TIBANDO
TIBBETT
TIBBITS
TIBBITTS
TIBBLE
TIBBLES
TIBBO
TIBERINI
TIBERIO
TIBOSCH
TIBANDO o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-05-12 published
IZZOTTI,
Lydia
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Lydia
on Monday, May 9, 2005 at the Toronto Hospital - Western Division
surrounded by her family. Much loved sister of Carmen
TIBANDO,
Eliseo (Albert,) and Lucy
IZZOTTI.
Loving aunt of Eva
McNAUGHT
(Peter,) Felicia
GIMZA
(David,) and Joseph
TIBANDO. Great-aunt
of Justin, Taylor and Brianna. Predeceased by her parents Gabriele
and Felicita
IZZOTTI, her brother Eugene
IZZOTTI and her brother-in-law
Albert TIBANDO.
Friends will be received at the Jerrett Funeral
Home, 1141 St. Clair Ave. W. (one block east of Dufferin), Toronto
on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. A Funeral Mass will be
held on Saturday, May 14 at 10 a.m. from St. Clare's Roman Catholic
Church, 1118 St. Clair Ave. W., Toronto. Interment Holy Cross
Cemetery. If desired, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society
would be appreciated by the family.
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TIBBETT o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2005-11-11 published
ISAACS,
Edythe
Lenore (née
OSBORNE)
Lenore ISAACS of Thornbury, beloved wife of the late William
H. 'Bill'
ISAACS, passed away in Collingwood on Wednesday November
9th, 2005 in her 87th year. Daughter of the late John Charles
and Annie Edythe
(TIBBETT)
OSBORNE.
Loved mother of Bert
ISAACS
and Maureen
McKEE of Thornbury and Lynne and her husband Michael
MALLETTE of Collingwood. Cherished grandmother of Matthew
MALLETTE
also of Collingwood. Predeceased by a brother Laurence
OSBORNE
of Schomberg. Funeral services will be conducted at the Ferguson
Funeral Home, The Valley Chapel, in Thornbury on Saturday November
12th at 1: 30 o'clock. Committal service and interment to follow
at Thornbury-Clarksburg Union Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Friday from 2: 00 to 4:00 and from 7:00 to 9:00
p.m. As your expression of sympathy, donations to Alzheimer's
Society, Humane Society of Collingwood, or Meaford General Hospital
Foundation would be appreciated.
Page B8
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TIBBITS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-02-14 published
Klaus Dietmar
WOERNER,
Entrepreneur 1939-2005
The German-born tool-and-die maker with enormous willpower founded
ATS, a Kitchener, Ontario, company that is now a global leader
in automated manufacturing solutions, Sandra
MARTIN writes
By Sandra MARTIN,
Monday,
February 14, 2005 - Page S6
A precision mechanic who arrived in Canada in 1960 with nothing
but his skill, energy and ambition, Klaus
WOERNER went on to
become the founder of
ATS, a specialized designer and supplier
of automation systems, that now has 4,000 employees in 26 locations
around the world and annual sales of more than $650-million.
He was named Canadian Entrepreneur of the Year in 1997.
He wasn't a big man, but he was powerful. When he walked into
a room, you could feel the crackle in the air. He could be impatient,
and when he got excited his slight German accent became more
pronounced, but he was very approachable and he never held a
grudge.
"There was no way you could work with Klaus and not be Friends
with him," said Ron
JUTRAS, who has succeeded Mr.
WOERNER as
president of
ATS. "He was a very good judge of character and
he always had time for people. It didn't matter what your role
was in the company, he would find a way to include you in social
gatherings."
Although he wanted people in the company to bring him solutions,
not problems, one of his best skills was problem solving. "He
loved rolling up his sleeves and getting into a problem," Mr.
JUTRAS said.
"Klaus could walk into a factory and he could see the opportunities
to improve it through automation and how he could make a real
difference," said Lawrence
TAPP, chair of the
ATS board, "and
he recognized the importance of the trades and apprenticeships,
which we really needed from a Canadian perspective."
"He was a business giant," said member of provincial parliament
Elizabeth WITMER, former deputy premier of Ontario, "but more
important, he was a very compassionate, generous human being
who gave a tremendous amount back to his community, never expecting
anything in return."
Klaus WOERNER, the youngest of three sons of Karl and Alice
(GREMPER,)
was born in Tiengen in the Black Forest area of Germany, just
after the outbreak of the Second World War. Becoming a toolmaker
was his dream but his hometown was too small to have an apprenticeship
program. He went first to Waldshut to do an apprenticeship as
a watch and clock maker and then to Switzerland to study tool
and die making.
After completing a four-year apprenticeship as a precision mechanic
at Braun Boverei in Switzerland, he applied for visas to Australia,
South Africa and Canada, intending to immigrate to whichever
country accepted him first. Canada won and he arrived in Montreal
in 1960 with a job waiting for him, or so he thought, in aviation.
He showed up for work and learned his employer had shut down
because of the cancellation of the Avro Arrow program the previous
February. He spent his first 14 years in Canada working at technical
jobs and as a watch and clock maker for jeweller Gabriel Lucas
in his celebrated Sherbrooke Street studio. Meanwhile, he finished
his high school diploma and then studied industrial engineering
at night at Sir George Williams (now Concordia) University in
Montreal. Through Friends, he met his wife Anna, then a nursing
student at the Royal Victoria Hospital, in the mid-1960s. "He
was very charming, very elegant and very ambitious," his widow
said this week. They married in Canada's centennial year and
moved to Toronto in 1969 because they were worried about the
economic and political instability in Quebec.
He worked for Litton Systems, then went full-time to Ryerson
Polytechnical Institute (now University) to complete his engineering
qualifications before working at the Ford Motor Company's Oakville
truck plant, installing assembly lines, and then working as an
engineering supervisor at Electrohome Ltd., a television manufacturer,
in Kitchener.
When Electrohome decided to wind down its television business,
Mr. WOERNER went out on his own and, in 1978, founded Automation
Tooling Systems
(ATS,) a start-up company in Kitchener building
specialized equipment to enable manufacturers to take advantage
of new technology.
"The idea of going into industrial automation was really sparked
at Ford," Mr.
WOERNER told Canadian Business magazine in 1998.
"I installed all these automated weld machines and welding robots
there. It was really fun work."
From those early days of building specialized machinery for the
automotive industry, the company has since designed and built
more than 10,000 automation systems for telecommunications, fibre
optics, solar energy and other industries.
ATS was always a family business. Mr.
WOERNER put a $70,000 second
mortgage on his house for cash flow, his wife Anna, who was raising
their two children and working part-time as a nurse, put in half-days
doing secretarial work. Sales reached $370,000 that first year
and grew to $1-million the next. By 1984, the company had $4-million
in revenues and was growing so fast that it was consuming cash
as quickly as he produced it in sales. The company was profitable,
but it needed more working capital than Mr.
WOERNER could provide
from a line of credit at his local bank. It was the bank which
suggested to Mr.
WOERNER that a chartered accountant might help
him increase his financing capability.
"I came to his office, and the level of activity was mind-boggling,"
Mr. JUTRAS said. "It was a beehive of activity. There was a tremendous
pulse and energy level."
Mr. WOERNER was wearing many different hats and working closely
with a bunch of people who were committed to working with him
and who shared his vision, according to Mr.
JUTRAS. "It was inspiring."
Essentially, Mr.
JUTRAS never left. He tested his boss early
on to see if he really wanted somebody to help him on the finance
side. "I made him spend the money on an ad in The Globe and Mail
and when he did it, I said, 'I guess he's serious,' so then I
asked him if he would hire me, and he said absolutely and I came
to work with him [as Chief Financial Officer] and off we went."
That was June of 1985, the year revenues hit $9-million.
"Klaus always wanted to minimize the bureaucracy and to have
an environment that was very team oriented and didn't have an
ivory tower. I can remember him articulating his vision early
on and getting out the white board and mapping out where he wanted
to go. It was exciting."
Mr. JUTRAS helped to find outside investment from Aer Lingus,
which gave the airline a 75-per-cent controlling interest in
ATS.
Giving up such a big share of the company was very hard
for Mr. WOERNER, but he knew he needed the outside capital. Then
in the early 1990s, after having survived downturns in the automotive
and computer electronics industries, Aer Lingus was itself struggling
as a result of the rising fuel costs brought on by the Persian
Gulf war. They wanted to divest themselves of
ATS and Mr.
WOERNER
seized the opportunity to retake control of his company through
an employee-management buy-back offer.
A business connection who became a friend is Robert
WARREN, a
lawyer in the Kitchener office of Miller Thomson. He was brought
in by Mr. JUTRAS to help with the first annual meeting after
the company went public in 1993, a move that brought in the capital
to enable ATS to expand globally. From the beginning, Mr.
WARREN
was impressed by his client's energy, work ethic and loyalty
to his Friends, customers and employees. "He was a horse," Mr.
WARREN said. "He was so strong and he lived to work. You always
knew where you stood with him and I can't think of a nicer man
that I've ever had the pleasure of working with."
Although they didn't know each other at the time, Robert "Bob"
FERCHAT worked at Ford doing financial analysis at the same time
as Mr. WOERNER was working in the technical area. They met and
compared notes in totally different circumstances when Mr.
FERCHAT,
who has held a number of executive positions at Northern Telecom
and BCE
Mobile
Communications and other firms, was invited to
join the board of
ATS in 1997.
A self-described fan of Mr.
WOERNER,
Mr.
FERCHAT said he had
enormous will power and the energy to back it up and that showed
both in the creation of
ATS and in his ability to make it survive
through the downturns in both the high-tech and automotive industries
in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There were no layoffs at
ATS
during those tough times because Mr.
WOERNER insisted on absorbing
the costs of keeping his people working. "He was very loyal to
his employees," Mr.
FERCHAT said, pointing out that the
ATS management
buyout in 1993 was offered to staff, who responded on a broad
level. "He wanted them to share in his wealth and he was frustrated
if the stock went down."
"There were no airs about him," said John
TIBBITS, president
of Conestoga College in Kitchener. "He was very direct so you
never had to do a 'song and dance' for him if you wanted something."
Describing Mr.
WOERNER as one of Conestoga College's best Friends,
Mr. TIBBITS said the relationship with
ATS began in the late
1980s with co-op programs. "It was symbiotic. As they grew, we
grew, too, in a number of areas, a key one being robotics and
automation," he said.
Over the years,
ATS gave cash, equipment, program advisers, apprenticeship
programs, even an engineering building, amounting to an overall
gift of at least $10-million since the mid 1990s. And he strong-armed
other community leaders to make big donations as well. At least
400 Conestoga graduates work at
ATS.
ATS workers and students weren't the only recipients of the
WOERNER
family's generosity. Six years ago the family gave $5-million
to Kitchener's Centre in the Square performing arts theatre.
They tried to give the money anonymously but the centre wanted
to announce it publicly to help in their fundraising. Nevertheless,
they declined an offer to rename the facility in their honour.
They also gave money to local hospitals, to the University of
Waterloo to establish a laboratory for automated manufacturing
research and $100,000 to Ms.
WITMER's unsuccessful run against
Ernie Eves in 2002 for the leadership of the Ontario Conservative
party.
The WOERNERs moved from a house in Kitchener to a 23-hectare
farm outside Cambridge in the early 1980s. That's where he practised
his serve in highly competitive matches on custom-built tennis
courts with his wife and Friends. That's also where, perhaps
in an homage to the denuded Black Forest area of his birth, he
exercised his green thumb by planting more than 100,000 trees
over the years.
Less than a year ago his famous energy flagged and his strength
diminished. Faced with a five-week wait for an M.R.I. in Ontario,
he went to the U.S. and was diagnosed with small-cell carcinoma.
He kept on working, often having chemotherapy in the morning
and then heading straight to the office. His only concession
to ill health was to work four days a week, staying home on Fridays
to recoup his strength.
"If will power could overcome cancer, he would have beaten it,"
said Mr. FERCHAT, adding that the challenge now is to honour
his legacy. "Nobody will be moving into his office or his parking
space for a long time."
Klaus Dietmar
WOERNER was born in Tiengen, Germany, on October
27, 1939. He died of cancer at home on February 7. He was 65.
He is survived by his wife, Anna, two children and three grandchildren.
A memorial service was set for today at Centre In The Square,
101 Queen St. N., in Kitchener, Ontario
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TIBBITTS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-02-05 published
ASANO,
Amy (née
SUGAMORI)
Peacefully, on Friday, February 4, 2005, at the North York General
Hospital, at the age of 81. Predeceased by her beloved husband
Thomas. Loving mother of Gabriel
DRAVEN and Karen
TIBBITTS. Proud
grandma of Haley. Sister of Haruko, Sam (deceased) and Alice.
Amy will be greatly missed by her family and many Friends. Visitation
will be held at the "Scarborough Chapel" of McDougall and Brown,
2900 Kingston Road (east of St. Clair Ave. E.), on Sunday, February
6 from 2-5 p.m. Reception to follow in the Arbor Lounge from
5-6: 30 p.m. For funeral information, please call the funeral
home at (416) 267-4656.
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TIBBITTS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-11-13 published
MARCHMENT,
Lorraine (née
LATIMER)
Passed away peacefully, in her sleep, on Thursday, November 10,
2005, in her 88th year. Lorraine (née
LATIMER,) wife of the late
Welburn MARCHMENT, and loving mother of Murray
MARCHMENT
(Myrtle)
and Ann SUBJECT (the late Lloyd
TIBBITTS.)
Proud and loving grandmother
of Susan, Sarah and Dean, and great-grandmother of Dylan. Predeceased
by her sister Margaret
BOOTH and brother Bill
LATIMER.
Friends
will be received at the J.S. Jones and son Funeral Home, 11582
Trafalgar Road, north of Maple Ave., Georgetown, (905) 877-3631
on Monday from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service will be held
in the Chapel on Tuesday, November 15th at 11: 00 a.m. Interment
Greenwood Cemetery, Georgetown. In memory contributions to the
Georgetown Hospital Foundation would be appreciated. To send
expressions of sympathy visit: www.jsjonesandsonfuneralhome.com
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TIBBLE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-01-07 published
FULLER,
John▼ "
Jack▼"
John died at his home on January 6, 2005. Devoted to and dearly
loved by his wife of 52 years, Mille (Mikey) née
TIBBLE.
Loving▼
father to Mike (Louise,) Maureen (Wilf
PETTEN,)
Janice,▼
Bill▼
(Maureen), June (Peter
BLAKEMAN), Margaret (Bob
LYMER). Dear
grandfather to Jonathan, Cal, Michael, Julia, Janine, Megan,
Charlotte, Victoria, Colin, Robbie and Ted. Brother to Bob, Gordon
(Joyce,)
Don
(Rosemary.) Brother-in-law to Brenda (George
SMITH.)
John will be missed by his many close Friends and business associates.
He founded his construction company J.M. Fuller Ltd., 50 years
ago and Canadian Pipe Supply Limited, 40 years ago. John was
the epitome of the honourable entrepreneurial man. He was truly
respected and admired in the business community. Thanks to Dr.
Gavin MISTRY, Dr. Norman
LAPERRIERE and nurse Michelle
LOW/LOWE/LOUGH
(Princess
Margaret
Hospital,) Dr. Vincent
MAIDA and Christianne
LABOSSIERE who helped John and his family through his illness.
John was a man who did not dwell on sorrow, and would not want
his family and Friends to dwell on this either. May he rest in
peace. Family and Friends will be received at the Ward Funeral
Home, 2035 Weston Road, (north of Lawrence Ave.) Weston from
7-9 p.m. Friday. Funeral Service in the Chapel on Saturday at
11: 00 a.m. followed by burial at Sanctuary Park, Royal York Rd.
& Lawrence Ave. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Princess
Margaret Hospital would be appreciated by the family.
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TIBBLE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-01-07 published
FULLER,
John▲ "
Jack▲"
John died at his home on January 6, 2005. Devoted to and dearly
loved by his wife of 52 years, Mille (Mickey) née
TIBBLE.
Loving▲
father to Mike (Louise,) Maureen (Wilf
PETTEN,)
Janice,▲
Bill▲
(Maureen), June (Peter
BLAKEMAN) and Margaret (Bob
LYMER). Dear
grandfather to Jonathan, Cal, Michael, Julia, Janine, Megan,
Charlotte, Victoria, Colin, Robbie and Ted. Brother to Bob, Gordon
(Joyce) and Don (Rosemary). Brother-in-law to Brenda (George
SMITH.)
John will be missed by his many close Friends and business
associates. He founded his construction company, J.M. Fuller
Ltd. 50 years ago, and Canadian Pipe Supply Ltd. 40 years ago.
John was the epitome of the honorable, entrepreneurial man. He
was truly respected and admired in the business community. Thanks
to Dr. Gavin
MISTRY,
Dr.
Norman
LAPERRIERE and nurse Michelle
LOW/LOWE/LOUGH (Princess Margaret Hospital), Dr. Vincent
MAIDA and Christianne
LABOSSIERE who helped John and his family through his illness.
John was a man who did not dwell on sorrow, and would not want
his Friends to dwell on this either. May he rest in peace. Family
and Friends will be received at the Ward Funeral Home, 2035 Weston
Rd. (north of Lawrence Ave.), Weston, Friday from 7-9 p.m. Funeral
Service will be held in the Chapel on Saturday at 11 a.m. followed
by burial at Sactuary Park Cemetery at Royal Rd. and Lawrence
Ave. In lieu of flowers, donations to Princess Margaret Hospital
would be appreciated.
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TIBBLES o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-09-26 published
WATERSTON,
Rosaleen
On Saturday, September 24th, 2005 we said good-bye to a loving
mother to Judi
TOWERS
(Doug;)
Douglas
WATERSTON (Brucette;) Pam
JONES
(Brian.)
Grandmother to Ian, Kevin, Megan and Christal
great-grandmother to Samantha, Eric, Graham, Charlie, Hannah,
Isabelle and Natashia. Godmother to Mark. Dear sister to Gordon
TIBBLES.
Special aunt to many nieces and nephews and caring friend
and neighbour. Predeceased by her husband and best friend Walter.
Friends and family are invited to a visitation at Dixon-Garland
Funeral Home, 166 Main Street North, Markham on Tuesday, September
27 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral service will be held at Central
United Church, 131 Main Street, Unionville on Wednesday, September
28 at 2: 00 p.m. Donations may be made to the Unionville Home
Society or the Heart and Stroke Foundation.
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TIBBO o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2005-11-14 published
VANCISE,
Catherine “Kay“ (formerly
GOBERT, née
McDONALD)
Of Chesley, passed away at South Bruce Grey Health Centre, Chesley
on Friday, November 11th, 2005 in her 79th year. Loving mother
of Brian GOBERT and his wife
Donna of Chesley, Cheryl and her
husband Gerry
FLEET of Walkerton and Elaine and her husband John
SHANTZ of Ripley. Cherished grandmother of Matthew, Laura, Jessica,
Palmer, Donald and Linda and great-grandmother of Kelsie, Kensie
and John. Kay will be sadly missed by her brothers, Leroy (Vi)
McDONALD of Amherstburg, Jack (Carma)
McDONALD of Woodstock,
Jim McDONALD of Chesley and Dale (Joyce)
McDONALD of Hanover
and sisters, Ella (Wally)
TIBBO of Chesley, Madeline (Harry)
SEDOR of Surrey, British Columbia and Sharon (Ted)
LOUGHLEAN
of Hanover, as well as many close Friends. Predeceased by her
first husband, Al
GOBERT; second husband, James
VANCISE; siblings
Bill,
Frank,
Joe and Marie and her parents, John and Ila
(WALPOLE)
McDONALD.
Visitation will be held at Cameron Funeral Home, Chesley
on Monday from 2: 00 to 4:00 and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. A Royal Canadian
Legion Auxiliary service will be held on Monday evening at 7: 00
p.m. A funeral service will be held on Tuesday, November 15th,
2005 at Saint Mark"s Lutheran Church, Chesley at 2: 00 p.m. Interment
in Chesley Cemetery. Memorial Donations to the Heart and Stroke
Foundation or the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated
as expressions of sympathy.
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TIBERINI o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-11-21 published
FRUSTAGLIO,
Domenic
God called Domenic peacefully on November 19th, 2005, at the
age of 80. He will be sadly missed by Anna, his loving wife of
56 years. He will forever be cherished by his dear children Louie
and Nancy, Rina and Galli
(TIBERINI,) and Rose and Domenic
(COLALILLO.)
Proud nonno of Anthony, Daniel, Daniella and Christopher, and
now is re-united in Heaven with his loving granddaughter Laura.
Domenic, the youngest of 9 children is predeceased by siblings
Rosaria (Antonio), Antonio, Anna Maria (Antonio), Gregorio (Domenica)
and brothers-in-law Giuseppe, Domenico and Nicola. He is survived
by his siblings Giuseppe (Antonietta), Ralph (Filomena), Liberata,
Sam (Rose) and sisters-in-law Filomena, Antonietta and Milvia.
He will also be held dear in the hearts of his many nieces, nephews,
cousins, relatives, and Friends. The family would like to thank
his dedicated caregivers Vangie and Lisa and a special thank-you
to George and Lisa, Louie and Concetta, and his neighbour Nick
for all their love and support. Family will receive Friends at
the Fratelli Vescio Funeral Homes Ltd. (8101 Weston Rd., south
of Langstaff Rd., 905-850-3332) on Monday from 6-9 and Tuesday
from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. A Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Wednesday
at 10: 00 a.m. from St. Clare of Assisi Roman Catholic Church
(off Rutherford Rd., west of Weston Rd.). Entombment to follow
at the Queen of Heaven Catholic Cemetery (on Hwy. 27, south of
Hwy. 7.) If desired, donations may be made to the Ontario
RETT
Syndrome Association or the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children.
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TIBERIO o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-06-07 published
MERCER,
William "
Bill"
Peacefully, with his family by his side, at Southlake Regional
Health Centre on Monday, June 6, 2005 in his 85th year. Bill,
beloved husband of Margaret
(DAVIS) of 62 years. Loving father
of Donna (Basil
McGANN,) the late Brian, 1992, (Alexis,) and
Linda (Bruno
TIBERIO.)
Dearly loved grandfather of Cari, Karen,
Elisa, Will, Jennifer, Kristin, and Robert. Great-grandfather
of Christian, Samantha, and Leah. Dear brother of Ruby (Frank
HANLEY,) and the late Rhoda, April 4, 2005, (the late Edgar
KING.)
Bill will be sadly missed by nieces, nephews, relatives and Friends.
Friends will be received at the Thompson Funeral Home, 29 Victoria
Street, Aurora, 905-727-5421, on Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Funeral Service will take place in the chapel on Thursday, June
9, 2005 at 11 a.m. Interment Aurora Cemetery. Memorial donations
to the Southlake Regional Health Centre - Intensive Care Unit,
or a charity of choice would be appreciated by the family.
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TIBOSCH o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-07-18 published
WESTELAKEN,
Christianus
M. "
Chris"
WESTELAKEN at Bluewater Health-Norman Site, Sarnia on Sunday,
July 17, 2005, Christianus M. (Chris)
WESTELAKEN of Forest (formerly
Grand Bend). Beloved husband of Rina
(DONKERS)
WESTELAKEN. Dear
father of Deborah (Bill)
McKAY,
Mitchell, Rose-Anne (Robert)
SECCARECCIA, Unionville, Peter (Barb)
WESTELAKEN, Saint Mary's,
Paul WESTELAKEN, South Carolina, Lisa (Vittorio)
PASSARELLI,
Rome. Grandfather of Christopher, Nicholas, Sarah, Michael, Jordon,
Stephen, Carley, Rachel, Ellen, Mackenzie, Ryan, Morgan, Chiara,
Giuacomo, Livia and Guiseppi. Survived by brother Tony
WESTELAKEN,
Milton, Sisters Martina
WYGERGANGS, Milton, Ann
VAN
BOXMEER,
Wyoming, Marie
VAN
DOORN, Holland, Bertha
SMITS, Holland. Predeceased
by brother Joe
WESTELAKEN and sister Wilhemina
TIBOSCH of Holland.
Aged 74 years. Resting at Ronn E. Dodge Funeral Home and Cremation
Centre, McFarlane Chapel, 9 James Street South at Watt, Forest.
Visitation Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Mass St. Christophers
Church, Union Street, Forest, Wednesday morning July 20th at
11 a.m. Interment Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Wyoming. Donations to
Canadian Cancer Society appreciated, cheques only received at
Funeral Home. The family would like to thank Dr.
DOSTALER, Dr.
MADISON, nurses and staff at Palliative care for their care and
kindness to Chris. A memorial tree will be planted in memory
of "Chris" by the Dodge family.
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