JACKSON
JARDINE
JENNINGS
JOBB
JOHNSON
JOHNSTON
JONES
JACKSON m@ca.on.grey_county.artemesia.flesherton.the_flesherton_advance 2005-06-08 published
Scott JACKSON and Entela
BUSHI
Buck and Doe For Scott
JACKSON and Entela
BUSHI
Saturday June 11, 2005 at the Flesherton Kinplex 8pm-1am
Music by: Scott Betts DJ Service
No Minors - Tickets at the door
Page 2
JACKSON - All Categories in OGSPI
JARDINE m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-10-02 published
JARDINE,
Patricia and Douglas - Happy 40th Anniversary Mom and Dad
May you next 40 years be as wonderful as the first 40. With all
our love, Chris, Dale, Nicola, Amanda, Jamie, Sandra, Jon, Mark, Krista, Alexandra, Danika, Marissa and Carter.
JARDINE - All Categories in OGSPI
JENNINGS m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-02-05 published
JENNINGS,
Ken and Diane - 50th Wedding Anniversary
February 5, 2005
50 years and counting!
We should all be so lucky to find a love that lasts this long.
Happy Golden Anniversary from Chris, Ron, Megan and Friends.
JENNINGS - All Categories in OGSPI
JOBB m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-05-14 published
JOBB,
Reverend
Leslie and Donna - 50th Anniversary
Open House Saturday May 21st, 2005 102 Sholto Drive, unit #51, from 2-6 p.m.
JOBB - All Categories in OGSPI
JOHNSON m@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-05-21 published
Elizabeth SCOTT and John
JOHNSON -- Match:
By Judith Tenebaum, Saturday, May 21, 2005, Page M6
When▼
John▼
David▼
JOHNSON, a Huntsville lawyer, couldn't negotiate
an out-of-court settlement for one of his clients, his case proceeded
to the examination-for-discovery stage, in May of 2001 in Lindsay,
Ontario▼
But▼ his ultimate discovery would be Elizabeth Ann
SCOTT.
After he conducted 45 minutes of questions, "I sat back in my
chair, proud, congratulating myself," he says. Mr.
JOHNSON then
suggested Ms.
SCOTT, a Toronto lawyer representing another party
in the case, might have further queries. "She asked her first
question, and I thought, 'I should have asked that,' and then
another that was good too, and so it went for about an hour.
"Elizabeth was showing me how to do my job. That was the first
time we met."
Ms. SCOTT says she found Mr.
JOHNSON "pretty smart and cute,"
but other than that, she didn't think much about him at that
point.
However, when the examinations concluded in November of 2001,
Mr. JOHNSON and Ms.
SCOTT lunched that final Friday with a fellow
lawyer before each headed home. "I didn't know if there was a
boyfriend, so I asked questions designed to elicit a 'we' response,
and gathered by the end of lunch she was single," says Mr.
JOHNSON,
who was newly available after a divorce.
When Ms. SCOTT said she would be working that Sunday, he mentioned
that, coincidentally, he would be in Toronto that day and invited
her out to dinner. "That's when I realized, whoo, he's asking
me out on a date," says Ms.
SCOTT, who cites timing and fate
as instrumental in their romance. She notes that had the lawsuit
against her client been dropped, "John and I would have never
met."
As they got to know each other, they learned that they had taken
the same bar admission course in Toronto in 1993. "I'm sure we
passed each other in the hall, and never knew who the other was.
If we had met, it wouldn't have been the right time," says Ms.
SCOTT, since Mr.
JOHNSON was married at that time.
Strong parental influence prompted both their careers. "When
I was a child, I was so argumentative my parents said I'd be
a fine lawyer. I'd wanted to be one from the time I was 10,"
says Mr. JOHNSON, a Queen's University graduate who hails from
Sundridge, Ontario, north of Huntsville.
"My dad always said, 'You should work for the underdog and help
people who need help.' "
True to that tenet, he says his clients are frequently "people
who have been hurt, or are sick, and trying to get benefits from
their insurance companies." As well, Mr.
JOHNSON, 35, has worked
regularly with house-building charity Habitat for Humanity, participating
in five projects, including one in Guyana.
Ms. SCOTT accepted her lawyer father's advice and entered law
school at the University of New Brunswick after completing an
honours degree in psychology and taking off a year to tour Australia,
New Zealand and Southeast Asia. After graduating, she found her
niche with Lawson McGrenere LLP representing insurers.
"I'm 39 now, dated a bit, and knew what I wanted. John is not
your conventional lawyer. He was like nobody else I had ever
met and treated me like gold," she says.
After▼ only their second date, a smitten and hopeful Mr.
JOHNSON
made an oblivious Ms.
SCOTT his life-insurance beneficiary. Meanwhile,
he had unwittingly won her over when he arrived at her home toting
a toolbox and ready to hang a heavy mirror that other suitors
had only promised to do. "I thought it was a sign," she says,
recalling that she had mused to herself, "Wouldn't it be funny
if this is the one I'm going to marry?"
Despite the playful chastisements of Friends that he was consorting
with the opposition after eight months of commuting from Muskoka
to Toronto, Mr.
JOHNSON arranged a transfer and joined Ms.
SCOTT
in a home they purchased. He became a partner in Johnson Clonfero
LLP and revived his adolescent passion for motorcycles. He purchased
one with assurances to a nervous Ms.
SCOTT that at the driver's
certification course he had taken, the examiner had deducted
points for driving too slowly.
On Friday evening of the 2004 Labour Day weekend, he persuaded
a wary Ms.
SCOTT to hop on his sport bike.
She clung to him tightly as they wound their way to Cherry Beach.
Alone there, she recalls her surprise as he reached into his
motorcycle jacket, pulled out a little box and got down on one
knee. "It was sweet," she says, "and by the water you feel like
you're not even in Toronto."
At Leaside United Church on January 22, Reverend Betty
JORDAN, whom
the bridegroom had met through Habitat, and Reverend Erin
TODD performed
the nuptials, with a luncheon at McLean House capping the event.
Considering that they often find themselves on the opposite ends
of arguments, they are remarkably adept at keeping their relationship
free of tension. "For the most part, we see things the same way
and bring the same philosophy to the practice of law," Mr.
JOHNSON
says, adding, "Elizabeth is smart, sexy, independent, everything
I wanted in a partner."
JOHNSON m@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-05-21 published
Elizabeth SCOTT and John
JOHNSON -- Match:
By Judith TENENBAUM,
Saturday,
May 21, 2005, Page M6
When▲
John▲
David▲
JOHNSON, a Huntsville lawyer, couldn't negotiate
an out-of-court settlement for one of his clients, his case proceeded
to the examination-for-discovery stage, in May of 2001 in Lindsay,
Ontario▲
But▲ his ultimate discovery would be Elizabeth Ann
SCOTT.
After he conducted 45 minutes of questions, "I sat back in my
chair, proud, congratulating myself," he says. Mr.
JOHNSON then
suggested Ms.
SCOTT, a Toronto lawyer representing another party
in the case, might have further queries. "She asked her first
question, and I thought, 'I should have asked that,' and then
another that was good too, and so it went for about an hour.
"Elizabeth was showing me how to do my job. That was the first time we met."
Ms. SCOTT says she found Mr.
JOHNSON "pretty smart and cute,"
but other than that, she didn't think much about him at that point.
However, when the examinations concluded in November of 2001,
Mr. JOHNSON and Ms.
SCOTT lunched that final Friday with a fellow
lawyer before each headed home. "I didn't know if there was a
boyfriend, so I asked questions designed to elicit a 'we' response,
and gathered by the end of lunch she was single," says Mr.
JOHNSON, who was newly available after a divorce.
When Ms. SCOTT said she would be working that Sunday, he mentioned
that, coincidentally, he would be in Toronto that day and invited
her out to dinner. "That's when I realized, whoo, he's asking
me out on a date," says Ms.
SCOTT, who cites timing and fate
as instrumental in their romance. She notes that had the lawsuit
against her client been dropped, "John and I would have never met."
As they got to know each other, they learned that they had taken
the same bar admission course in Toronto in 1993. "I'm sure we
passed each other in the hall, and never knew who the other was.
If we had met, it wouldn't have been the right time," says Ms.
SCOTT, since Mr.
JOHNSON was married at that time.
Strong parental influence prompted both their careers. "When
I was a child, I was so argumentative my parents said I'd be
a fine lawyer. I'd wanted to be one from the time I was 10,"
says Mr. JOHNSON, a Queen's University graduate who hails from
Sundridge, Ontario, north of Huntsville.
"My dad always said, 'You should work for the underdog and help
people who need help.' "
True to that tenet, he says his clients are frequently "people
who have been hurt, or are sick, and trying to get benefits from
their insurance companies." As well, Mr.
JOHNSON, 35, has worked
regularly with house-building charity Habitat for Humanity, participating
in five projects, including one in Guyana.
Ms. SCOTT accepted her lawyer father's advice and entered law
school at the University of New Brunswick after completing an
honours degree in psychology and taking off a year to tour Australia,
New Zealand and Southeast Asia. After graduating, she found her
niche with Lawson McGrenere LLP representing insurers.
"I'm 39 now, dated a bit, and knew what I wanted. John is not
your conventional lawyer. He was like nobody else I had ever
met and treated me like gold," she says.
After▲ only their second date, a smitten and hopeful Mr.
JOHNSON
made an oblivious Ms.
SCOTT his life-insurance beneficiary. Meanwhile,
he had unwittingly won her over when he arrived at her home toting
a toolbox and ready to hang a heavy mirror that other suitors
had only promised to do. "I thought it was a sign," she says,
recalling that she had mused to herself, "Wouldn't it be funny
if this is the one I'm going to marry?"
Despite the playful chastisements of Friends that he was consorting
with the opposition after eight months of commuting from Muskoka
to Toronto, Mr.
JOHNSON arranged a transfer and joined Ms.
SCOTT
in a home they purchased. He became a partner in Johnson Clonfero LLP and
revived his adolescent passion for motorcycles. He purchased
one with assurances to a nervous Ms.
SCOTT that at the driver's
certification course he had taken, the examiner had deducted
points for driving too slowly.
On Friday evening of the 2004 Labour Day weekend, he persuaded
a wary Ms.
SCOTT to hop on his sport bike.
She clung to him tightly as they wound their way to Cherry Beach.
Alone there, she recalls her surprise as he reached into his
motorcycle jacket, pulled out a little box and got down on one
knee. "It was sweet," she says, "and by the water you feel like
you're not even in Toronto."
At Leaside United Church on January 22, Reverend Betty
JORDAN, whom
the bridegroom had met through Habitat, and Reverend Erin
TODD performed
the nuptials, with a luncheon at McLean House capping the event.
Considering that they often find themselves on the opposite ends
of arguments, they are remarkably adept at keeping their relationship
free of tension. "For the most part, we see things the same way
and bring the same philosophy to the practice of law," Mr.
JOHNSON
says, adding, "Elizabeth is smart, sexy, independent, everything
I wanted in a partner."
JOHNSON - All Categories in OGSPI
JOHNSTON m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-02-12 published
MOWRY/
JOHNSTON - Happy Anniversary
I can't believe it's been a year already!
Love you lots Billy.
Your wife, Sherri J.
JOHNSTON - All Categories in OGSPI
JONES m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-06-18 published
JONES,
Glen and Alberta - Happy 55th Anniversary
Congratulations, With Love From Your Family.
JONES - All Categories in OGSPI