The Bulletin, Thursday, August 15, 1963 Briefs Merc and There" Activities tonight include the following: AI chapter, PEO Sis terhood, family picnic in Juniper Park, 6:15; junior high dance, Juniper Park multi purpose rec reation area, 7:30; Alcoholics Anonymous, district courtroom, courthouse, 8:30. At 8 o'clock: VFW and auxiliary, Veterans Hall, N. First Street at Revere Avenue; Eastern Star Grange Home Economics Club with Mrs. Myron Shelley, Erickson Road; work night at Moose Hall. Mr, and Mrs. Bill Hudson left yesterday for Anchorage, Alaska, to attend the Pacific Northwest convention of Kiwanis Club Inter national. Also attending will be Howard Milton, Redmond. Hud- son is secretary of the Bend club; Milton is past president of the Redmond club. In Alaska the Hud sons will also visit Juneau, Mt. McKinley, Fairbanks and other points. They will be gone 10 days. John Harpole, physical thera pist at St. Charles Memorial Hos , pital, has just returned to Bend from a vacation in Montana. Donnie Peterman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Peterman, Airport Road, returned last night by plane from a two-and-a-half-week visit in California, accompanied by a friend, Eddie St. Louis of Sacra mento. Peterman met the two boys in Klamath Falls. Eddie will visit here two weeks. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. George St. Louis, and their other four children, will join him here the last week in August, and the family will return to Sacramento together. Milton Bowman, 557 E. Norton, arrived in Miami, Fla., Tuesday night by Army airplane. While there, he will attend the national conference of Disabled American Veterans. Bowman is a past com mander of the Bend unit Richard Bryant,, assistant chief in th6divisr6n."of watershed man agement, regional office of the U.S. Forest Service, is here from Portland this week, working with members of the Deschutes tional Forest staff. Na- Michael Jameson, following a visit with his mother, Mrs. E. G. Jameson, 34ij Lafayette, has re turned to Peru, N.Y. with his brother, Eldon E. Jameson and family. A Junior High School dance will be held tonight from 7:30 to 10:30 o'clock at the multiple - purpose area in Juniper Park. Tomorrow at 10 a.m. in the City Hall, there will be a meeting of the Junior High dance council. Recovering from slight injuries suffered when she tumbled on a downtown sidewalk Wednesday is Mrs. Gertrude Borhek, 878 Riv erside. Mrs. Borhek is resting in St. Charles Memorial Hospital. Nancy J. Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil C. Moore, 1132 Newport, Bend, won academic honors at Arizona State Univer sity during the second semester of study of her senior year. Miss Moore was named to the honor roll with a grade index of 3.31 while completing 13 semester hours. Mr, and Mrs, Howard Benshoof and children of Ortonville, Minn., have been visiting this past week at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Conley Cronen and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bucholz. Mrs. Benshoof is the sister of Mrs. Cronen and Mrs. Bucholz. The visitors also called at the homes of Wilbur Wachter, Lowell Cronen, and Ralph Snider. Lunch will be served by the Golden Age Club, in connection with a rummage sale, country store and food sale, all day Fri day and Saturday at the club house. Hours will be from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. both days. Mr. and Mri. Paul J. Bonn and children, residents of Bend, and Mrs. Bonn's parents, Mr. an d Mrs. Thomas Palmer, -Portland, have returned from a'.' vacation trip to the isolated Williams Lake area of British Columbia. Guard to leave for camp Friday Forty members of Bend's Co. C, 2nd Tank Battalion, 303rd Arm ored Division, will leave tomor row morning at 3:30 a.m. for 15 days of summer training at Yakima Firing Center. At the location, the Bend guard will train with an estimated 1500 men from other units throughout Oregon and Washington. Commanding officer of the unit as it heads north and takes over its Yakima assignment will be Lt Leo Hopper, who has headed the local Oregon National Guard out fit since July 21. He replaced Captain V. K. Mo lan who was transferred from Bend to Seattle by his company, the Union Pacific. Captain Molan plans to spend a week with the Bend guardsmen during the Yak ima training exercise. The local unit will not take the two tanks with them that are a familiar sight behind the Arm ory. At Yakima, they will get a regular army issue of armor need in field training. Since receiving their tanks ear lier this year, the Bend guards men have taken their armor into the field on several occasions for training. The training area is in the vicinity of Bessie Butte, south of Bend. Reports Issued for last month Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE In various city departments, the municipal judge record shows 46 cases handled in court in July, with traffic and liquor violations being the major offenses. One case of hit-and-run was tried. Ted Adamson, fire and ambu lance chief, reported 17 fire calls during July of wliich the majority were within the city lim its. The city ambulance made 18 trips, of which 17 were local for a total of 448 miles of travel and 48 man hours on duty for volunteers. Henry Powers dies at age 75 Henry W. Powers, 75, a Central Oregon resident during the past 50 years, died Wednesday after noon in his home in Blakely Heights. Services are scheduled at 2 p.m. Friday at the Niswonger - Rey nolds Funeral Chapel, with The Rev, D. L. Penhollow officiating. Burial is to follow in the Tumalo Cemetery. Surviving Mr. Powers are his widoe, Edith, Bend; the following stepchildren, Perry H. Dawson, Alaska; Ira Dawson, Alaska; Mrs. George Brown, Republic, Wash.; Marvin W. Dawson, La Pine: Mrs. Cal Charmon, Bend; five grandchildren and one broth er, Rex Powers, Sisters. Plans underway for Crook County Fair, Aug. 23-25 PRINEVILLE - Last minute preparations are underway in all departments for the 1963 Crook County Fair, August 23-25, as the department heads prepare for what is expected to be the largest year in Crook county fairs, ac cording to Ivan Chappell, fail manager. Department heads are G u s Woods, county agent, livestock; Mrs. Maude Purvine, home ex tension agent, 4-H contests and exhibits in the home economics field; Mrs. Blanche Harper, open class home economics exhibits; Mrs. Noma Tucker, floral; Mrs. Doral Kircher, art: Mrs. J o y i Haworth, photos and crafts; Mrs. j George Chase, land products: : Mrs. Gilbert Law-son. rabbits and ! poultry; Raymond Guthrie, halter class and Frank McCullough, working events, in the horse show. Don Snabel, fair secretary, stresses that the fair is being planned to be educational, and that the fair itself will not be a place primarily of entertainment, though portions of the fair will furnish amusement and pleasure. He emphasized this week that the fair will show the skills, the effort and the work of Central Oregon residents. Marshall L Hunt is heart victim Marshall L. Hunt, 63, long-time resident of Central Oregon and widely known in the region, died last night at 11:30 in the Klam ath Falls Hillside Hospital. He was a victim of a heart attack he suffered on August 3 when in trap shooting competition in the Klam ath city. Hunt suffered the attack on the "firing line" as a member of the Bend team. He was widely known in Oregon trapshooting circles, and long served as an officer of District court cases reported Deschutes County District Court collected $113 this week from both local and out-of-state people pass ing through Central Oregon. William Thomas Wyatt of Bend the Bend Trap Cub. Mr. Hunt was a native of Doug las County, having been born near Oakland on Oct. 27, 1500. He at tended school in southern Oregon, and was married to Marie Cra zier, by whom ha is survived. Al so surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John Baker, Bend, and a son. John R. Hunt, a teacher in an American school in Germany who is presently at home in Everett, Wash. There are two grandchil dren, Pamela Marie and James Marshall Baker. Mrs. Carey Stearns, LaPine, is a sister, and James Stearns, Tulelakc, Calif., is a nephew. Shortly following his marriage, in early days, Mr. Hunt lived for a time in the LaPine commun ity, then was a resident of Burns before coming to Bend to serve for many years with the Bend Hardware Co. At the time of his was fined 10 for hauling logs on ?eaI" "e was w,w wurra a 11011 The family home in Bend is at 38 Greeley. Funeral sen-ices are to be announced later. Sunday, July 28. Another Bond man, Gary Harold Horning, for feited a $25 fine after bing ar rested for violation of the basic rule. Stephen Rouland Allen. Oak land, Calif., was arrested for im proper passing. He forfeited a $20 fine. Karrol Seiling Christensen of Eugene forfeited $25 for a basic rule violation. Another out-of-state man, Igna cio Resendez of Sunnyside, Wash., was arrested yesterday for an overload on his truck. He forfeit ed a S33 fine. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Exclusive Frostop fran chise aveiieble for Bend area, Frostop Is nationally known Root Beer and a full line of products for drive-in operation. 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