BROTHERS, | employment with Ontario George H., Chester and John Hydro. The three brothers now D. (Jack) Jones believed | have a total of 101 years of to hold a record for long time | combined service with the Com- THESE THREE are | mission, All three are working | Construction Division. Jack Region, two Regional with the wi'hin the Central on the Commission's staff and the third Have Service Record 101 Years With Two months ago Chester Jones appointed General Superin- tendent of the new Lakeview gen-| erating station project in the Port Believed to hold a record at present for long-time ment with Ontario Hydro brothers, George H., John (Jack), and H. C! Jone now have a total of 101 years of combined service h the Com mission, The thre working within ( two on the Commiss staff and the third for struction Division All three brothers the Construction Div ever, Chester Jones | one of the brothers who till { brothers with that Divison. He } held| Jack Jones, like his two broth many responsible positions at var ers was born in Peterborough, | jous Ontario Hydro construction| ontario, and attended the schools projects across the prov-lthere including Central Public ince, building generatin ations! gehool which this year celebrated) and transformer Helits centennial. After leaving] started with Ontario Hydro 'ince worked for Hamilton! February 1928 and has now com in Peterborough as an pleted 32 years' experience apprentice draftsman. But World| In 1944 Chester Jones War I interrupted his career and| pointed Superintendent and work- he joined the Canadian Army in| ed on the construction of a num- 1915, He received his honorable ber of stations near Sudbury and discharge in 1919 and on his re-| in the Lakehead a From 1950 turn to Peterborough worked for| 55 he was Zone Superintendent in| a short time for the De Laval Co charge of constructing trans He later was employed by Gen- former stations in the Toronto|eral Motors at. Oshawa and then area, from Oakville to Port{went to the Ideal Bread Co. in Hope and as far north as Bar Toronto, where he worked for With the commencement of the|about seven years, first as a White Dog Falls project in North-| driver and after as an inspector. ern Ontario In 1956, Chester In 1928, Jack Jones started with Jones served as superintendent | Ontario Hydro in the Stations Con- and later at Caribou Falls as|struction Department. He was General Superintendent until|transferred to the Operating 1958. In the spring of that year|Dept., in July 1930, as an Assist- he went to the Thunder Bay ther-| ant Operator and became 2nd Op- mal electric generating station|erator at Leaside T.S. in October project at Fort William in the 1932. Jack was promoted to 1st Lakehead area as the General Operator Burlington T.S. in Superintendent, employ- was three D ester the world's largest steam elec- tric generating completed on | WAR VET John Duncan Jack" | ser\ He How-| ntendent for the Central Re only | gion and is the eldest of the three vif} the ATE entral on Regional Con- the Jones, also has 32 tarted n d: is the 148 entire t sta was a at Hydro couple of months when he return- ed to Leaside T.S. as 1st Oper- In July 1947 he became Chief Richard W. Jones, is Communi-|gisters, Mrs. Operator at Scarborough F.C just over a year when he district in November and Scarborough years later, 1954 position of Operating Superinten Central Region) the post he still holds STARTED ON SUNDAY When George H. Jones started ,g4in it would be in the service of|[Mt. Lawn Cemetery, Oshawa Hydr« bec bec actually of he ause with Ontario began on Sunde emergency report on a Mone developed at Woodbridge and was asked He worked for the Cor n since -and now has 37 year service. George served his apprenfice ship in Peterborough and became a journeyman electrician He joined the Construction Dept., staff in 1923 as an elec- trical journeyman and worked on various construction projects in southern Ontario. In August, 1925, George was transferred to the Operations Dept., Station Main tenance Section at Strachan T.S. and remained there as Electrical Foreman until 1927 when the headquarters were moved to Bridgman T.S In 1947, George Jones was transferred to Head Office as Su- pervisor and covered the Toronto and. Hamilton district. The fol- an but he ha to help out sion ev 'S 0 TRAFFIC KILLS 37 4 Provinces Share Weekend Mishaps By THE CANADIAN PRESS Four provinces Can ada's 59 reported weekend acci dental death A Canadian Pres 6 p.m. local times F night Sunday showe p wick, Quebec, Ontario ish Columbia the reporting such deaths Traffic killed and miscellaneous Quebec 1 20 six drownings, a deat and a man kil ing tree. Traffic youth was chopped to death by a cruiser's propeller in the St. Clair River shared ONE MISHAP KILLS FOUR Four British = Columbia's ecurred in a boat- in the Straits of a fishing boat province had traffic by a from mid t of two killed nal ¢ perso died in ick traffic accidents » survey includes traffic. and in summer pastimes but industrial deaths Ontario dead Frank May wned Sunday New accident S Ontario, one Sou accident cle Five persons died when ning vere by 61 Hamilton, after falling out his boat in Hamilton harbor Sidney Hoblyn, 70, Toronto COMING EVENTS [sick by avd i wed fr 5 Sorman { © 3 Brampan KINSMEN BINGO urgay. * ™™" 1 Premier 2 JUBILEE PAVII ION TUESDAY, JULY 2¢+h FREE ADMIS EXTRA Bl N hit hi 68 Joseph Bush, Ww N rs Erindale Mrs. John James, Syos- Long Island Y., Sunday in a two-car crash on Highway 400 near Coldwater Mrs. Lucie k sford, of r-truck near Sudbury Dieter Sur day 1 and set Lapierre, 23 injuries suffered collision Sunday ( 20 Jackpot WOODVIEW PARK MONSTER BINGO $1,300 PRIZES $100 DOOR PRIZES JACKPOT NOS. (50-56) TONIGHT iD DAM Hessner, 22 when the he d into a parked >eterborough Agnes Lormand 15, drowned at Emily Park Sunday. ary Gibson, 18, Port Perry, whose car overturned near his home Sunday Mrs. Mary Firth, 81, Stratford, | injured in a two-car collision in Stratford Saturday |. Bruce Coon, 36, Toronto, was in vehicle car crashe near I Mab Bancroft, in-| EASTWAY CLEANERS LTD. KINGSTON RD. EAST, OSHAWA Closing for Staff Holidays ONE WEEK ONLY Saturday, July 30 to Saturday, August 6 jured by Saturday. Hector a car Bechard, 30 rie Frederick Doy drowned Saturday River at Brantford ming Robert Michael Papuga Detroit, thrown from his boat into the propeller of a cruiser op the Canadian side of the St. Clair River near Squirrel Island Sun day. Tony Boydell lieved drowned quarry near Mrs. Sadie daughter Mrs 29, and Mrs Brantford Grand 57 in while tt the 16. Hamilton, 't Sunday in Hamilton Aberdeen, Marjorie Piche's )e- 65, her daughter Carolynn, 10, all of Alliston, in a; two-car collision Sunday on High way 10 near Caledon Bryan Russell Leighton, Windsor, injured Sunday his sports car overturned Windsor. Mrs. Emma Lafontaine, 51 tawa, Saturday night when knocked a lamp post on top her while she was walking Ottawa 20 near Ot Credit area. This station will be and T.S., remaining in that post Relay Communications Section of| Flora) Massey, Ont., and Mrs, power plant when! appointed in August 1948 as Op-|been employed for more than 15|{ont. and four brothers, Kenneth, |erating Supervisor for Leaside years. Jack's daughter, Maureen, Niagara Falls, Ont.; S i x| worked in the Operations Division|gshawa: better Jack Jones was promoted to the!years before she left recently to is Operations|gent for the Toronto Region (Now have He was scheduled to] trouble work THEATRE GUIDE May 1940 and stayed there for allowing year when the Commis-| | Ontario near his home Southern Ontario today and Tues- Wingham Sandwich northwesterly West Township, drowned Sunday drop temperatures in that area when his boat overturned in Lake Tt swim- ern Georg +n day partly cloudy and more a sony Piche, When winds southeast 15 today, south a car ing cloudiness today. Cloudy with of scattered showers in| storms OBITUARIES ARIE DEN BOEF band of the former Anne Kuiters, died at the family residence, 210 Gibbs street, this morning, He was in his 46th year. A son of Mr. and Mrs, Anthony {Den Boef, the deceased was born at Nieuw-Lekkerland, Holland, | Jan, 21 1915 and came to Canada| | and Oshawa six years ago. An employee of the tool and die department at General {Motors Mr. Den Boef was a| member of Emmanuel Reformed Church Whitby. Besides his wife he is survived |bv his parents in Holland a |daughter, Joan Eleanor and two sons, Anthony Jr. and Jan, |Oshawa. The memorial service will be CLIFFORD H. STARK THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 25, 1960 3 a A 4 / Taken suddenly ill during the' night Arie Den Boef, beloved hus-| of / neld at the Armstrong Funeral|? Clifford H. Stark, of 204 Cen- gone at 1.30 p.m. Thursday, July| tral Park boulevard south, died in the Oshawa General Hospital Saturday, July 23. He had been in poor health for more than a year. He was in his 53rd year. ' |" Mr, Stark was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. William C. Stark of Stark's Corners, Quebec. He was born September 26, 1907, at Stark's Corners and was mar- ried October 26, 1937, at Iron] Bridge, Ont. He had been Oshawa resident for the past 19 years, having lived in Sudbury just previous to that time. He was a member of the staff of Harold R. Stark Plumbing, a {member of St. George's Anglican sion formed the Regions, George|Church, the Canadian Order of was appointed Station Mainten-| Forresters, and a former mem- ance Supervisor for Toronto Re-| ber of the Advisory Vocational gion (Central Region) and contin-| Committee, board of education ued in this position until 1953. In|and a past president of Local 463 that year he was promoted to his|of the Plumbers and Steamfitters present position of Station Main-| Union. tenance Superintendent for Cen-| Surviving are tral Region. former Janet A. The Jones brothers are indeed|qaughters, Donelda closely identified with Ontario|ghirley. and a s Hydro as a family. George's son,| He is also sur elman, of Whitby, will conduct ie services Friends arc asked not to call at the funera) home before Tues- lay evening JOHN T. ELLIOTT Following a short illness the death occurrec at Oshawa Gen eral Hospitai on Tuesday, July 2, of John Taylor Elliot, son of the late Adam and Sarah Elliott, of Pickering township. The deceased is survived by one sister (Sophia), Mrs. Stanley Chappell of Lethbridge and sev- eral nieces and nephews. The deceased made his home with Mr, and Mrs. Robert Batty, Brooklin, and was 78 years of age. He rested at Robinson Funeral Home, Brooklin, till Thursday noon. Service was held at St. George's Anglican Church, Pick ering. Rev. Robinson officiated. He was laid to rest in the family plot at Erskine Cemetery. The pallbearers were Lorne Bath, Ralph Annan, Chris Fair, Robert Batty, James Batty and Harold Percy, MRS T. F W. BASINGER Mrs Thomas F. W. Basinger, 369 Park road south, died Satur- day, July 23, at the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital. She had been in failing health for the past few months. She was in her 77th year. Mrs. Basinger was the former Annie Caroline Hircock, daughter of the late John and Sarah Hir- cock, She was born March 19, 1884, at Ripley, Derbyshire, Eng- land. . She married on Feb. 11, 1911 in Cobourg. Mrs, Basinger came to Canada about 5¢ years ago and lived for some time in the Cobourg area before moving to Edmonton, Alta. She had been an Oshawa resident. for the past 17 years. She was a member of Simcoe Street United Church and sang in the choir. She was also a mem- < Jones (right) at one time was employed by General Motors of Oshawa. (Ontario Hydro photo) the two and his wife, Dickson; (Dell) "(Sadie) Hobbs v Giles: cations Electrician in the Meter|yontreal: Mrs. Douglas Central Region, where he has|william Stanton (Pearl) Garson, Harold R (Sandy), Alton, Osh- Alexander at Head Office for almost two|c,urtice. Ont., and awa. three brothers! The memorial service will be most of their at the Armstrong Funeral Home life in the service of On-| Tuesday, uly = a 2 2 m ole ari oy intains| service will be taken by Rev. Don- tarlo Hydro and each: maintain lald Wilson of St. George's Angli- that if he could choose his career|.,n Church. Interment will be in married. All spent be working is a to Ontario Hydro because it good organization for which FUNERAL OF MRS. ALBERT E. BELL The memorial service for Mrs Albert E. Bell, 26 Church street, who died Thursday, July 21, aged 83 at the Oshawa General Hos- pital was held at the Armstrong on a| Funeral Home at 1 p.m. Satur- "The day, July 23. Last| 'Rev. M. A. Bury of King Street United Church conducted the ser- vices. Interment was in Oshawa Regent "Porgy and Bess," [Union Cemetery. my 1.30, 3.55, 6.20, and 845 p.m.| The pallbearers were R. Skel- ber.of the Ever-ready Auxiliary Last complete show at 8.35|ton, R. Miles, J. Boyd and D. Mc- and an honorary member of the WEATHER FORECAST Es ky [oni sana Jee ait Thunderstorms, Humid Tuesday |City Choir. She is survived by her hus- band, Thomas and three daugh- ters, Mr. William Hill (Louise), Port Whitby; Mrs. Ernest Knull (Anne), Leduc, Alberta and Mrs. Herbert Wurbs (Joyce), Oshawa and two surviving sons, Wil {liam James, Edmonton and Cresswell, Oshawa. Also surviving are sister, TORONTO (CP)--Official fore-|20 today, northwest 20 Tuesday. Mrs. William Smith (Nellie), casts issued at 5 a.m.: hite River, Western James Synopsis: Another fine day is| Bay regions: Cloudy with scat- in store for Southern and Central|tered showers and thunderstorms today but showers and|today. Tuesday partly cloudy and thunderstorms are edging into|cooler. Winds south 20 today, the Northwest. This line of un-| northwest 20 Tuesday. settled weather, will reach cen-| tral regions early Tuesday and| may bring isolated thunderstorms to southern Ontario late Tuesday. | Windsor 65 90 Increasing south - to - southeast-| St. Thomas erly winds will bring rising tem-| London peratures and humidities to| Kitchener Brock (Whithy) -- "Man String," 7.00, 9.00 p.m. Last Mile," 8.30 p.m. complete show 8.30 p.m. | a London, Ont.; and six brothers, George and Benjamin, Co- bourg; Thomas, Bowmanville; Ephriam, Nelson, British Col- umbia and Nathan, Oshawa and 11 grandchildren. | The memorial service will be | held at the Armstrong Funera | Home at 3.30 p.m. Tuesday, July 26. Interment will be in St. | John's Cemetery, Port Whitby. {The services will be conducted b:- Rev. John K. Moffat, minister of Simcoe Street United Church MRS. FLORENCE BURTON The death of Florence Mabe! Burton occurred on Satureay July 23, at Anden Nursing Home, Oshawa. In failing health for three years, Mrs. Burton was in her 85th year. Daughter of the late William and Catherine Reader, she was born on Scugog Island and lived most of her life in Port Perry. {She was a member of Port Forecast Temperatures Low tonight. High Tuesday but in the North a return to| Toronto winds will again Peterborough Trenton . St. Catharines . 1 Hamilton | Muskoka | Killaloe | Earlton | Sudbury North Bay | Kapuskasing | White River | Moosonee d 1esday Regional forecasts valid unti midnight Tuesday. Lake Erie, Laké Huron, South- n Bay regions, Wind- sor, London: Sunny today. Tues- hu- mid with isolated afternoon or evening thunderstorms. Winds light today, southeast 15 Tuesday.| Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali-| 28, followed by interment in Osh-|° awa Cemetery. Rev, G. E. Rez-|' 'Small Woman' To Speak In Oshawa | Gladys Aylward, who rose] from the nosition of a London parlormaid to become a legend : n life-time through heroic service in war-ravaged China, wil' sneak in Ca'varv Ban- ict Ow ' streets, Oshawa on Wednesday, July 27 Miss Aylward, "The Woman" of the best-sel'" that title and whose story was condensed in the Reader's Digest nortrayed -on the screen in Inn of the Sixth Happi is now on a speaking tour of Canada. She is the guest of World Vision, Tn agency giving emergency aid to more than 75 missionary organ- izations She dreamed of going to China as a missionary, but was un- able to obtain backing because of her lack of education. So she de- termined to go anyway without help from anyone. Small "The ness', Perry United Church, Mrs. Burton is survived by her husband. Charles Burton and two sons, Leo Burton, of Burlington, and Harold Burton, of Richmond, British Columbia. The body is resting at Gerrow | Funeral Home. Funeral service will be in the chapel of the funeral home on Tuesday, July 26, at 2 p.m Interment will be at] Pine Grove Cemteery, Prince Albert. MRS. W. J. MILLER Annie Helen Robson, widow of| Wallace J. Miller, died at the Oshawa General Hospital on Sun- day, July 24, 1960, after a short illness. She was in her 68th year The deceased had been in poor| health for almost ten years. | Born at Vernonville, Haldimand township, Northumberland coun- ty, she was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Robson. She was married at Toronto, in 1926 to the late Wallace J. | Miller. Most of her life was spent at Vernonville, then on a north of Bowmanville, and resided in Oshawa during past four years. The was a member of the King Street United Church. has ta are two « 'haf Ochawa Toronto; also a sister, and lin Helen of and a brother William J: Robson ernonville. The body resting he Morris Funeral Chapel. Bowman- for in the In- n is at ville chapel on Tuesday at 2 p.m he the Vern ilile Cemetery. Russell Crossley frneral services SEEK MORE AID TORONTO (CP) Thé Un#ted | Nations has asked the Canadian | Red' Cross Society to recruit a | second medical team: for service in The Congo. Organization of the | first team was begun after an |urgent request Friday from the | world Health Organization. The |W.H.O. said in a cable Sunday there is an "acute and alarming shortage" of medical personnel in Congo hospitals owing to the departure of Belgian doctors and || nurses. FLYING TO EUROPE? DONALD Travel-Service WHITBY--OSHAWA--BROOKLIN MO 8-3304 GOOD FOOD Business Men's Lunch 12 - 2 Daily Air Conditioned DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER AYLWARD FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL CONFIRMS YOU ON THE BALL-POINT PEN CARRIES PAPER The Wall Street Journal re- ports that a German man- ufacturer is now producing a ball-point pen that actually unfurls note paper from its own barrel. No matter what you may be looking for chances are you'll find exactly what you want in the Oshawa Times Want Ads. Check them daily. Apples! "An Apple a Day Won't Keep fn, & ry ALSO ALL OTHER TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS RA 8-6201 The Doctor Away" BUT for the cost of an apple a Day, we will help you pay for your Doctor's Bills and Surgical Opera- tions. NO AGE LIMIT NO MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS PAYS CASH DIRECT TO YOU Please fill out coupon and You will receive full details free and without obligation. MAIL to your Transportation Insurance Co. Representative: MR. A. MORRIS, c/o Box 123, Oshawa Times NAME ADDRESS of the King Street United Church will conduct the services. burton regions, Toronto, Hamil- Sunny today. Tuesday mostly | and more humid with a isolated afternoon or thunderstorms. Winds ght today. southeast 15 Tuesday. Northern Georgian Bay, Kirk- and Lake regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny today. Tuesday cloudy and more humid with scat- tered showers or thunderstorms. ton RISTOW A OLSEN 27 ~ REIL ESTATE, SHOULD YOU BUILD YOUR OWN Occasionally we talk to house-hunters who say they can see ot least some small drawback to every house they look at, so they think maybe they will build a house for themselves. That way, they say, they'll get exactly what they want. It sounds simple, doesn't i chance of evening Lie 20- Tuesday Timmins - Kapuskasing, East- ern James Bay regions: Increas- and thunder- tonight. Tuesday partly, cloudy and cooler. Winds south| it? And vet I'm willing to bet that it never $50 to $5,000 Without Endorsers or Bankable Security Loans Life Insured bw rpmion Finance 17 Simcoe St. North OFFICES THROUGHOUT ONTARIO PAUL RISTOW orks out that well once in a thousand times. People who build their own houses find almost in- variably that there are some things they have overlooked, or didn't think of until it was too late When you shop around for a house that's already built, you stand o far better chance of finding o place that comes closest to being exactly what you want. And then there's the problem of work- manship. Unless you have a far better than average knowledge of home building, you never can tell whether your contractor might be cutting a few corners to increase his profit on your house. But if you buy a house that is already built, or buy a new one that is guaranteed to have the same fi workmanship as a 'model' home built by the same contractor, you can see in advance exactly what you'll get for your money. CARL: OLSEN And most important of all, perhaps, is the question of cost. We wish we had a dollar for every privately built house that ever exceeded its original estimate by 25 per cent or more. Give us that, and we'll pay you a thousand dollars for every one that didn't exceed its original estimate at all. This business of building your own place. may be all right for gamblers and millionaires, but it's a risky proposition for the rest of us lesser mortals! Many Plans and repayment schedules | to suit your budget. 1. Are you in arrears of taxes short of money to pay your debts? 5 Don't Get B REPAY Do you have medical or hospital bills? 6 7. Is your first or second mortgage coming due? 8. Do you need money for business OME OWNERS ALLIED INVESTMENTS CO. CAN SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMS IN A HURRY ! Check All Your Needs To Clean "p Bills ? 2. Are you behind in your Mortgage payments? 3. Are you present mortgage? 4. Do you wont to consolidate all your Do you need money for your vacation? reasons? EHIND You Can BORROW $1600.00 ONLY 35.00 MONTHLY JUST PICK UP YOUR PHONE AND ASK FOR A LOAN RisTow and Olson REALTORS 19 ATHOL ST. WEST OSHAWA RA 8-507 7 RA 5-6541 51 KING ST. INTERV ALLIED INVESTMENTS CO. Phone RA 3-3993 Anytime for Day or Evening Appointments EAST IEW BY APPOINTMENT ONLY OSHAWA