Obit for Mrs. Millicent Goodenough Jarvis, 64
Unidentified newspaper - unknown date in 1940

Theresa Woman Dies
Sunday Morning

Wife of Burt E. Jarvis Dies Following
Stroke on Thursday Evening -- Funeral and
Burial Held Tuesday.

Theresa--Mrs. Millicent Goodenough Jarvis, 64, wife of Burt E. Jarvis, died at her home in this village early Sunday morning. Death resulted from a stroke which she suffered Thursday night.

She was born May 2, 1875 in Carthage, daughter of John and Mary Goodenough. Fifty five years ago she moved to this village, where she has since resided. On October 18, 1897 she was married to Burt E. Jarvis of this village.

She was a member of the Theresa chapter O. E. S., and other organizations. She was a member of the Baptist church of Philadelphia. She is survived by her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Kathryn Young of Theresa; a brother, Hiram Goodenough, New Hartford; and a granddaughter, Frances Young. Funeral services were held Tuesday from the home, Rev. Charles G. Cady and Rev. U. B. Grant officiating. Burial was made in the family plot in the Oakwood cemetery.

 

Unidentified newspaper clipping - date unknown


Lifetime Devoted to Military
Service Reflected in WWII
Memorabilia

by Phyllis Backman, Staff

A neat country home rests on the corner of Jefferson County Route 181 and Fox Hill Road between the communities of Clayton and LaFargeville. To the left of the house and back from the road is a small trailer.

The trailer shelters no individual or family, but it could hardly be termed vacant. It houses the World War II memorabilia of Master Sgt. Earle S. Hunneyman, U. S. Army, retired.

Cut off from access during much of the winter, it beckons owner/curator to revisit with the return of spring. A sign, �From Here to Eternity,� adorns the side of the trailer, inspired by the Oscar-winning World War II movie.

The �50�s circa 8 by, perhaps, 30 feet, two-bedroom mobile home still contains household furnishings. The entry accesses a hallway, with bedrooms across and to the right. To the left, the narrow passage leads to living and kitchen areas, housing the bulk of Hunneyman�s collection; reminders of a grave period in histry, and yet a proud interval in the life of a soldier.

Walls throughout the hallway are covered with honors and mementoes; a framed case of medals earned through distinguished service to country, citations marking conspicuous service, a copy of Fifth Division News, issued in Fort McClellen, Ala. on Nov. 17, 1939, a Christmas Day menu from Scofield Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii, and a framed photograph of Harold Graham, uncle of Earle Hunneyman and machine gunner during World War I.

Tables in living and kitchen areas are filled with more reminders of an era indelibly imprinted in the minds of many Americans and, most certainly, the soldier named on the many documents here preserved. The retired master sergeant has a collection of books on WWII, numerous issues of vintage newspapers and a photograph collection containing some notable personalities. A quick study will reveal shots of President Roosevelt, Shirley Temple, Loretta Young, Charles Lindbergh, Will Rogers and Amelia Earhardt. Each paper, document or photo has a story to tell.

Grasping a photograph of Harold Graham, Hunneyman acknowledges that his uncle played a major role in his passion for military service. Uncle Harold, a native of Stone Mills, was assigned to Madison Barrack for a time, he tells, and on a march to Ogdensburg one day, came through LaFargeville. �They were going to bivouac across from my aunt and uncle�s home,� he said, �and he asked me if I wanted to go down and see the soldiers.� Hunneyman was nine years old at the time and the event made a lasting impression.

Born in Black River, Earle Hunneyman moved to the farm on the Middle Road where the Orleans water tower now stands. Three years of age at the time, he has made his home in the area ever since, exclusive of military service years.

He entered the service at 19 and remembers that his mother had to sign for him because, at the time, enlistees had to be 20. When the physical revealed that Earle didn�t meet the weight requirements, he was sent back home to fatten up. Back in a couple of weeks, a bit heavier and very hopeful, Earle was accepted.

The officer in charge wouldn�t send him to Madison Barracks because he wasn�t heavy enough to handle the Mausers. So he was shipped to Scofield Barracks in Oahu, Hawaii, for basic training and subsequently assigned to Company A, 3rd Engineers.

�Not only did we train as engineers, we had to be proficient in carpentry and shooting, as well,� he noted. Their job was to carve a passage through the mountains to speed transport across the island. They built Coli Coli Pass and, during leave time, visited the other islands.

Hunneyman was to remain in this utopia for three years. Says Hunneyman of his Hawaiian experience, �It was like college. The generals loved sports; baseball, football, basketball and boxing. I played baseball. A friend and I took a run up to Coli Coli Pass each Sunday to keep in shape.�

The delight of his assignment was dimmed only by news of his sister�s death. Termed a �blue baby� at birth, Violet, was always frail and succumbed to heart disease at the age of 17. He remembers sitting outside his barracks after the news arrived and being joined by the first sergeant who offered him comfort.

Hunneyman was discharged out of New York City after completing his tour in Hawaii. Remembering a friend�s recommendation of Fort Hayes, Ohio, he addressed an inquiry to the recruiting offices in Columbus. A notice came back instructing him to report in February. They would be taking in three soldiers.

His tenure at Fort Hayes was both sweet and bittersweet. He smiles as he recalls people lining up in the morning to watch as the troops marched to �My Old Kentucky Home.� But he remembers misfortune, as well.

�We had to fire on the range in Chillicothe,� he said. �There was an old corporal there who had charge of putting the targets up and down. One day after firing, we had returned to our tents and were cleaning our rifles when we heard a shot. We soon saw the ambulance head down toward the target. The corporal was dead, victim of a stray bullet. Every officer was to have checked every rifle before it left the range. It was sad. The old corporal had survived WWI but didn�t survive the firing range.�

They didn�t train on Sunday so (sic) traveled by rail to Cincinnati to take in a ballgame. A news headline spread through the train that Germans had sunk the Athena, an incident that provoked England�s involvement in the war.

Hunneyman�s outfit was dispatched to Iceland, destroyers on each side, and upon arrival, learned that a German submarine had been captured.

He discovered, to his amazement, the city of Reykjavik is heated by hot springs and residents have no heating bills. He also recalls spotting a Frink snowplow out of Clayton on the airstrip up there.

�We went from nearly 24 hours of darkness to almost a total day of light and used our blankets to cover windows at night in the summer in an effort to facilitate sleep.� On the bright side were breathtaking views of the northern lights.

Their job: to patrol the shoreline. �We took turns every night walking the beach to assure no one was coming ashore,� he said. The troops also served as stevedores, unloading supplies off the ships. Labels came off in wet weather and no one knew what was in them.

�We never had to do any fighting up there, just training,� he said, remembering a lot of hiking. He remained there, possibly three years. AT 84, he confesses, he can�t recall everything just right. A decision to bring 1,500 non-commissioned officers back to the states to form a new division had Hunneyman on the move once again, returning aboard the Hawaiian Skipper.

At Camp Attebury, Ind., he was instructed not to unpack anything, and was sent to Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.

It was there that he endured the hardest training he�d ever encountered. �We trained to rush bunkers carved out of hills,� he said, �and it took a lot out of the men.�

An assignment in the Panama Canal zone for the purpose of training in jungle warfare was a sharp contrast from time spent in Iceland. Heat was intense and windows contained screens but no glass. Rain fell so much of the time that troops always carried raingear.

Hunneyman was very aware of segregation at that time in the American south. He was taken by surprise, however, when he was stopped while approaching a brown drinking fountain in Panama and instructed to drink only from the while ones.

While there, he had an opportunity to travel through the canal, a privilege for which he is grateful.

He returned to Fort Hayes, Ohio, and from there went to England, where troops were housed in a hotelby the Bristol Channel.

Hunneyman didn�t go into combat until Christmas Eve of 1944, during the Battle of the Bulge. �We were told not to get in our sleeping bags that night, but to stay awake as German paratroopers might be sent in,� he said.

Hunneyman became the officer in charge when a lieutenant was shot and the company commander cracked. His actions on that occasion earned him two bronze stars in a single day.

At 10 a.m. the next morning, Christmas Day, Hunneyman�s bodyguard was killed. The young soldier, barely 18, hailed from the state of Massachusetts. To this day, no Christmas morning passes without time set aside in bittersweet reflection of one, barely reaching manhood, whose life was cut so short.

�The insignia of our rank appeared on our hats,� he said, �and we were advised after the first day, to wear insignias on the back so that the enemy could not identify the officers so easily.�

Hunneyman praises General Patten and credits him with saving the troops. He relates that Eisenhower called Patten for help after Patten had already given the command to advance into Czechoslovakia. Had Patten not provided assistance as quickly, US troops would, likely, have been driven back into the channel, he claimed.

Hunneyman�s outfit liberated many towns in Belguim and, on one occasion, troops were put up in homes of the locals. The women prepared food outdoors in a central oven, and treated the troops to apple pies that night. Before leaving the next morning, the women pleaded, �Whatever you do, don�t let the Germans come back here.�

Hunneyman was in Belgium when the war ended and he soon returned to the states and Fort Dix, N. J

He went on to teach military science in the ROTC program at Syracuse University for three years, and, for a time, served as advisor to the New York National Guard, returning to Germany during the occupation.

He found the country all rebuilt and, during his stay, acquired a number of original oils which now grace the trailer walls. Reflecting a softer Germany, the subjects include castles on the Rhine and rural scenes. �A lot of hungry artists were there at the time,� he notes, �and a paint could be purchased for as little as a cup of coffee.�

Reminiscences of Germany bring to mind another collection that is not out on display. The glassed-in case of memorabilia has been carefully tucked away and it takes some searching to unearth it. This soldier had not claimed weapons of war for trophies as have many troops returning from battle. A variety of German military pins, medals, swastikas and even a photo of Hitler can be found among Earle Hunneyman�s trophies, and represents a stark contrast to the tranquil scenes of the paintings.

Still another document on display attests to Hunneyman�s retirement from the military on July 31, 1957. Returning to the town where he grew up, he settled on a farm outside LaFargeville.

When he moved to his current address, realizing that space would be inadequate for the collection of war memorabilia he had amassed, he purchased the trailer from a friend.

A few veterans magazines bear witness to his membership in Colon Couch Post 821 American Legion in Clayton, Barben Jones Post 1400, Watertown, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Disabled American Veterans, memberships he treasures and that mark a lifetime devoted to military service.

Note: The piece was accompanied by a photo of Earle Hunneyman

 

Obit for Jesse Jolly, 59
Unidentified newspaper - April 24, 1940

Jesse Jolly, 59
Dies Suddenly

Theresa, April 24. -- Jesse Jolly, 59, died suddenly at the Theresa hospital at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, after having been admitted as a patient there Tuesday forenoon. For the past three years Mr. Jolly has not been well and a few months ago he underwent a major operation.

He was born in the town of Antwerp in April, 1881, and his early life was spent there on the farm near Bishops Corners. About 40 years ago the father retired and the family came to Theresa to reside. Mr. Jolly resided in Buffalo for a period of years, where he was a conductor on the street car lines. Always interested in farming he purchased a farm near Sandy Creek and one at West Monroe. Later he sold them and retired.

He was married but he and his wife separated. He spent his later life in the family home in this village.

He is survived by two children, Eleanor of New York city and Eldred of Gouverneur; and seven brothers and sisters. They are: Mrs. G. W. Bury, Richard, Eugene and Fred Jolly of this village; Mrs. George Neagle, Syracuse; Mrs. J. A. Warner, Freeport, L. I., and John of Watertown.

The funeral will be Thursday at 2 p.m. from the home, Rev. Carl Worden of the Episcopal church officiating. Burial will be in the family plot in Oakwood Cemetery here.

 

Obit for Mrs. Edwin Jones, who expired in Ohio
From Unknown Newspaper

MRS. EDWIN JONES
EXPIRES IN OHIO

Suffers Heart Attack
While On Shopping Trip

FORMER MRS. G. B. VANDOREN

Married Cleveland Private Golf Course Owner in 1931 --

Was Sister of Sidney B. Cooper -- Private Funeral Services
Will Be Held Here Friday.

Word was received here Tuesday night of the sudden death of Mrs. Emma Cooper Jones, wife of Edwin Jones, Wickliff, O., while on a shopping tour in Cleveland Tuesday afternoon. Death was due to a heart attack, she having been afflicted with heart disease for some time.

Mrs. Jones was the daughter of the late Jerome and Emma Cooper and was born in Theresa, where she resided during her early life. Later she trained at the House of the Good Samaritan and practiced nursing for a time. She was first married to Dr. George B. Van Doren, city, from whom she was divorced at Scranton, Pa., in 1927 and on Dec. 27, 1931, was married to Edwin Jones, owner of private gold courses, in Cleveland. The wedding occurred at St. Petersburg, Fla.

She had resided in this city for several years and was well known here. During the past winter she had been in St. Petersburg, Fla., and there underwent an operation, but was recovering satisfactorily and her death was unexpected.

The body will arrive here Thursday and be taken to the home of her brother, Sidney B. Cooper and sister, Mrs. Louise Cooper Jennings, 146 Bowers avenue, where the funeral will be private and will be held at 3:15 Friday afternoon. Rev. D. D. Douglas, rector of the Church of the Redeemer, will officiate. Burial will be made in the Cooper family plot at Theresa. Friends may call at 146 Bowers avenue Thursday evening.

Mrs. Jones is survived by her husband; two sisters, Mrs. Louise Cooper Jennings, city, and Mrs. Oscar D. Dillman, Springfield, Mass. and by the following brothers: Rana S. Cooper, Binghamton; Samuel A. Cooper, Rochester; George W. Cooper, Schenectady; Jerome B. Cooper, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Emmett A. Cooper, Syracuse, and Sidney B. Cooper, city.

 

Obit for Henry J. Jarvis, 58
Unidentified newspaper - February 1961

Henry J. Jarvis

Redwood -- Henry James Jarvix, 58, Redwood, retired garage owner died at 12:30 Tuesday morning at the home of his son, Leon Jarvis, in Charleston, S. C., where he and Mrs. Jarvis were spending the winte.r

He had been a patient in Medical College hospital, Charleston, for two weeks earlier this winter.

Mr. Jarvis had been in failing health for the past few years.

The body was brought to the Quincer funeral home where a prayer service will be held on Saturday morning, Feb. 18, at 9:45 and services in St. Francis Xavier church at 10 a.m. with the Rev. Robert Cotter, pastor, officiating.

The Rosary will be recited Friday evening at 9:30 in the funeral home by the Knights of Columbus. Friends may call between the hours, of 7 and 9 Thursday evening and Friday afternoon from 2 to 4 and Friday evening from 7 to 9.

The body will be placed in the Redwood cemetery vault for burial in the spring. Bearers are Lawrence Curtis, Harold Ferguson, Edward Hartman, Herbert Tubbs, John Putnam and Rod Kable.

Mr. Jarvis is survived by his wife; three daughters, Mrs. Clarence (Margaret) Getman, Jr., of Syracuse, Mrs. John W. (Rosemary) Boyette of Hampton, Va., and Mrs. Donald (Alice) Sears of Liverpool; two sons, Edward Jarvis of Redwood and Leon Jarvis of North Charleston, S. C.; one sister, Mrs. Claude (Elizabeth) Wohl of Lowville and sixteen grandchildren.

Mr. Jarvis was born August 3, 1902 in Derrick in Franklin county, the son of Calvin and Cornellia Gokey Jarvis. He married Miss Hazel Hines May 4, 1925 in St. Joseph Catholic church, Bonneville (sic). The

couple made their home in Booneville (sic) where Mr. Jarvis was employed in garages as a mechanic. They then came to Theresa and in 1936 to Redwood where he owned and operated his own garage on Main St. until 1951. Since that time he worked for two years as a rural letter carrier out of Redwood. Also, he worked for about one and one half years on the New York State thruway, Syracuse, after which they returned to Redwood and he was employed in Kabel�s Garage until April of 1960. He was a member of Holy Name Society, the Redwood volunteer fire department and the Knights of Columbus of Clayton.

 

Abstract of Obit for Jos. P. Johnston- June 3, 1960
Watertown Daily Times

Joseph P. Johnston, 86, died at Redwood

Born: March 21, 1874 - New York City

Parents� Names: Joseph W. and Caroline Smith Johnston

Marriage: Blanche Elderkin of Hammond - Jan. 1, 1902; Blanche died Oct. 31, 1958 at the farm.

Schooling: New York schools

Moved to Macomb, N. Y. where he, as a young man, owned and raced a string of race horses -- in the grand circuit which included the entire area east of the Mississippi River.

They purchased the Fred Griswold farm on the Goose Bay Rd. and resided there until 1959.

Survivors: Son, Walter Johnston; two daughters, Mrs. Horace I. (Marion) Greene; Mrs. William (Sarah) Keene; two sisters, Mrs. Fred (Jennie) Swan and Mrs. Arthur (Esther) Seaker; three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

Burial: Redwood Cemetery

 

Abstract of Obit for Mrs. Elizabeth Jewett, 92
Watertown Daily Times - date not apparent (Sept. 26)

Mrs. Elizabeth Marklie Jewett, 92
Died at a Theresa Nursing Home

Born: Sept. 22, 1858 - near Redwood
Parents� Names: Frank and Elizabeth Betz Marklie
Marriage: Marcus J. Jewett of Redwood - Sept. 10, 1879, probably at the Universalist Church in Watertown; Marcus, a fur dealer, died April 15, 1924 at Redwood.

Couple lived on the Jewett farm at Jewetts Corners -- they retired Nov. 16, 1906, from the farm and moved to Redwood.

Survivors: Three sons, Morris H., J. Carl, Ray L.; one daughter, Mrs. Earl C. (Ina) Wheeler; 19 grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren, nieces, nephews, and cousins.

Predeceased: Son, Frank G., who died February, 1949.

Note: Mrs. Jewett was the last survivor of a family of five children. Sister, Mrs. Susan H. Hofferberth, died February of the same year as Mrs. Jewett.

Burial: Redwood Cemetery

 

Obit for Adelbert C. Jones, age 74
Sent to the Watertown Daily Times for Publication - Dec. 18 (year unknown)

ADELBERT C. JONES, AGED 74

Man Suffers Heart Attack While
Eating at Ogdensburg After
Shopping Trip With Wife and
Grandson--Body Removed to
Redwood For Funeral.

(Special To The Times)

Redwood, Dec. 18. -- Stricken with a heart attack while eating at the Crescent diner in Ogdensburg, Adelbert Clinton Jones, 74, retired New York Central railroad station agent, died suddenly at the restaurant Saturday evening at 5:45.

Mr. Jones had gone to Ogdensburg earlier in the day by train with his wife and grandson, Clinton Jones, jr., of Alexandria Bay. The trio had been shopping in stores during the afternoon. Dr. R. L. Stacy, coroner�s physician, was summoned by police to the restaurant and pronounced the man dead.

Mr. Jones was employed by the New York Central railroad for 42 years until his retirement on Aug. 1, 1935. All of his time was served on the St. Lawrence division. He joined the railroad at Watertown in 1891 serving as timekeeper and stenographer in the division superintendent�s office.

Three years later he resigned that post but returned to railroad duty on June 1, 1896, as station agent in Emeryville. From that time until his retirement he served as station agent throughout the division, being located at Altmar, Newton Falls, Holland Patent, Hammond and Redwood, the latter place for 20 years.

He was born in Albion, June 20, 1865a, a son of Stephen Girard and Margaret Horning Jones. On Nov. 16, 1892, he married Miss Ina May McCarthy in a ceremony performed in Oswego. They lived in Watertown for two years after their marriage. Since 1916 he had lived in Redwood. For 19 years prior to that he lived in Hammond.

Mr. Jones was a member of the Hammond lodge, F. and A. M. He was also a member of the Alexandria chapter of Royal Arch Masons. For the past seven years he had been a member of the Redwood board of education. He was a communicant of the Redwood Methodist church and was a member of the choir of that church.

Surviving besides his wife are two sons, Dr. Stephen G. Jones, of Boston, Mass., and Clinton M. Jones, a teacher at the Alexandria Bay Central School. (perhaps the obit continued, but was clipped off)

 

Obit for Mrs. Blanche Elderkin Johnston, 75
Unidentified newspaper - Nov. 1 - year unknown

With Photograph of Mrs. Johnston

Redwood, Nov. 1 -- Mrs. Blanche Elderkin Johnston, 75, wife of Joseph P. Johnston, a Redwood farmer, died at her farm home Friday morning. Mrs. Johnston, who had suffered from a serious heart condition for years, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in October, 1957, and had since been confined to her bed.

The funeral will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Quincer funeral home with Rev. Vernon C. Nichols, pastor of the Redwood Methodist church, officiating. Burial will be in the family plot in Redwood cemetery. A memorial service will be held at the funeral home this evening by members of the Redwood Rebekah Lodge 631.

Bearers will be Hirschel Cable, Robert Cable, Lawrence Stotler (in pencil crossed out and Norris Jewett inserted), William Hofferberth, Howard Handschuh and Albert King, all of Redwood.

Surviving Mrs. Johnston, besides her husband, are a son, Walter, at home; two daughters, Mrs. Horace (Marion) Greene, Redwood, and Mrs. William (Sarah) Reeve, South Colton; four sisters, Mrs. Anna Gibbs and Mrs. Helen Leroy, both of Rochester; Mrs. Freida Crosby of Hialeah, Fla., and Mrs. Emma Puzoff (unclear), North Syracuse; three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. A daughter, Mrs. Richard (Theresa) Gates, died in August, 1926.

A native of Terrell, Texas, Mrs. Johnston was born Feb. 27, 1883, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Elderkin. While still a child, she moved with her family to the Hammond section. Then she moved to New York city with her parents but returned to the north country at the age of 16 with her family.

On Jan. 1, 1902, she was married to Joseph P. Johnston in the Plessis Methodist parsonage by Rev. Mr. White, then pastor. After their marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Johnston lived on the Catlin farm, a mile south of Redwood. Later, they moved onto the Giltz farm near Plessis. In 1920, they purchased the Frank Griswold farm at Redwood, where they have since lived. They celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1952.

Mrs. Johnston was an active member of the Redwood Methodists church. She was the first noble grand of Redwood Rebekah Lodge 631 when it was formed in 1924. She was later the lodge treasurer. In 1937, Mrs. Johnston was the district deputy treasurer of the Rebekah lodge.

 

Obit for Mrs. Ida Cole Jones, 78
Unidentified newspaper - date not apparent

Last Rites Conducted
For Mrs. Ida Jones, 78

Funeral services for Mrs. Ida Cole Jones, 78, were held this (Friday) afternoon at 2 from the Giltz funeral home. Rev. John A. Flikkema, pastor of the Presbyterian church, officiated. Burial will be made in the spring in the family plot in Oakwood cemetery. Bearers were A. A. Stratton, William Dixon, Clifton Vock and J. A. LaFave.

Mrs. Jones had been in poor health for the past year and had undergone an operation. Her death occurred in Buffalo, she having spent the past two years with her daughter, Mrs. Chester Bauter, at Blasdell, near Buffalo.

Born July 4, 1866, at the Cole homestead, Hyde Lake, Mrs. Jones was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Alanson Cole, pioneers of the town. Her early life was spent here. About 50 years ago she married William Jones, shoe merchant of Watertown. Later they moved to Syracuse, where he continued the shoe business. His death occurred several years ago.

For a number of years she resided with her sister, Mrs. Listle Young, this village. She was a member of the Presbyterian church here.

She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Alan (Ruth) Ransom, Detroit; Mrs. Chester (Marie) Bauter; and her sister, Mrs. Young; also several nieces and nephews.

 

Obit for Mrs. Clinton M. Jones
Unidentified newsclipping - November 14, 1974

Alexandria Bay -- The funeral for Mrs. Clinton M. Jones, 65 of 124 Catherine Ave., who died Thursday, Nov. 7 in the Edward J. Noble hospital was Saturday afternoon at the Reformed church of the Thousand Isles. Burial was in Highland Park Cemetery.

Surviving are a son, Clinton M., Jr., of Hingham, Mass.; a sister, Mrs. Ishmael (Agnes) Burns of Alexandria Bay; and three grandchildren, David, University of Idaho, Susan and Douglas.

Mrs. Jones was born at Alexandria Bay May 20, 1909, daughter of Elbert and Ethel Ballantyne Makepeace. A graduate of Alexandria Bay High school she was married to Clinton M. Jones Jan. 25, 1927 at Alexandria Bay. He was a retired member of the Alexandria Central school faculty. Mr. Jones died April 28, 1970.

Mrs. Jones worked summers at the Potpouri Gift Shop.

She was a member of the Reformed church of the Thousand Isles.

Donations may be made to the memorial fund of the Reformed church of the Thousand Isles.


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