PLOEG
PLOMIN
PLOMP
PLOOARD
PLORINS
PLOSS
PLOTKIN
PLOTZKE
PLOUFFE
PLOURDE
PLOW
PLOWES
PLOWMAN
PLOWRIGHT
PLOEG o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2005-09-20 published
HENDERSON,
Harry
K.
At the Grey Bruce Health Services, in Owen Sound on Sunday, September
18th, 2005, in his 78th year. Harry K.
HENDERSON, the loving
husband and friend of Dolores
HENDERSON (née
McMEEKIN) for over
fifty-eight years. The loving father of Ann and her husband,
Chris OGONOSKI,
Heather and her husband, Paul
SORENSON, Rick
HENDERSON and his wife, June, David
HENDERSON and his wife, Jan
and Paula CAMERON.
The loving grandfather of Angela and her husband,
Tim MAITLAND, K.C.
WILLCOCK,
Laura and Paula
OGONOSKI, Melanie
NOLAN,
Christopher
SORENSON and his wife, Esther, Teena and her
husband, Joseph
DEMARS,
Tania and her husband, Richard
VANDER
PLOEG, Rick
HENDERSON Jr., Dolores
HENDERSON, Kerrie and her
husband, Jeff
LEYBOURNE and Jodie
RANDALL,
Crystal and her husband,
Aaron HIBMA,
David and Darren
HENDERSON, Michael and Anthony
CAMERON.
Great-grandfather of twenty great-grandchildren and
one great-great-grand_son. Dear brother of Jean (Mrs. Mick
MOORE.)
Fondly remembered by his nieces and nephews. Predeceased by his
brother, Harold and his sisters, Evelyn (Mrs. Jim
PARK) and Betty
(Mrs. Ron DUNCAN.)
Harry served a third of his life in the City
of Owen Sound government. Harry served on Police Commissions
and as a City Councilman or twenty-three years and finishing
his government service as Mayor of the City of Owen Sound. Friends
may call at the Breckenridge-Ashcroft Funeral Home, on Monday
from 7: 00 to 9:00 p.m. and Tuesday from 2:00 to 4:00 and 7:00
to 9: 00 p.m. A Funeral Service will be held at the funeral home
on Wednesday afternoon at 1: 30 p.m. Pastor Mary
TURNER officiating.
Interment in Greenwood Cemetery. As an expression of sympathy,
memorial donations to the Diabetic Association, the Ontario Heart
and Stroke Foundation or to the Gideon Memorial Bible Plan would
be appreciated by the family.
Page A2
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PLOMIN o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-05-03 published
MacCURTAIN,
Lillian
Peacefully, after a lengthy illness, with family by her side,
on Saturday April 30, 2005, at Parkwood Hospital. Lillian
MacCURTAIN
in her 39th year. Beloved spouse of Hugh
DUNCAN.
Loving mother
of Brian MacCURTAIN,
Conrad and Bradley
ROSE. Lovingly remembered
by her parents Brian and Shelagh, sisters Maureen and her husband
Robert PLOMIN, and Olwyn
MacCURTAIN.
Predeceased by brother Vincent.
Loving aunt of Chandra and Chelsea
PLOMIN,
Elizabeth,
Shawn and
Jason DUNCAN.
Also remembered by many aunts, uncles and cousins
in Ireland. Visitation will be held at the Evans Funeral Home,
648 Hamilton Rd. (1 block east of Egerton), on Tuesday May 3,
2005, from 10: 30-11 a.m. Funeral service will follow in the Evans
Chapel at 11: 00 a.m. Cremation with Interment in Mount Pleasant
Cemetery. Online condolences can be expressed at www.evansfh.ca.
A tree will be planted as a living memorial to Lillian.
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PLOMP o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-04-20 published
PLOMP,
Ronald
Gerard
Peacefully after a courageous battle on Tuesday, April 19th,
2005, at the Newmarket Health Centre, Ron passed away in his
47th year. Beloved
son of Johanna and the late Gerald. Caring
and devoted father of Devin, David and Melissa. Dear brother
of Yvonne; Monique (John
SCHNEIDER); Gerald (Mary); Richard (Kimberley)
and Darryl. Ron will be sadly missed by his many nieces and nephews.
Friends will be received at the Taylor Funeral Home "Newmarket
Chapel", 524 Davis Drive, Thursday, April 21st, 2005 from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at St. Elizabeth
Seton (17955 Leslie St.) on Friday, April 22nd at 11 a.m. Services
will conclude at the church as cremation will follow. Memorial
donations to Pal Care or Doane House Hospice would be greatly
appreciated.
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PLOOARD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-04-26 published
PLOOARD,
Jack
Henwood
Peacefully, at Northumberland Hills Hospital, Cobourg, on Sunday,
April 24, 2005, in his 93rd year. Jack
PLOOARD, beloved husband
of the late Irene Amy
KIDD.
Loving father of Charles, and Jaylene
and her husband Paul
COLLINS of Blind River, Ontario. Dear grandfather
of Stephanie (Jim) and Aimee (Graham)
COLLINS.
Loving son of
the late Charles and Emily. Brother of Art and the late Charlie,
Marian, Anne and Rita
PLOOARD.
Friends are invited to call at
the Ross Funeral Chapel, 135 Walton Street, Port Hope, Wednesday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Service will be held at St. Paul's Anglican
Church, Perrytown, Thursday, April 28, 2005 at 11 a.m. Interment
St. Paul's Perrytown Church Cemetery. Memorial donations to St.
Paul's Anglican Church Perrytown would be appreciated. Many thanks
to the staff at the Intensive Care Unit of Northumberland Hills
Hospital for their extreme kindness and caring.
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PLORINS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-06-01 published
HEGARTY,
Anne
Kate
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our
mother, on Saturday, May 28, 2005. Beloved wife of the late James
HEGARTY.
Loving mother of Tom (2002) and his wife
Jane,
Susan,
Peter and his wife
Patti,
Mary and her husband Doug
WALKER,
Paul,
Annette and her husband Ivars
PLORINS,
John and his wife
Lisa.
Loving grandmother of Nevin, Nathan, Meghan, Lisa, Peter, Jason,
Ryan, Michael, Brian, John, David and Mark. Private family service
will be held on Thursday, June 2, 2005. Anne's family wishes
to thank Aurora Resthaven for the professional care they gave
to her during her stay. If desired, donations to the Heart and
Stroke Foundation would be appreciated.
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PLOSS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-03-21 published
RAMINSH,
Alma (née
PLOSS)
We are deeply saddened to announce that on March 19, 2005 we
lost our wonderful mother. Alma - wife of the late Alfreds -
leaves behind their children: Ingrid (Egils
TANNIS,)
Margita
(late Victor
KANBERGS), Vija (Taketo
MURATA), Imant (Becky
STRUBE),
John. Grandchildren: Aivar (Georgia), Anita (Dave); Davis (Natalija),
John (Christine); Alfred, Teddy, Ariana; Lisa; Jessica (Colin),
Robbie. Great grandchildren: Signe; Ilmars, Katrine; Callum.
Alma graduated from Conservatory of Music, Riga, Latvia and was
an accomplished concert pianist and piano teacher. She will be
missed by many students in Cochrane and Toronto. Memorial service
will be held on March 22 at 11: 00 at the Saint John's Latvian Lutheran
Church, 200 Balmoral Avenue, Toronto, M4V 1J6. In her memory
donations may be made to the above church.
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PLOTKIN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-08-15 published
PROMISLOW,
Jennie (née
PLOTKIN)
Peacefully on August 13, 2005, in her 95th year. Born in Medicine
Hat, Alberta on April 15, 1911. Beloved wife of the late Louis
David PROMISLOW.
Loving and much loved mother of George and Avril
PROMISLOW, the late Morry
PROMISLOW and Josie
PROMISLOW,
Ruth
and Ies VAN
MESSEL,
Miriam and Harold
KATZIN. Lovingly remembered
by thirteen grandchildren and nineteen great-grandchildren. Funeral
services at Shaarey Zedek Cemetary at Armstrong and Main Street,
11: 30 a.m., Winnipeg, Manitoba. Shiva at 121 Eastbourne Avenue,
Toronto, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Sunday 2-4 p.m. and 7: 30
p.m.
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PLOTKIN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-05-17 published
Young rabbi killed at train crossing
May have been blinded by sun
Police appealing for witnesses:
By Stan JOSEY,
Staff
Reporter
A popular young Thornhill rabbi may have been blinded by the
rising sun early yesterday when his car was hit broadside by
a GO train at a level crossing on Green Lane just east of Bayview
Ave.
Rabbi Levi
BIALO, 25, died instantly when his white Acura Legend
became wedged under the lead car of the reversing GO train and
was carried about 160 metres down the track.
BIALO and his wife
Shira were in charge of the young adult program
at Chabad Lubavitch, an Orthodox synagogue about a block and
a half from the scene of the accident. Both also taught elementary
classes in the synagogue school.
Friends say
BIALO, who moved here from Cleveland about two years
ago, likely was rushing to make Shacharit or morning prayers
at the synagogue when his car was struck shortly after 7 a.m.
The level crossing, which is protected by lights, bells and a
barrier gate, is just east of the driveway to the
BIALOs' home
in the Landmark condominium project on Green Lane.
York
Region police accident reconstructionist Sgt. Dave
MITCHELL
said police suspect
BIALO may have been blinded by the rising
eastern sun, brushed under the barrier gates, put on his brakes
and stopped directly on the southbound tracks. "It's just a very
sad and unfortunate set of circumstances," he said.
Police are appealing to anyone who may have witnessed the accident
to shed some light on the circumstances.
The rush-hour train had just left the Langstaff station near
Highway 7 and Yonge St. and was heading for Union Station.
No one was injured on the train, but
MITCHELL said the three-member
crew was "severely shaken" by the accident. They were taken away
by investigators to be interviewed.
The GO passengers were transferred to buses within an hour and
a half of the accident to continue their trip into Toronto.
Members of the tight-knit Chabad Lubavitch community were devastated.
They called the young rabbi "the best person you could ever meet."
Several members of the synagogue stood staring anxiously down
the tracks as Markham firefighters and other emergency workers
conducted the difficult task of freeing the man's body from the
car's wreckage.
A Jewish burial team, which traditionally cleans and blesses
the site of a tragic accident involving Jews, was allowed on
to the site shortly after the body was removed around 10: 30 a.m.
Green Lane was closed most of the day as accident investigators
studied the scene. Rail traffic began moving along the Bala subdivision
Toronto's main rail line into Northern Ontario -- around 11
a.m.
Rabbi Avraham
PLOTKIN comforted
BIALO's family. Other congregation
members at the site could not believe the rabbi, who leaves pregnant
wife Shira and a 2-year-old son, was gone.
"He was so full of life and such an inspiration to everyone,"
said Neil HENDERSON, 50. "He would have been on his way to morning
services... this is really sad."
"Levi was a great person who helped bring religion to a lot of
people who did not pray so often or so hard," said Jeremy
PILARSKI,
25. "He hosted regular dinners at his home for the young people
in the community and made a difference in their lives.
"I am sure everyone who knew him is just devastated."
HENDERSON said the accident should make officials consider a
grade separation for the tracks, which run through a busy residential
and commercial area.
GO Transit spokesman Ed
SHAY/SHEA said the line is owned by Canadian
National and he did not know of any plans for an overpass.
He said the train speed limit at that point was 40 or 50 km/h,
depending on which of the two tracks the train was using.
York Region police, the Transport Safety Board, GO Transit and
Canadian National are investigating.
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PLOTZKE o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-03-13 published
BECK,
Reverend
Donald
Robert
At London Health Sciences Centre, Victoria Campus on Saturday
morning, March 12th, 2005, Reverend Donald Robert
BECK of London
surrounded by his family, passed away quietly and with great
Faith, in his 76th year. Dearly beloved husband of Velma (formerly
BLAIR)
BECK.
Don was predeceased by his first wife
Wil and his
son Brian. Dear father of four surviving children; Michael of
Toronto, Jeffrey (Heather) of London, Topher (Kim) also of London,
and Susan of Pennsylvania. Dear brother of Bill (Margaret) of
London and several nieces and nephews. Don was the loving grandfather
of Cian, Sophie, Chad, Hali (Jordan), Kristopher (Michelle),
Carrie (Ian), Kyle and Brett. Also survived by his step-children
Don (Leslee)
BLAIR of Strathroy and Marilyn (Lutz)
PLOTZKE of
Chatham. Friends will be received by the family from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. Monday at the A. Millard George Funeral Home, 60 Ridout
Street South, London (433-5184). The funeral service will be
held at First-St. Andrew's United Church, 350 Queens Avenue (at
Waterloo Street), London, on Tuesday, March 15th at 2 p.m. with
Reverend
Dr.
David
McKANE officiating. Cremation to follow. As
expressions of sympathy, memorial donations would be appreciated
to the Stewardship Services of United Church of Canada, 3250
Bloor Street West, Suite 300, Toronto M8X 2Y4, or the Heart and
Stroke Foundation of Ontario, 617 Wellington Street, London N6A
3R6. Condolences accepted at www.amgeorgefh.on.ca
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PLOUFFE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-06-16 published
BELL,
Robert
Gordon, O.C., M.D., LL.D
Peacefully at home, on June 15, 2005, in his 94th year. Beloved
husband of the late Mary Irene
LAMPING, whom he married in 1938.
Loving father of Bobbie (deceased,) Ronald (Katharine
KIRKWOOD,)
Janice (Walter
HAMBLEY,)
Linda
(Louis ST-
LAURENT,) Mary (Daniel
PLOUFFE) and Brian (Lynn.) Cherished Grandpa to Kate (John
BLICK,)
Laura (Peter
BHOI,)
Carolyn
(Sam
BIRRITTELLA,) Jason, Jessie,
Vicki, Christopher, Lisa, James, Elizabeth, Andrew and Sarah,
and proud Great-Grandpa to Robert, James, Patrick, Daniel and
Asha. Predeceased by his brother Oliver and his sister Jean.
He will be missed by his dear sister-in-law Helen
LAMPING, his
cousin Mary
WILSON, nieces, nephews, and Friends as well as his
wonderful caregivers, Yolande, Matilda and Georgette. Born on
a farm in Saint Mary's, Ontario in 1911, he grew up in a warm and
caring home environment. Educated in Saint Mary's, he later attended
Medical School, University of Toronto (Victoria College) and
was a member of the Canadian Army Medical Corps in World War
2. A pioneer in addiction medicine, he and his wife Mary began
working as a team treating patients in their own home in 1946,
and subsequently established Glen Maple, Shadowbrook, Willowdale
Hospital for Women, Alex G. Brown Clinic at Mimico Reformatory,
and The Bell Clinic. He received international recognition for
creating successful treatment and recovery programs and founded
the first public hospital for addiction in Canada, The Donwood
Institute. He then, at the age of 72, continued and expanded
his work by opening Bellwood Health Services. He is an Officer
of the Order of Canada, a recipient of the Royal Bank Award,
an honorary Doctor of Laws (York University) and has received
numerous other honours. Music played a big part in his life and
he was an accomplished pianist. He loved gardening, dancing,
reading, bridge and especially gatherings with family and Friends.
Visitation will be held on Friday and Saturday from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. at the R.S. Kane Funeral Home (6150 Yonge Street,
at Goulding, south of Steeles). A Funeral Mass will be held on
Monday June 20, 2005 at St. Gabriel's Church (Sheppard Avenue)
at 10 a.m. Private Interment in Saint Mary's, Ontario. Condolences
www.rskane.ca. For those who wish, donations may be made to the
Gordon Bell Foundation for the Prevention of Addiction. More
than 40,000 families have benefited from his life's work. His
dedication to his patients will be remembered by them and their
subsequent generations. As he often said, 'It has been a privilege
to have been of service.' R.S. Kane 416-221-1159
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PLOUFFE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-06-30 published
Robert Gordon
BELL,
Physician: 1911-2005
Pioneering doctor who almost didn't make it through medical school
turned a chance involvement with alcoholics into a life's calling
to treat all manner of addictions
By Stephen
STRAUSS,
Special to The Globe and Mail, Thursday,
June 30, 2005, Page S11
Toronto -- After word got out that Robert Gordon
BELL, known
to those who knew him as Gordon, had died at 93, an e-mail was
sent to his family from a former patient. In it, the feelings
of not just the writer but the tens of thousands of people whom
Dr. BELL and his treatment had helped escape from addiction was
summarized in a mental health koan.
"I learned from him that, yes, I was an alcoholic, but to be
an alcoholic didn't mean I was a bad person," the man wrote.
It is something that the Ontario farmer's son, who turned a happenstance
involvement with Toronto alcoholics in the 1940s into a life's
calling to treat addictions of all sorts, would undoubtedly have
relished. His personal motto, and one that he repeated daily
to patients, was "it has been a privilege to have been of service."
What wasn't said, but implied, were the added words "when others
find it such a privilege not to serve you."
The social context in which the ever-courtly Dr.
BELL helped
revolutionize the treatment of addiction in not just Canada but
around the world was a medical disdain bordering on repulsion.
"He was a courageous pioneer, because he took on an area of medicine
almost nobody at the time wanted to deal with," said Frank
EVANS,
long-time colleague and secretary of the Canadian Society of
Addiction Medicine. "Doctors were both revolted and disgusted
at a problem which they saw as self-inflicted. In what he did,
Dr. BELL was almost the addiction equivalent of Father Damien,
who provided an understanding and haven for lepers on the Hawaiian
Island of Molokai."
Dr. BELL would later write that part of his sympathy for an addict's
personal failures came from his own difficulties in becoming
a doctor in the first place.
Born into a Scots Presbyterian family in the Southern Ontario
town of Saint Mary's, Dr.
BELL was inspired by his industrious
Uncle Charlie -- a doctor who once held the North American record
for the number of babies delivered in a year -- to go into medicine.
But he was an indifferent student, and he failed medical school
after his third year at the University of Toronto. While working
in a smelting plant, he experienced what he would later call
a transcendental release from fear of failure while watching
the sun rise over Lake Erie. "I lost my fear of not being able
to succeed, and I acquired a sense of direction in personal fulfilment,"
he would write in an 1989 autobiography.
He might have become self-assured, but he also had to struggle
mightily to convince the University of Toronto to readmit him
after a dean bluntly informed him: "Can you not appreciate that
you have neither the intelligence nor the emotional stability
to graduate in medicine and succeed as a physician." In a way,
that set the tone for his subsequent dealing with authority --
he refused to leave until a second opinion was obtained from
someone who saw the good doctor lurking within the previous failure.
Dr. BELL's first entree into social-psychiatric medicine came
during the Second World War when he worked in the Canadian Army
with soldiers traumatized by their war experience. Having found
this interesting, and sure that his lack of an obstetrics background
would doom him in general practice, he opened up a clinic in
his home for -- in his words -- the "emotionally disabled."
At the time, he assured his wife, who already had given birth
to two of his five children, that "the worst we could expect
would be three or four nervous old ladies as guests. I had no
idea at the time our only patients would be alcoholics." Not
only that, but among them would be one who returned to the house
after going on a bend with the express purpose of beating Dr.
BELL to a pulp.
Reflecting a Canada in which alcoholics were viewed as the bane
of a medical practice, Dr.
BELL quickly found that there was
almost nothing in the medical literature describing how you dealt
with people who drank too much. Out of the personality jumble
of the patients who came to him -- business successes, failures,
the violent, the passive, the neat, the messy -- grew the notion
that, to treat addiction, you had to treat the whole person in
a caring community. A singularly important feature of this, and
one that went against the thinking of the time, was that an alcoholic
was an alcoholic for life and there was no possibility of going
back to social drinking.
To this was grafted what were, for the time, revolutionary alcoholism
drug treatments, most notably Antabuse, a medication that made
anyone sick who drank alcohol afterward. To ensure they would
truly be of service to their patients, Dr.
BELL and another physician
first tried the substance on themselves. The result was a near
overdose wherein Dr.
BELL's blood pressure and pulse rate fell
to almost zero and he came close to dying. Later, he and a fellow
doctor would invent and again self-test Temposil, an anti-drinking
drug with fewer side effects. They also came up with a body-weight
scale that allowed you to estimate how much you could drink without
getting drunk.
Dr. BELL's interest in addiction -- he had soon learned that
many of his alcoholic patients were addicted to barbiturates
and other drugs -- led him to found a number of clinics and hospitals
in the Toronto area. The establishment of these facilities was
viewed by the authorities of the day with considerable suspicion.
Indeed, so wary was the Ontario Medical Association of his activities
that it secretly sent a couple of doctors to check out his clinic.
In the words of one of the investigators, the Ontario Medical
Association suspected that Dr.
BELL was "some kind of medical
racketeer out to make a fortune by sobering up wealthy drunks."
Making money would have surprised both his bank managers and
his family. "He always paid himself last," said Ron
BELL, one
of his sons.
Soon, Bell clinics in their various incarnations were seen as
the best places in North America for people to have a chance
at least to stop being alcoholics. And rich Americans, notably
Henry Clay Ford, grand_son of Henry Ford, and Harvey Firestone
Jr., of the Firestone tire family, soon arrived for treatment.
They both ended up sitting on the board and contributing money
toward the operation of the Donwood Institute, the first public
hospital in North America specifically designed to treat addictions.
Of particular pride to Dr.
BELL was the more than half-a-million
dollars contributed by former patients -- the "hopeless characters,"
according to those who turned them away -- to the Donwood. The
success in Canada spurred the development of similar institutions
in the United States, one of which treated Betty Ford, the wife
of former U.S. president Gerald Ford. It became the template
for the Betty Ford Center in California.
But life's accomplishments don't always capture the character
of a man. Dr.
BELL was, say those who knew him, someone who transcended
his background. The child of the old Protestant Ontario embraced
in his practice the multiplicity of the multiculturalism of its
present. "He was very ecumenical," said University of Toronto
professor Harold
KALANT, who had known him since medical school.
As an example, Toby
LEVINSON, a psychologist who worked with
him since the 1960s, reported the reaction of a native woman
when Dr. BELL took his family on a tour of the Donwood. "Dr.
BELL was here with his family; he came right over and talked
to me. Can you imagine Dr.
BELL talking to a drunken Indian?"
she asked in amazement.
His final accomplishment may have been the incorporation of his
children in his vision of a caring community for addicts. Both
his daughter Janice and his daughter Linda ended up working at
Bellwood Health Services, a residential centre he helped found
to treat not only drug and alcohol addictions but also gambling,
sexual manias and eating disorders.
In the end, Gordon
BELL's life finished in a full circle. He
was buried in the graveyard of the church in Saint Mary's where
he had worshipped as a child, and where his childhood minister
had emphasized the need for lifelong learning. What killed him
was a heart attack, which he diagnosed to a caregiver even as
he was dying. "A good clinician to the last," said Ron
BELL.
Robert Gordon
BELL was born in Saint Mary's, Ontario, on November
11, 1911. He died of a heart attack in Toronto on June 15, 2005.
He was 93. He is survived by daughters Janice
HAMBLE,
Linda
BELL
and Mary BELL-
PLOUFFE and by sons Ronald and Brian. His wife,
Mary, died in January of 1994.
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PLOUFFE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-03-03 published
JOHNSTON,
Doris (née
PLOUFFE)
Peacefully in her 93rd year, on Thursday, February 24, 2005.
Predeceased by Cecil George, her husband of 69 years. Loving
mother of Lilian
KIRKPATRICK
(Richard,)
Rosemarie
JARRETT (Neil,)
Cecil BRUCE (deceased,) Virginia
NEALE
(Ray) and Michelle
CAUSTON
(Wayne). Fondly remembered by grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
At her request, a private cremation has been held.
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PLOURDE o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2005-11-17 published
RYAN,
Judith
Mona “Judy” (née
RACICOT)
Suddenly at Grey Bruce Health Services, Owen Sound on Tuesday,
November 15th, 2005. Judy
RYAN (née
RACICOT) of Owen Sound in
her 57th year. Beloved wife of Ray
RYAN. Dear mother of Cynthia
RYAN and Dennis
RYAN.
Sadly missed by two grandchildren
RYAN
and Caitlyn
BALL.
Also survived by two brothers Richard
RACICOT
and his wife
Joyce of Kamloops, British Columbia, and Donny
RACICOT
of Vancouver and three sisters Linda and her husband Tom
DEAKINS
of Owen Sound, Patsy and her husband Norm
PLOURDE of Ajax and
Susie SPARLING of Toronto. Friends are invited to the Tannahill
Funeral Home 376-3710 for visiting on Friday evening from 7: 00
to 9: 00 p.m. The Funeral Mass will be celebrated at Saint Mary's
Church on Saturday morning at 10: 30 a.m. Memorial donations to
either the Heart and Stroke Foundation or the Lung Association
would be appreciated. Messages of condolence for the family are
welcome at www.tannahill.com
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PLOURDE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-03-15 published
JONES,
Iris
(MASON) (née
MATTHEWS)
March 10, 2005, at the Lakeshore General Hospital in Pointe-Claire,
Quebec, at the age of 89. Beloved wife of the late Leonard
JONES.
Iris will be remembered by her daughter, Julia
MASON
(Pierre
BEAUCHAMP,) her son, Ian
MASON
(Normande
PLOURDE,) her brother
Edward MATTHEWS
(Darleen,) her sisters Rosa
RILEY, June
HOLMES
(John) and her sisters-in-law Jean
MATTHEWS
(Bruce,)
Alene
MATTHEWS
(Frank,) her granddaughters Emma and Arianne
BEAUCHAMP, as well
as her many nephews, nieces, cousins and Friends in Toronto,
Pointe-Claire, and Guelph. Family and Friends will be invited
to attend a private ceremony at a summer date and place to be
announced. In lieu of flowers, a donation to the Red Cross Society
would be gratefully appreciated.
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PLOURDE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-10-12 published
BROWN,
Gail
Ruth
After a brave battle, early Tuesday morning, October 11, 2005,
we lost a very special person. Gail, beloved mother of Michael
and Terry. Dear sister of Muriel and husband Gerry
PLOURDE, and
Carter GERMAIN and his wife
Jackie.
She will be sadly missed
by Vincent
BROWN, and by a large extended family and many Friends
in Ontario and Nova Scotia. Friends will be received at the Lynett
Funeral Home, 3299 Dundas St. West (one block east of Runnymede)
Thursday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service in the chapel Friday,
October 14, at 1 p.m. Cremation to follow. If desired, donations
may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society.
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PLOW o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-02-19 published
JUELSBERG,
John
Peter
It is with profound sadness that we announce Peter's passing
at 61 yrs of age, on February 16, 2005. Predeceased by his infant
son James Peter (1985) and his father Gunnar
THORKIL.
Survived
by his wife and soul-mate of 25 years, Judith Grace (née
STACKHOUSE,
formerly PLOW,) his son, Jason Andrew, and stepchildren Dr. Lisa
Grace PLOW-
JARVIS
(Ted) and John-Russell
PLOW (Cathy.)
Survived
as well by his mother Lisa
HIND (née
FONNESBECH
JUHLER) and sister
Elizabeth "Suss". Loved by Bradley
STACKHOUSE and Cannon
GARBOR.
Cherished Boppa of Keith, Harrison, Luke and Isobel
JARVIS.
A celebration of Peter's life will take place on Saturday February
26, 3: 30 pm, at St. Peter's Anglican Church Erindale, Mississauga
(Mississauga Rd. and Dundas). In lieu of flowers, donations to
Credit Valley Hospital Dialysis Unit gratefully accepted.
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PLOWES o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-02-08 published
ROWARTH,
Arlene
Elizabeth
Suddenly at Markham Stouffville Hospital on Monday, February
7th, 2005 in her 73rd year. Beloved wife of John. Sadly missed
by her children Robert and his wife Michelle, Linda and her husband
Dan McCAUGHEY,
Laura and her husband Paul
MOSER and Jane and
her husband Brad
LARKIN.
Loving grandmother of Aaron, Benjamin,
Cassandra, Kirsten, Shannon, Alison, Jordan, Ryan, Hailey, Brea,
Amanda and Janna. Dear sister of Emily
GREENWOOD,
Beryl
PLOWES
and Neil EDWARDS.
She will be fondly remembered by her many Friends
and family. Friends will be received at the Dixon-Garland Funeral
Home, 166 Main St. N. (Markham Rd.), Markham on Wednesday 7-9
p.m. Service in the Chapel on Thursday at 11 a.m. Cremation.
If desired, donations to a charity of your choice would be appreciated.
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PLOWMAN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-10-04 published
MARSH
PLOWMAN,
Betty
(Betty
MARSH)
Returned home in the early morning of September 15, 2005. Fondly
remembered by her husband Mayne
PLOWMAN, sons Geoffery and Nigel
MARSH, daughters-in-law Laura
MARSH and
Ro SELVETTI, grand_son
Jordan MARSH, close friend Betty
JOHNS.
Step-mother to Bryan
and Brenda
PLOWMAN and Adele
MURRAY.
Grandi to Keith, Kevin,
Daryl, Bryan, Shannon, Paul, Tim, Alisha, and Kayla. Great-grandmother
to Kyle, Keegan, Kalub, Kristyn, Andrew and Connor; nieces Brenda
and Juliette. A Memorial Service will be held at Saint John's Anglican
Church at 1 p.m. on Friday, October 14, 2005, at 19 Donridge
Drive (east off Yonge Street, south of 401 on York Mills to Old
Yonge Street, left to Donridge, left to the Church). A reception
will follow right after the service at York Cemetery at 160 Beecroft
Road, Toronto (416-221-3404). Donations to your favourite charity.
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PLOWRIGHT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-08-22 published
PLOWRIGHT,
Bertram▼
Allan▼
It is with great sadness the family announces the passing of
Allan PLOWRIGHT on Friday, August 19, 2005, at Sunrise of Unionville.
Predeceased by his beautiful and loving wife Joy, and will be
greatly missed by his daughter Anne
PLOWRIGHT and Jane
SIMARD
and her husband Georges. The family would like to thank the gracious
and caring staff of Sunrise of Unionville who cared for him as
if he were family. Friends may call at the Ward Funeral Home,
2035 Weston Road, on Tuesday, August 23 from 1 to 2 p.m. Funeral
service in the chapel at 2 p.m. Donations to the Alzheimer Society
would be greatly appreciated by the family. Condolences to the
family may be sent to allan.plowright@wardfh.com.
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PLOWRIGHT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-08-21 published
PLOWRIGHT,
Bertram▲
Allan▲
It is with great sadness that the family announces the passing
of Allan PLOWRIGHT, on Friday, August 19, 2005, at Sunrise of
Unionville. Predeceased by his beautiful and loving wife Joy.
Will be greatly missed by his daughters Anne
PLOWRIGHT and Jane
SIMARD and her husband Georges. The family would like to thank
the gracious and caring staff of Sunrise of Unionville who cared
for him as if he were family. Friends may call at the Ward Funeral
Home, 2035 Weston Rd. (north of Lawrence Ave.), Weston, on Tuesday
August 23 from 1-2 p.m. Funeral Service in the Chapel at 2 p.m.
Donations to the Alzheimer Society would be greatly appreciated
by the family. Condolences to the family made be sent to: allan.plowright@wardfh.com
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