOU CAN EAr Friday Seafood Buffet Great Gift For Father's Day Saniiben Sport sUtks aie cool ligM-eishiantlcontaubie The petiftt eombmjiion toi men who wart 39 loofc ihcn bed Acning casually ihc lamousSinMbeiiiimi turn la Ctmf out tutue Choice colors labrM.arajs.ijflei SPORT World's most comfortable casual Slacks! tvnamgthemme tanaat AMflaheinm glim Ictilmg 1 SustjiniM-- oarmsfll tuition II5 jtcftufanoc ing genuine Ruby Inc OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8P.M. M'E-N-S'W-E'A-R ZDS MENU Cod Nuggets Crab legs Beer Battered Frog Legs Deep Fried Shrimp Boiled Spiced Shrimp Mixed Vegetable Hushpuppies Party Potatoes Salads 5-9 P.M. 95 $71. I Adults 0 Children Under 12 Inside The Grand River Inn Hwy 36 465 TASTERS CHOICE 327 WASHINGTON-- CHILIJCOTHE and on Smity-ABKiSaTaflEg Induing Sana YoroeH toe Cream Are) Fresh Sirawtenes.

We am a Eg Rastaurart saaJirg to 200 peppte. Make your plans FBI. NITE BUFFET $5.95 WhoteCaffish-Shranp Bafteque Bnel-fned Cfcncfcen SAT. NITE BUFFET $6.49 Ctace Sirtoin 9eak--Sirirap Barbeque 8eS Rfes-Horstfoeuvies baked poteto.sotp, bread 8 cinnamon rolls, cofee or lea. gEWUflSO HAVE fflBHSTaOTrBBffiES AND SOFT CECHEMI SPECIALS FOR FRI.

NITE Choice Prime Bib $5.49 $6.49 Shrimp Bastel $455 8 Qz. Choice Sntom 2 Boneless Pork Chops $4S5 SPECIALS FOR SAT NITE Choice Prime $6.49 6 Jumbo Shrimp $535 Large! Bone $555 Frog Legs $535 bread cinnamon volte, ccrfios or tea. WE HAVE fflESHSTOAWBERHCS AND SOFT 3CE CREAM SUNDAY DINNER BUFFET Roast Beef Round--Fried Chicken sauoe, friomsjtyte gresn tears, tos tesft tomgmaflft satafls, irsawimg spinach saTufl. troa)ti Ttflte and bread, homsmafls cinnamon rite, ccfftes tea ALL FOR $4.49 FRESH STRAWBERRIES AND SOFT ICE CREAM FOR DESSEHT.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
362,960
Years Available:
1890-1988