DAY o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-10-09 published
McLEOD, Sadie Leona (formerly
RICHARDSON, née
THOMAS)
Of Wiarton, peacefully at Grey Bruce Health Services Wiarton
on Saturday, October 6th, 2007. The former Sadie Leona
THOMAS
in her 89th year. Loving mother of Bob
RICHARDSON and his wife
Verniece and Wayne
RICHARDSON and his wife
Linda, both of R.R.#1
Allenford; and mother-in-law of Carol
RICHARDSON, of Wiarton.
Cherished grandmother of Brad
RICHARDSON
(Anne,)
Cindy
(Rick
DAY), Cathy
HEWITT, Deanna (Mike
VOKES), Julie (Greg
YATES),
Tracy (Chris
HELLOWELL,) and Jen
RICHARDSON (and partner Jeremy
DODSON;) and great-grandmother of Kyle, Rachel, Michael, Curtis,
Tyler, Ashley, Halley, Emily, Hannah, and Matthew. Devoted sister
to Les THOMAS (and friend Flo) and Marg
PEER, both of Wiarton.
Sadly missed by her sisters-in-law Joanne, Audrey, and Eva, brother-in-law
Ross, many nieces, nephews and best friend Carl
CAMMIDGE.
Predeceased
by her son Clayton “Clayt&rdquo
McLEOD; her parents Robert and Gertrude; brothers Ivan, Jim,
Stan and Charlie; and her sisters Nora, Win and Dot. The family
invite Friends to visit with them in tribute to Sadie's life
to share stories and refreshments on Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
at the Thomas C. Whitcroft Funeral Home and Chapel, Sauble Beach
(519) 422-0041. To respect Sadie's wishes, there will be no funeral
service. Cremation with interment at Eastnor Cemetery. As your
expression of sympathy, donations to Friends of Gateway or Canadian
Diabetes Association would be greatly appreciated. In living
memory of Sadie a Red Maple tree will be planted in the funeral
home meadow by the Thomas C. Whitcroft Funeral Home and Chapel.
Condolences may be expressed on-line at www.whitcroftfuneralhome.com.
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DAY o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-10-12 published
DAY,
Norma
Elizabeth (née
MASON)
In Meaford on Wednesday October 10, 2007. Norma
DAY of Meaford
in her 77th year. Beloved wife of the late William 'Orton'
DAY.
Survived by her father Norman
MASON and his wife
Doris.
Loved
mother of Richard
DAY and his wife
Barb and Orville
DAY all of
Whitby; Pearl and her husband Bill
LAMBE of Meaford and Doug
DAY and Diane
LONG of Sydenham Township. Sadly missed 'Granny'
of grand_son Andrew, granddaughter Elizabeth and special granny
to David and his wife Pam, Kevin and Scott; Mark and Tanya. Special
great-granny of J.J. and Maddie; Curtis and Jesse; Adam and Paige.
Remembered also by a sister Rita and her husband Len
LISCOMBE.
Norma was predeceased by her mother Elizabeth (née
MOLE) in 1961.
Funeral services will be conducted at Christ Church Anglican
in Meaford on Friday, November 2nd, 2007 at 1: 30 p.m. Interment
of cremated remains will take place at Lakeview Cemetery, Meaford
at a later date. As your expression of sympathy, donations to
the Meaford General Hospital Foundation or a charity of choice
would be appreciated and may be made through the Ferguson Funeral
Home, to whom arrangements have been entrusted.
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DAY o@ca.on.simcoe_county.nottawasaga.stayner.stayner_sun 2007-11-28 published
NOBLE,
Tom
Passed away peacefully at the Clearwater Hospital, Clearwater,
British Columbia on Tuesday November 20th. Loving father of sons
- Rick and Paul and daughter Susan. He will be sadly missed by
his siblings - brothers Bob and Jim
NOBLE, sisters Shirley
DAY
and Joan WOOD.
Special thanks to Gloria Petre and her family
for their loving care. Cremation has taken place.
Page 16
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DAY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-06-08 published
HISEY,
Kenneth
Clarke
Ken died suddenly on May 20, 2007, in his 82nd year, as the result
of an accident while riding his motorcycle near his home in Thailand.
He was born in Toronto on July 23, 1925, and from an early age
demonstrated his love of travel and adventure. In 1943, he joined
the Merchant Navy where he was trained as a radio operator and
was posted to a ship off the coast of Africa. At the conclusion
of the war, he worked as a radio operator at Trans Canada Airlines
(now Air Canada.) In 1949 he married Joan
DAY and the following
year left the airline to form the house building company Hisey and
son with his dad Delos. After the construction of many new homes
in the Scarborough area, he established HG Designs and began
manufacturing kitchen cabinets and windows. Lured by the seas
once again, Ken retired from more conventional employment in
the early 1980's, and spent the next several years as owner/operator
of dive boats in the Georgian Bay area. He loved his time on
the water, exploring wrecks from years gone by, and formed many
lasting Friendships with divers who returned time and again for
the experiences provided by Captain Ken. By the late 1980's,
he was off exploring again and in his travels visited and fell
in love with the country and people of Thailand. Since then,
Ken has divided his time between the two countries, spending
winters in Thailand and summers on his boat in Penetanguishene
and at his cottage outside of Parry Sound. Ken lived life to
the fullest and created excitement wherever he went. He was a
free spirit, whose booming voice, rib-cracking hugs, takecharge
personality, spontaneity and generosity will never be forgotten
by his family and many Friends from around the world. He was
loved and will be remembered by his two daughters Heather
HISEY
(Paul JARVIS) of Toronto, Ontario and Susan (Jay)
MANERY of Lethbridge,
Alberta and their mother Joan
HISEY.
His grandchildren Anne and
Adam MANERY will miss their Papa and the excitement that he brought
to their lives. He is also survived by his step-grandchildren
Hilary and Evan
JARVIS and by his caring wife
Pornchanok of Thailand.
He was predeceased by his parents Delos and Elsie
HISEY and his
sister Evelyn and her husband Karl
FISCHER. In lieu of flowers,
the family would be grateful for donations to support lymphoma
research. Cheques may be made payable to the Alberta Cancer Foundation,
Tom Baker Cancer Centre, 1331 - 29 St. N.W., Calgary, Alberta
T2N 4N2 or online @ albertacancerfoundation.ca. Please request
that your donation be directed to Doctor Doug Stewart's Autologous
Transplant Program TBCC Acct #0041813501570.
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DAY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-06-16 published
BEARD,
Ann
Marie (formerly
DAY, née
HUGHES)
Loving wife of John
BEARD, passed away peacefully on the morning
of June 15, 2007. Former wife of W. Morrison
DAY and a long-time
resident of Collingwood, she is survived by a large and loving
family: her daughter Sarah
DAY, son-in-law David
GILLIES and
granddaughters Emily and Erin; stepson Terry
DAY (and Linda,)
grandchildren Martha
BRIGDEN (and Mike,) Scott
DAY (and Lisa,)
Heather KIRK (and Emile;) stepdaughter Christie
DAY (and Robert
HYLAND;) stepson Ian
DAY and grandchildren Riley, Ivory and Sierra
and great-grandchildren Noah, Avery, Riley, Dylan, Charlotte,
Haley and Kendra. Ann Marie was an active member of the All Saints
Anglican Church, and a generous supporter of the World Wildlife
Foundation and the First Nations Peoples of Canada. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society.
Service to be held at All Saints Anglican Church, 32 Elgin Street,
Collingwood, on Wednesday, June 20, 11: 00 a.m. Visitation from
10: 00 a.m. at All Saints. Friends may leave condolences by visiting
www.fawcettfuneralhomes.com
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DAY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-07-06 published
Break-in cited in shootings
By Alex DOBROTA,
Page A8
The teenager suspected in the double homicide that shook a quiet
Scarborough neighbourhood on Wednesday morning fought off and
shot dead two home intruders that targeted the house he was visiting,
police said.
Livingston
DAVIS, 16, was sleeping at the house on Rylander Boulevard,
close to Sheppard Avenue East, shortly before 4 a.m. when the
two men attempted to enter the premises, police said.
"A struggle ensues, he is armed with a gun, he shoots one, he
chases the other one out of the house and shoots him," said Staff
Inspector Brian
RAYBOULD, head of the Toronto police homicide
squad.
The first officers on the scene found Shawn
DAY, 34, bleeding
inside the house, and Clifford
CHARLES, 43, slumped inside a
black pickup truck that had jumped the curb on Rylander Boulevard
and smashed into a tree.
Both men were from Toronto and both suffered a single gunshot
wound to the chest. They died at a nearby hospital.
A source close to the investigation said the homicides were drug
related and that the residence was a crack house.
As of yesterday, police were still hunting for Livingston. The
teenager has no history of run-ins with the law or involvement
in gang activity, Staff Insp.
RAYBOULD said.
"The thing to do is to contact a lawyer or contact any one of
the police investigators."
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DAY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-09-29 published
'Country gentleman' doubled as the gravel-voiced Nose of Algonquin
Disarmingly direct, he kept a close eye on his resort's decorum
and his campers' secrets
By Charles
OBERDORF,
Special to The Globe and Mail, Page S12
For 30 years, most people met Eugene
KATES as the proprietor
of Arowhon Pines, the luxury resort in Ontario's Algonquin Park.
Although sometimes disarmingly direct, he had the manners and
style of what an earlier generation called a "country gentleman."
In charge but at ease, he made a very reassuring host.
Mr. KATES's gentlemanly side often came as a revelation to the
two generations of summer campers, more than 5,000 children and
adolescents, who knew him in the 30 years before 1975 as the
fearsome, gravel-voiced autocrat who owned and ran Camp Arowhon,
two lakes away from "the Pines."
Seth GODIN, a former Arowhon camper and counsellor who is now
a widely read marketing guru, wrote recently that, "In an age
of 'the customer is king,' Eugene was an anachronism. He never
said things to make people happy, didn't sugarcoat his point
of view and didn't compromise. He stood up to the government,
to rangers, to staff and even to his customers, the parents.
He wasn't afraid to tell you what he thought, and it didn't take
long to guess what he expected."
Behind his back, campers called him The Nose. That hurt, but
as his daughter Joanne, now Arowhon's camp director (and in winter,
this newspaper's restaurant critic), tried to tell him, it was
really a backhanded compliment. Although he rarely dealt with
campers individually - that was the counsellors' job - he always
seemed to know everything that went on, including each child's
most embarrassing secrets. The full phrase was "The Nose knows."
And so he did. When two counsellors-in-training got caught smoking
marijuana, Mr.
KATES immediately began arranging to send them
home. Not an easy decision; one of the two was very popular and
also a close relative. Within hours, one senior counsellor had
begun organizing a resistance: "If those two have to go home,
we should all quit."
Mr. KATES called a staff meeting for 11 p.m. His decision was
final, he said, adding that he had heard talk about quitting.
"I'm going into my office now," he said. "If any of you want
to leave, meet me there and we'll do the paperwork." No one took
him up on it.
However, he was less hard-hearted than his young charges thought.
His second wife, Helen, remembers a pale yellow bathrobe in which
he would patrol the grounds when he thought some campers were
staying up too late. Helen, new and conscientious, took a walk
herself one night, caught a boy in one of the girls' cabins and
marched the miscreants to the director's cabin. Later, he told
her gently that the idea wasn't really to catch anyone. It was
enough that campers saw the yellow bathrobe and got scared back
to where they belonged.
Eugene KATES was born in Toronto, the elder child and only son
of Max KATES, a dentist, and his wife, Lillian. He grew up on
Edgar Avenue in Rosedale, attended St. Andrew's College, Elm
House School and Upper Canada College until his final school
year, 1932-33, when he transferred to the University of Toronto
Schools. At the university itself, he studied math, physics and
chemistry. He then went for a short time to Rochester, New York
to learn film editing, hoping to work in the industry.
But the Depression was cutting deeply into his father's income,
and to eke things out, Lillian
KATES determined to open a children's
camp in Algonquin Park. She took over the lease on a bankrupt
family campground, renamed it Arowhon (from Samuel Butler's utopian
novel Erewhon - and "arrow"), and in 1934, signed up her first
60 campers, recruiting them through the sisterhoods of Reform
synagogues within one day's drive of Toronto. Mr.
KATES, then
20, dealt with logistics.
"The cabins had no lights, no running water," he later recalled.
"There was a smelly central toilet system and a kitchen with
a couple of old wood-burning stoves. To keep food cold, we had
to cut ice from the lake in wintertime, carry it to the icehouse
and pack it in sawdust. I was as much trouble as I was a value,
but I installed a small 32-volt generator, which allowed a 25-watt
bulb in each of the camper cabins. Almost every time there was
a play, we would overload the generator and there'd be a mad
rush up the hill to restart it while the camp waited in the dark."
In 1940, he and friend Tommy Walker joined the armed forces.
He trained at Camp Borden and in 1941 was commissioned a second
lieutenant with the 10th Armoured Regiment. By mid-1942, in England,
he had been seconded to the Royal Air Force, interpreting aerial
photographs and, it seems, spending many evenings at London's
Savoy Hotel.
He always spoke fondly of his time in England, but hardly at
all about later tours in Europe and North Africa, except to imply
that what he witnessed there turned him forever against the idea
of war. His last long conversation with his daughter was about
the folly, as he saw it, of Canada's involvement in Afghanistan.
At war's end, he had a job offer in the British film industry
but decided to help out for one season at the camp. The war years
had left it with a staff more interested in having fun than in
their charges, and his mother was giving it only partial attention,
having also built and opened Arowhon Pines, for visiting parents.
"That season was so unsuccessful and so unhappy" he wrote, "that
I had to come back to prove that I could beat it. I certainly
had no experience as an educator, but I had trained men in the
army and had become used to having my directions unquestioned.
That first postwar year at camp hooked me on the life."
He abhorred the thought of running a babysitting service, though.
He cleared a baseball diamond and an archery range, built stables
and a riding ring, expanded the docks for canoeing, sailing and
swimming. They could choose what skills to master, but they were
expected to set goals, state them and meet them. "His philosophy,"
his daughter says, "was that the drive toward excellence and
the pursuit of learning forged lifelong character - for both
the child attaining the skill and the staff member teaching it."
He was also passionate about the wilderness, even though, as
his son, Robert, an expert outdoorsman, points out, he never
hiked in the bush, never paddled a canoe and hardly ever sailed.
"But he loved Algonquin Park, loved being in business in Algonquin
Park."
From the start, Camp Arowhon had been co-ed - one of the first
such camps in North America. After the war, Mr.
KATES set about
diversifying it in other ways, reaching outside the Jewish community
to replicate the rich mix of cultures he had experienced in the
army. Soon enough, Arowhon was mixing not only Jews and gentiles,
Americans and Canadians, but also campers from Europe, the Caribbean
and Latin America.
His off-season life in Toronto went less well for a while. In
1949, he had married Ruth
GROSS,
Joanne and Robert's mother,
but the pair divorced in 1962. In 1968, he married Helen
DAY,
an English-born businesswoman. In 1971, the two took over Arowhon
Pines, the resort hotel, which had been fading under Mr.
KATES's
mother's management.
The hotel's lease then had only six years to run, and government
policy called for an end to all private leaseholds in the park.
Mr. KATES brought his full-bore energy and single-mindedness
to bear on Queen's Park. "A park the size of Algonquin can't
be the exclusive preserve of canoeists and backpackers," he argued.
"Three hotels in a 3,000-square-mile park exclude no one."
The minister he addressed was impressed, and even more that the
Pines had stayed solvent for 30 years with no liquor licence
(guests bring their own) and operating only 18 weeks a year.
Its lease was renewed, and the government was soon promoting
it in its tourism brochures.
The KATESes set about upgrading on all fronts. As Mr.
KATES put
it with typical directness in a 1976 interview, "We're in the
business of selling three things: a bedroom, a dining room and
a setting. The setting is superb, but it's beyond our control,
so we have to do our best with the other two." In 1987, Arowhon
Pines was invited to join Relais and Châteaux, the very selective
luxury hotel association.
By that time, it was already attracting guests from Europe. It
has since seen them arrive from as far as Peru, Vietnam and Senegal.
Mr. KATES delighted over the foreign guests, but when his staff
was abuzz over serving Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell, William
Hurt, Frances McDormand or Martin Short, he would ask, "Who?"
And, while he fretted over decorum in the stately dining room,
whenever hydro crews worked on lines to the camp or the hotel,
they got invited to lunch, sweaty work clothes and all.
Until late in his 70s, he went skiing for three weeks each year
in the Alps. In his 80s, he and Helen were beating couples 30 years
his junior at doubles tennis. About five years ago, though, he
was diagnosed with emphysema. Still, one afternoon in April,
sitting in his Toronto garden with the management team, talking
about reopening, he offhandedly said, "I don't know if 92 is
the right time to retire."
He spent his final weeks in his cabin at the camp, amid the shouts
and laughter of children. He died on the final day of camp, but
not until after the last bus had left.
The Nose knew.
Eugene KATES was born in Toronto on October 14, 1914. He died
at his cabin in Algonquin Park on August 21, 2007. He was 92.
He is survived by wife Helen, children Joanne and Robert, and
four grandchildren.
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DAY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-11-12 published
Two dead in separate stabbings
By The Canadian Press, Page A9
St. Catharines -- Two St. Catharines men are charged with second-degree
murder in the death of a 20-year-old Fonthill man stabbed on
the weekend in front of dozens of horrified pub-goers.
Mike DAY died from his injuries Saturday.
Joseph MITCHELITIS and Allen
EGGLETON, both 21, are being held
in custody for a bail hearing scheduled for tomorrow.
Police say officers arrived to discover two men had been stabbed.
Both were taken to hospital and a third man, also suffering from
stab wounds, later arrived at the hospital.
Meanwhile, in Brantford, police are searching for a 16-year-old
murder suspect, who cannot be named under the Youth Criminal
Justice Act, in connection with a fatal stabbing at a house party
early Saturday. The 18-year-old victim was rushed to the Brantford
General Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
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DAY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-11-16 published
CAVEN,
Janice
Noreen
At the Greater Niagara General Hospital, on Wednesday November 14th
2007. Beloved wife of Robert and loving mother of Scot
CAVEN
(Gail) and Christine
DAY
(Duane) all of Mississauga. Also loved
by her grandchildren Sean, Robbie, Dylan and Cassie. Dear sister
of Eileen McCLELLAN of Hamilton and sister-in-law of Raymond
CAVEN of Ottawa. Loved by her many Friends. At Janice's request
cremation has taken place and there will be no funeral service.
A gathering of Janice's Friends and family will take place at
the James L. Pedlar Funeral Home, 1292 Pelham Street, Fonthill,
on Sunday November 18th 2007 from 2: 00 to 4:00 pm.
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DAYAN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-12-04 published
MANDELL,
Claire
In her 93rd year on Sunday, December 2, 2007 at Baycrest. Claire
MANDELL, beloved wife of the late Max
MANDELL. Cherished mother
and mother-in-law of Sherry
MANDELL-
SHAPIRO and Garry
SHAPIRO.
Dear sister of the late Ida
EDISON,
Molly
CHESTER, and Ethel
SHER. Loving grandmother of Jeffrey
GLICKMAN and Sharon
BAR-
DAYAN,
Aaron and Joanne
GLICKMAN, and Mitchell and Samantha
GLICKMAN.
Adoring
great-grandmother of Sonny, Dylan, and Joel. At Temple Sinai,
210 Wilson Avenue for service on Wednesday, December 5th, 2007
at 2: 00 p.m. Interment Mozierer Sick Benefit Society Section
of Roselawn Cemetery. Shiva 73 Walmer Road. Memorial donations
may be made to the Claire Mandell Memorial Fund c/o The Baycrest
Foundation, 416-785-2875.
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DAYKIN o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-12-20 published
CRANDON,
Audrey (née
WARD)
Of Wiarton, peacefully with her loving family at her side at
Grey Bruce Health Services Wiarton on Tuesday December 18th,
2007. The former Audrey
WARD in her 83rd year. Loving mother
of Ralph and his wife Laverne, of Owen Sound; and Anne and her
husband Ron
DAYKIN, of Aylmer. Cherished grandmother of Tavia,
Danica, and Mason. Sadly missed by a sister-in-law; aunt; cousins
nieces; nephews; and many Friends. Predeceased by her husband
Charles; parents Jim and Cassie
WARD, sisters Viola and Gladys
and brother Ralph. Audrey was an amazing baker and cook. During
World War 2 she worked for Fleet Aircraft in Fort Erie, doing
her part for the war effort. Audrey was a longstanding member
of the Colpoy's Bay Women's Institute; Unity Rebekah Lodge #147
Wiarton for 50 years; Royal Canadian Legion Br. 208 Wiarton for
48 years; and worked as a Registered Practical Nurse for more
than 17 years prior to retiring from Gateway Haven. At Audrey's
request there will be a private family service held in the chapel
of the Thomas C. Whitcroft Funeral Home and Chapel, Sauble Beach
(519) 422-0041 on Friday, December 21st, 2007. Rev. Ed
LAKSMANIS
officiating. Interment in Colpoy's Bay Cemetery. In lieu of flowers
donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation, Canadian Diabetes
Association, or Wiarton Hospital would be greatly appreciated.
In living memory of Audrey a Purple Lilac tree will be planted
in the funeral home meadow by the Thomas C. Whitcroft Funeral
Home and Chapel. Condolences may be expressed on-line at www.whitcroftfuneralhome.com.
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DAYMAN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-08-14 published
WILLIS,
Brenda▼
After a long struggle endured with courage and grace, Brenda
left us on August 10th, 2007 at the age of 70. For 47 years beloved
wife and best friend of Christopher. Dear mother to Andrew
WILLIS
and Jennifer
BERMINGHAM of Toronto, Sally
WILLIS of Toronto and
Penny and Ken
HEADRICK of Oakville. Adored grandmother of Hannah
and Rachel
WILLIS and Meghan, Iain and Allison
HEADRICK.
Dear▼
sister of Doug and Wilda
QUAIL,
Jean▼
DAYMAN, Pat and Rick
YERBURGH
and Shelia and Jack
BUCHANAN, all of Fernie, British Columbia.
Brenda is also survived by numerous cousins, nephews and nieces
from Montreal to Vancouver. Born and raised in Fernie, she graduated
from the Vancouver General Hospital school of nursing in 1958 and
nursed for many years in Vancouver and London. Cremation has
taken place. Brenda's many Friends are invited to gather for
a celebration of her life at Spencer Hall, 551 Windermere Road,
London on Friday, August 24th, 4: 00 to 6:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers,
the family would appreciate donations to the Victorian Order
of Nurses, 100-1151 Florence Street, London, N5W 2M7, or to the
charity of your choice.
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DAYMAN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-08-17 published
WILLIS,
Brenda▲
After a long struggle endured with courage and grace, Brenda
left us on August 10th, 2007 at the age of 70. For 47 years beloved
wife and best friend of Christopher. Dear mother to Andrew
WILLIS
and Jennifer
BERMINGHAM of Toronto, Sally
WILLIS of Toronto and
Penny and Ken
HEADRICK of Oakville. Adored grandmother of Hannah
and Rachel
WILLIS and Meghan, Iain and Allison
HEADRICK.
Dear▲
sister of Doug and Wilda
QUAIL,
Jean▲
DAYMAN, Pat and Rick
YERBURGH
and Shelia and Jack
BUCHANAN, all of Fernie, British Columbia.
Brenda is also survived by numerous cousins, nephews and nieces
from Montreal to Vancouver. Born and raised in Fernie, she graduated
from the Vancouver General Hospital school of nursing in 1958 and
nursed for many years in Vancouver and London. Cremation has
taken place. Brenda's many Friends are invited to gather for
a celebration of her life at Spencer Hall, 551 Windermere Road,
London on Friday, August 24th, 4: 00 to 6:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers,
the family would appreciate donations to the Victorian Order
of Nurses, 100-1151 Florence Street, London, N5W 2M7, or to the
charity of your choice.
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