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News

Record-breaking wish tally

 

Over 700 area residents and donors made a Christmas wish with their donation this year.  

Their wishes were to remember or honour a loved one by writing their name on a paper ornament, to be hung on the 12’ Christmas Wish Tree in the WDMH lobby. 

WDMH Auxiliary Volunteer, Carmen Sanger said “the tree in the lobby was so full of ornaments; you could barely see the branches!”

This year, donors and matching gift sponsors worked together to ensure a record breaking year for the program.  

Over $74,000 was raised, which is $25,000 more than last year.  

The following sponsors donated a total of $12,000 to help match individual gifts: Dan R Equipment of Winchester/Plantagenet; MacEwen Petroleum; Russell Meadows Retirement Community; Riveredge Farms and; seven area Scotiabank branches: Avonmore, Chesterville, Findlay Creek, Morrisburg, Osgoode, Russell, and South Mountain.

Last year, over 800 gifts were made totaling over $49,000 in support of the highest priority needs at WDMH.  

Over $650,000 has been raised throughout the last 14 years, supporting everything from redevelopment to equipment.

Troy Cross, WDMH Foundation Executive Director shared that “without the strong and much appreciated support from our donors, the highest priority needs at WDMH would be impossible to meet every year.”  

He continued, “much of that support is received through this annual program, because it gives the community a chance to remember and honour those that have changed their lives for the better, and make a difference at the same time.”

Winchester District Memorial Hospital Foundation’s purpose is to raise funds to support WDMH in providing the very best of health care close to home for the residents, who are the heart of our community, and whose wellbeing depends on this fundamental right.

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News

Thought for food – Green Food program experiencing downturn

 

Proper nutrition through the inclusion of necessary fruits and vegetables in one’s daily diet, can often fall by the wayside in the hustle and bustle of daily life, with people all too often opting for less nutritious, convenience items.

For a few years, South Dundas has taken the lead role in helping make proper nutrition more convenient for its residents, by offing a green food program. 

The program makes it easy for residents to fill their fridges with fruits and vegetables, without having to take the time to shop for them.

“All you need to get started is $10 and an empty grocery bag,” says Ben Macpherson, recreation program coordinator for South Dundas, who administers the program.

“The green food bag program is for everyone,” he says.

“It’s $10, try it once,” encourages Macpherson. 

“If you don’t like it, there’s no commitment to continue, and if you do like it, it’s very easy to continue receiving the bag each month.”

Currently, the green food program is experiencing a downturn in usage.

“I have no idea why,” says Macpherson. “It’s such a simple and easy way to get a great value for you and your family.”

Last month, only 80 people participated in the green food program. 

Although Macpherson is used to seeing the numbers fluctuate a little from month to month this is the lowest it has been since its inception. 

The program has seen as many as 145 monthly users.

This recent downturn will not have an overall impact on the program. It will continue and the cost will remain the same $10. 

But, when more people use the program, everyone benefits from a greater value, and greater variety of produce, for their $10 contribution.

How to get started

• The first step is the hardest: Drop by either the South Dundas municipal office in Williamsburg or Community Living Dundas County, located on Allison Avenue, in Morrisburg. Tell them you want to order a green food bag and pay $10. If you order/pay before March 8, there will be a green food bag ready for you to pick up on March 20.

• Pick up day: On pick up day, which will be outlined on your order sheet, stop by the Morrisburg Arena anytime from 12:30-3:30 p.m. or 4:30-6:30 p.m. to pick up your green food bag. Take an empty shopping bag with you. When you pick up your green food, a volunteer is on hand to take orders/payments for those who wish to re-order for the next month.

How the program works

Once the order by date passes, Macpherson takes the money collected and a wholesale price list and decides what will be in the next food green food bag. 

“What I do is choose items that are the best prices for that month, so I’m stretching the dollar for everyone,” says Macpherson. 

“I try to include some staples every month, like potatoes and onions, because you can really do a lot with those. I start with the staples, and then I go from there with the dollars I have available. What I try to do is to provide a balance of fruits and vegetables each month.” 

“There’s a core group who have used this program since it started. They love it and they definitely recognize the value it provides,” says Macpherson. 

Most who use the program tend to be parents or seniors, but Macpherson stresses that the program is for everyone. “You can order as many bags as you want, it doesn’t matter who you are,” he says.

Some people have even organized themselves so that one person picks up several bags for them and their neighbours, to add to the convenience of the program.

Macpherson hopes that this valuable program will continue to grow and thrive for the value it provides the residents of South Dundas.

While Macpherson administers the program, there are many volunteers who offer their time to keep the program going. 

They pack the bags, oversee pick ups and orders and one, Neila Fowler, even donates the use of her truck on her day off to go and pick up the order from the warehouse.

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News

John Stewart Estate Memorial Trust Funds delivered to area organizations

 

Funds from the John Stewart Estate Memorial Trust were delivered to Dundas County recipients Friday at the Dundas County Food Bank’s Winchester location.

The Dundas County Food Bank received $1,200. Meals on Wheels, which serves Morrisburg and Iroquois, and the J.W. MacIntosh Seniors Support Centre in Williamsburg each received $490 from the estate.

All were very grateful to receive the contributions in support of each of their programs.

“The board looks most at need,” said Estella Rose, advisory board member. Contributions are made to other groups throughout the United Counties and the City of Cornwall. In total, $8,505.91 worth of grants were made through the program to 13 organizations. The grants ranged in size from $490 to $1,200.

The money for the annual grants is investment income derived from the sale in 1991 of the John Stewart Home, once located in Cornwall. The home was opened in 1930 as a modest facility to provide housing for poor and indigent persons. 

To date, over $192,000 in income has been distributed to appropriate agencies. This is the 110th anniversary of John Stewart’s death.

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News

Sports lending library stocked

 

The South Dundas Sports Lending Library, established in 2012 to allow residents of South Dundas to access a wide variety of sporting goods, is becoming very popular.

“The Sports Lending Library is working very well,” said Ben Macpherson, South Dundas recreation program coordinator. 

Macpherson established the program with a successful Trillium Funding Application and now has sports equipment of all kinds available, for for residents of South Dundas to freely borrow.

“The snowshoes have been very popular this winter,” said Macpherson, who says that area schools have made use of them to provide their students the opportunity to try something new.

“The schools are strong supporters of the program,” he said, adding that currently one of the schools has borrowed a number of helmets and skates for a skating trip to the canal in Ottawa.

“Also getting a lot of use are the skates at the arena,” said Macpherson. 

“We had one person borrow a pair because he hadn’t been skating in 20 years. Now, he comes every week and borrows the same pair.”

That’s the whole point of the library, facilitating physical activity for South Dundas residents.

The Sports Lending Library is located beside the Dundas County Food Bank. Available for borrow are snowshoes of all sizes, basketballs, volleyballs, footballs, cross country skis, badminton and bocce ball sets. Skates and helmets are available within the Morrisburg Arena in all sizes, from children’s to youth to adult.

“Several families have borrowed the cross county skis,” said Macpherson, explaining how great it is for people to have the opportunity to enjoy these outdoor winter sports without having to invest in the costly equipment. 

“It’s also great if you have visitors coming to town,” he said explaining that you can outfit them to enjoy some recreational activities with you, again without having to invest in equipment.

Looking forward to the summer months, Macpherson is hoping to bring in canoes and kayaks to the lending library.

Anyone with questions about the South Dundas Sports Lending Library can contact Ben Macpherson at 613-543-2937 or bmacpherson@southdundas.com

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Entertainment

Zukerman wins legion of new fans at St. Lawrence Stage Concert

 

There was a large audience gathered for the February 16 concert held by the St. Lawrence Acoustic Stage at the Morrisburg Meeting Centre. 

That really wasn’t a surprise. With such outstanding performers as Natalia Zukerman and Awna Teixeira on the bill, people knew they were in for an exceptional evening.

And the two artists did not disappoint.

Opening for Natalia, Awna Teixeira, an original member of the group Po’Girl, built an informal, comfortable rapport with the audience. Awna is very new to the world of solo performance.

“I’ve been in Po’Girl for about nine years,” she laughed, “but when they went on hiatus for a while, I felt it was time for me to branch out. It’s really an adventure going solo. Suddenly there’s a lot of room up here on the stage.”

Blessed with a sweet, slightly husky voice (it really does have Dolly Parton overtones, a musical comparison she mentioned during an earlier interview with The Leader), Awna cannot be ‘defined’ by a single musical genre. She has honed her talent in a year of concert touring.

“Where Darkness Falls”, the title song of her 2012 album of the same name had a soft folk music flavour to it. Yet “Watch Over Us” was passionate and dramatic. This particular piece reflected her Portuguese heritage, and she sang some of it in that language. 

Awna plays several instruments, among them the banjo, guitar and harmonica, and has said that the type of instrument she is playing often determines the nature of the song she sings. Her favourite instrument, however, is the gut bucket bass, although she laughed that she just couldn’t squeeze something that big on to her plane from Utah. 

She told the audience that, as a song writer, she often revisits her compositions, not content to leave a song behind forever. “I just added a new verse to a 2005 Po’Girl song I wrote,” she said. “I don’t know how painters ever really finish anything because I have to keep working on my songs.”

Sometimes exuberant, at other times thoughtful, even a little plaintive, Awna Teixeira’s music is an unexpected delight. 

There is a gentle sense of humour underlying many of her pieces as well. (One piece was “inspired by two hamsters that I ‘freed’ from their cage in my old classroom.”)  By the end of her set, the audience knew that they were hearing a very gifted break out  artist.

Natalia Zukerman seemed slight, even fragile, when she stepped on to the Morrisburg concert stage to perform. It was an illusion.

She picked up her guitar and simply filled the hall with a voice that is compelling, rich, powerful. From the moment this artist sang a bluesy “little love song to the South”,  swept into the edgy Latin beat of a song about abuse,  invited the audience to join her in the whimsical “Valerie” (“Be very Edith Piaf about it!”), Natalia Zukerman was utterly engaging. She owned the Stage.

Accompanied on several songs by Toronto percussionist, Sly Juhas (himself a marked talent), Natalia held the audience in the palms of her hands throughout the evening.

Incidentally, those hands were formidable on guitar.  She plays as though the guitar is an extension of her own passionate personality,  and her skill is  outstanding.

A workshop she held in slide guitar earlier in the day allowed her to share that talent with some eager learners. “She worked with each of us,” said Sandra Whitworth, “and she was terrific and incredibly patient. What a great teacher.” 

Raised in New York City, member of the very musical Zukerman family, writing and performance have been part of Natalia’s life since she can remember. But she finds her inspiration in many places.

“I grew up in Manhattan, but wanted to live in a Morrisburg,” she laughed. “I’ve spent my life teetering between big places and little places.”

“It’s been a long day/A long year…We move too fast/We miss too much…We could have some good times/If we didn’t rush.”

A trained visual artist, Natalia makes strong cross over connections between her music and her art. “I begin to think that the same image can occur again and again in a song. Why not? Artists re-paint the same object or scene many times. Even a single image, say of a boat, can create different metaphoric trips in life when you are writing,” she explained in an earlier interview with The Leader.

She has just completed a double live album, an experience the singer/songwriter described as “exhilarating.” 

Frankly, Natalia's entire performance at the St. Lawrence Stage Saturday night was exhilarating.

What a grand show!

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Obituaries

Allan Murphy

 

After a brief illness with cancer, Allan Brian Murphy passed away peacefully on Sunday February 11, 2013. He was in his 69th year.  

Allan will be greatly missed by his loving companion of 37 years, Josephine Jacques. 

He was dear father of David (Kim), Cindy (Tom Varley), and Donna (Scott Gladstone) and step-father of Doreen (Jacques Kahalé), Judy (Michael Savic), Allen (Jo-Anne) Jacques, Nancy (Steven Saucier), Karen (Eric Irvine), and Lynn (Grant Leslie). 

He leaves behind his grandchildren Chantelle, Charnelle, Cassandra, Tyler, Ellie, his great-granddaughter, Sophia, 14 step-grandchildren and four step-great-grandchildren. 

He was dear brother of Catherine (Gary Kavanagh), and Margaret Richards. 

Allan will be sadly missed by his family, friends, and many nieces and nephews and by his faithful dog, Buddy. 

He was predeceased by his parents, Patrick and Dorothy Murphy and siblings Patricia, Donald, Jean, Jim, Shirley, and Michael.  

Funeral arrangements were under the care and direction of Lahaie and Sullivan, Cornwall Funeral Home, West Branch, 20 Seventh St. West. In keeping with Allan’s wishes, Cremation has taken place.  A private service will be held at St. Mary’s Cemetery in Morrisburg.  

As expressions of sympathy, Memorial Donations may be made to Hospice Cornwall, 1507 Second Street West, where compassionate care was provided by doctors, nurses and volunteers.  Special thanks to Mack and Nancy Dunning.   

Messages of Condolence may be left at www.lahaiesullivan.ca 

 

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Obituaries

Jim Derouchie

 

A resident of Ingleside for the past 14 years, Jim Derouchie passed away at the Cornwall Community Hospital, McConnell Site, on Sunday, February 10, 2013.  He was 66.

Jim was born in Cornwall, on July 8, 1946, to his parents Howard and Mary Derouchie (nee Lapierre).  He grew up in Lancaster, and moved to Iroquois, where he worked at the Caldwell Linen Mill for more than 30 years. 

On July 19, 1969, he married Paulette Gibeau and together they had two sons Steven and John.  

Jim was an avid fisherman and hunter. 

Jim is survived by his wife Paulette, his sons Steven (Stephanie) of Kitchener and John (Josée) of Cornwall and his siblings Linda Sauve of Lancaster, Judy Timmons of Iroquois, Shirley Sauve of Cornwall and Suzanne (Mike) Menard of Lancaster.  

He will be fondly remembered by grandchildren Delana, Skylar, Hunter and Ethan.  

He was the dear brother-in-law of Sylva (Paulette) Gibeau, Rick Gibeau, Gilles (Diane) Gibeau, Denis Gibeau, Ronald (Louise) Gibeau, Guy (Julie) Gibeau, Mike (Cathy) Gibeau, Mark (Lori) Gibeau and Sue (Mike) Campeau, all of Cornwall. He is also survived by nieces and nephews.  

Jim was predeceased by sisters Gail Lalonde and Sheila Forgues.   

Friends called at the Marsden and McLaughlin Funeral Home, Iroquois, on Thursday, February 14th from 9 a.m. until time of service.  

A Memorial Service followed at 11 a.m., with Father Chisholm officiating.  

Donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation would be gratefully acknowledged by the family.  Online condolences may be made at marsdenmclaughlin.com.

 

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Obituaries

Lloyd David Millward

 

Lloyd David Millward passed away peacefully, after a lengthy illness, at Brantford General Hospital, on Wednesday, February 13, 2013. 

Formerly of Morrisburg, and a longtime resident of Paris, Lloyd was in his 87th year. 

Lloyd was a longtime businessman in Paris, owning Millward`s IGA.  He was also very active with St. James Anglican Church Paris.

He was beloved husband to the late Evelyn (nee Wilson -1992); the late Margaret (Ouderkirk 2004), and the late Jean Fairbrother (2010).

 He was loving dad to Scott (Donna) and Paul (Tracy) and  cherished grandpa to Jason, Bryan (Ryanne), Allison, Leslie (Ryan), Lauren, Christopher (Leily), Geoffrey and Erin. He was dear great grandpa to Will and Ben.  

Lloyd was also special father and grandfather to Margaret and Jean’s children and their families; dear brother to Dorothy Casselman (the late Ivan), Mary McVey (Gordon), and Lyle (Sheila), and brother-in-law to Verna Young.

He is also survived by several nieces and nephews.  

Friends called at the Wm. Kipp Funeral Home, 184 Grand River St. N., Paris, on Sunday, February 17, 2013, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. The funeral service was held at St. James Anglican Church (8 Burwell St. Paris.) on Monday at 11 a.m. with Father Victor Kischak officiating.

Interment will follow later at Paris Cemetery.

Donations to St. James Anglican Church Building fund would be appreciated.

Online condolences or donations may be arranged through  www.wmkippfuneralhome.com 

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Obituaries

Wally Keeler

 

A lifetime resident of the area, Wally Keeler passed away suddenly at home in Morrisburg, on Saturday, February 2, 2013.  He was 52. 

Wally was born in Matilda Township, on January 29, 1961, to his parents Howard and Eva Keeler (nee Sipes).  He attended Dixon’s Corners Public School and Seaway District High School.  

On April 16, 2005, at Knox Presbyterian Church in Iroquois, Wally married Kim Sypes and together they enjoyed seven and one half years of married life. 

Wally possessed a good sense of humour, and he enjoyed playing Phase 10 and working on models.  

I am missing you always, you never said I’m leaving, you never said goodbye, you were gone before I knew it and only God knows why.  A million times I needed you, a million times I cried, if love alone could have saved you, you never would have died. In life I loved you dearly, in death I love you still, in my heart I hold a place that only you can fill.

–Your loving wife Kim

Wally is survived by his wife Kim Sypes and by his siblings Barbara Richardson of Pittston, Larry Keeler of Smiths Falls, Madilene Collison (Gary) of Iroquois, Arnold Keeler of Burlington, Glen Keeler (Judy) of Brinston and Karon White (Paul) of R.R.# 2 Brinston. He will be fondly rmembered by his mother-in-law  Elaine Fawcett of Morrisburg.  

He was brother-in-law to Donna Zeron (Mike) of Iroquois, Dennis Fawcett (Jennifer Kirkland) of Williamsburg and Cherie Seymour of Morrisburg. He is also survived by nieces and nephews.

Wally was predeceased by his parents Howard and Eva Keeler (nee Sipes), his sister Joyce Keeler and his brothers Donald and Arliss Keeler.         

Friends called at the Marsden and McLaughlin Funeral Home, Williamsburg, on Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.  Funeral service was held at the funeral home on Tuesday, February 5th at 11 a.m., with Rev. Geoff Howard officiating. Interment will be at Spruce Haven Cemetery, Brinston in the spring. Pallbearers were Curtis White, Chris White, Dennis Fawcett, Mike Zeron, Perry Keeler and Shelby Keeler.

Donations to a tombstone fund for Wally would be gratefully acknowledged by the family.  Online condolences may be made at marsdenmclaughlin.com.   

 

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Opinion

Perspectives by Rev. Janet Evans

 Travelling the Lenten Journey

I wonder how many of you have seen the film Les Miserables? I’ve seen it twice-once with family and once with a close friend. I’d be only too happy to see it again and will undoubtedly purchase it when it comes out on DVD. 

Les Miserables is about a man who is sent to prison for stealing a loaf of bread to feed a starving child. Many themes arise from this one story, and I for one was crying as the movie unfolded.

The characters sing all of their lines, and they do such a good job that I felt that I could see into their very souls.

Les Miserables is about power perhaps gone wrong–oppression, pain, and what some people have to do to stay alive. It is, however, also about light triumphing over darkness, forgiveness, redemption and hope.

In this Lenten season, we can remember that every individual faces both good and bad times in their livers. We rejoice at occasions which call for celebration, but we sin against God and against one another. We sometimes cause pain to others but forgive people when they hurt us.

We are imperfect men, women and children. Yet God continues to love us and calls us to be the best that we can be. As His faithful followers we are to place God at the centre of our days–we are to reach out to our neighbours with compassion and mercy. We can seek justice, love kindness and walk humbly with our Lord.

As we travel along our Lenten journey this year, let us take moments for prayer, for discernment, for seeking the peace which passeth all understanding.

May we walk in the paths which Jesus has put before us–let us remember that Jesus will ever be our guide, our inspiration, our example, our teacher, our friend.

Jesus challenges us to build a better world, but He promises to love and cherish us, this day and in all years yet to come.

Rev. Janet Evans, 

Iroquois United Church

 

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