Hubert B. Johnston was an accountant.
Donald Johnston was an embalmer.
41082. Willard Haskell Johnston
Willard Haskell Johnston was a commercial traveller, trader, and a retail grocer.
Find-a-Grave
F/L Johnston was killed in the crash of a Bristol Freighter aircraft that occurred at 1 (F) Wing, Marville, France, on 30 Dec 1963. His brother, G/C E. R. ('Russ') Johnston, was also based in 2 Wing at the time--he was the Commanding Officer of 2 (F) Wing.
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Canadian Virtual War Memorial
Flight Lieutenant
Britton Lyall Johnston
December 30, 1963
Marville, France
Military Service:
Service Number: J46966
Age: 38
Force: Air Force
Unit: 5 Air Movements Unit, RCAF
Citation(s): War Medal 1939-45, Defence Medal, Canadian Volunteer Service Medal and Clasp. Canadian Forces decoration.
Honours and Awards: Canadian Forces Decoration
Additional Information:
Born: January 5, 1925 Lennoxville, Québec
Enlistment: October 12, 1943 Montreal, QuébecSon of Willard Haskell and Ruby Margaret (Reid) Johnston of Lennoxville, Quebec and brother of Russell, Reed and David. Husband of Marie Thérèse (Belliveau) Johnston and father of Deborah, Michelle and Robert of Lennoxville, Quebec.
Harold Evans Matthews was a dairy farmer.
Newman was a 1938 graduate of the University of New Hampshire, Durham.
Find-a-Grave
During World War II he served with the US Army and later worked for the Army and Navy Maritime Commission. For 32 years he worked at the Gilman Mill for Georgia Pacific as an electrician. Keith loved Alaska and after retiring in 1985 resided there and in California for 13 years. Returning to Lancaster he volunteered much of his time to the community at Weeks Medical Center, Wheels on Meals, the Lancaster Welcome Center and the Lancaster Historical Society. Keith also loved to fish.
Dennis Avon Dolloff was a farmer.
Ladysmith Chronicle (British Columbia, Canada)
August 2010Frances Ethel Halsall (nee Dolloff): August 31, 1919- August 15, 2010
Fran passed away Sunday August 15. She was predeceased by her parents, Avon and Grace Dolloff, her brothers Ed (June) and Don (Betty), and her loving husband, Dick.
She is survived by her sister Sandra (Garnet) Morrison, her daughter Ann (Terry) Cooke, and her son Art (Jennifer). She also leaves to mourn her grandchildren Sam, Timm, Stephanie, Sandal, Joseph, and Stephanie and great grandchildren Cayden, Catriona, Hannah and Avery. A
Sidney Haskell Ball was a bank manager.
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Canada, War Graves Registers (Circumstances of Casualty), 1914-1948
Name: Sidney Haskell Ball
Death Date: 17 Sep 1918
Rank: Lieutenant
Unit: Headquarters Canadian Forestry Corps
Cemetery: Étaples Military Cemetery
Cemetery Location: France
Burial Place: France
Nathaniel Folsom Manning was a banker.
George Wyman Shearer was an electrical engineer.
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Canadian Soldiers of the First World War, 1914-1918:
George Wyman Shearer, enlisted 11 Mar 1915
The Winnipeg Tribune (Manitoba, Canada)
April 12, 1922C. H. Mansur, 256 Wellington Crescent, former solicitor for the Grand Trunk Pacific railway, died Tuesday at his home after a protracted illness.
Mr. Mansur was 51 years old, and was born in Stanstead, Que. He attended McGill college, Montreal and graduated in arts in 1893, and law in 1898. For a time he practised law at Rock Island, Que., until he moved to the west in 1906, to undertake the duties of assistant solicitor for the Canadian Pacific railway. Later he became solicitor for the Grand Trunk railway and worked in that capacity until 1915 when he went overseas with the Army Service corps. He returned to Winnipeg in 1919.
He is survived by his widow, a son, and a daughter.
B. A., University of Manitoba, 1924
Mortgage inspector, Sun Life Assurance Co., Montreal; President, Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation.
Francis Lee Ball was a mechanical engineer.
Patrick Quinn was a farmer and carpenter.
Harold M. Quinn was a papermaker in a paper mill.
Edward James Dundin was a sawyer, house carpenter, and blacksmith in a cannery.
Seattle Daily Times (Wahington)
February 16, 1920The funeral of E. J. Dundin, who died in Regina, Sask., Canada, February 7, while returning to his Seattle home , 3918 Brooklyn Ave., from the funeral of his father, was held this afternoon in the chapel of the University Undertaking Company.
Mr. Dundin, who was 53 years old, was taken ill aboard a Canadian Pacific train and removed to a hospital in Regina where pneononia developed. He was engaged in the salmon canning business and spent much of his time in Alaska. He is survived by his widow and several children.
Seattle Daily Times
December 28, 1967Funeral services for Wilfrid Leslie Dundin, 71, of Mount Vernon, formerly of Seattle, will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Adams Forkner chapel. Burial will be in thr Veterans section of Washwlli. He died Monday in a Seattle hospital.
Born in North Raynham, Mass., he came to Seattle in 1909.
He retired in 1961 as a fish buyer for the Kayler-Dahl Fish Co., and moved to Mount Vernon.
Surviving are his wife, Grace E..; two stepsons, Donald W. and Gerald R. Dundin, both of Mounr Vernon, and a sister, Mrs, Edwin Woods, Camano Island, Island County
Seattle Daily Times
March 9, 1951Funeral services for Roy H. Dundin, 51, of 2310 N. 46th St., who died yesterday at his home, will be held at 1 o'clock tomorrow in Forkners chapel, with burial in Washelli.
Mr. Dundin had lived here for 42 years. He was born in Massachusetts. He attended Lincoln High School here.
He had been employed as a truck driver for the Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co., for many years until he became ill abiut a year ago. He was a member of the Teamsters' Union, Local 174.
Surviving are his wife, Grace; two sons, Gerald R. and Donald Dundin, both of Seattle; a sister, Mrs. Eva Pigott, Seattle; a brother, Wilfred Dundin, Petersburg, Alaska, and one grandson.
James J. Landers was a farmer and milkman.
Thomas F. Hooper was a farmer.
Clifford J. Hooper was a cutter in a box factory.
Marcus Connell was a house carpenter.
Lilla Gladys Connell was a stenographer.
Gerald Marcus Connell was a house plumber.
Alburn John Connell was a clerk for a railroad.