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For God, For King, For Country

 

There is a plaque from old St. John the Baptist Anglican Church fastened to the wall of the modern St. John’s in Iroquois. It is carved in heavy marble, with the phrase, Pro Deo, Pro Rege, Pro Patria, 1914-1918, carefully inscribed at the top. After nearly 100 years, most people rarely take note of the six names and dates that are etched below. 

Brock Wells was barely 21. His mother, Clara, had a small farm outside Iroquois. When the call came, Brock signed up to fight on May 7, 1915. Frank Wert was also 21. He’d worked as assistant veterinarian in Iroquois: he’d also had a little military training helping on transports with the horses and mules. His sister, Mrs. Alfred Keeler, was listed as his next of kin. He signed up September 10, 1915. Allen Fisher, the name everyone in the village knew this young man by, although his real name was Charles Allen Fisher, was a 21 year old telephone operator. He’d actually received a little military training, having served for 10 months on local Canal Patrol. He enlisted January 4, 1916, naming his parents on his attestation papers. 

The oldest of the six, Frank Osborne, in his mid twenties, worked as a cheese maker in Iroquois. His dad, Albert Osborne, was listed on his enlistment papers, when Frank signed up to fight in the Great War, January 5, 1915. David Allan Robertson, known as Allan to his friends, was 22 years old, and a clerk in an Iroquois store. He came to the recruiters February 5, 1917. William E. Thwaite was 22, not a local boy exactly. He was actually from Newcastle-on-Tyne, England, and just happened to be working in the local dry goods store in the village when the War began. He’d enlisted with the 59th Militia Regiment in Iroquois after he came to town, because he’d had militia training in the old country. When he signed up on March 7, 1916, authorities made him an officer. At various times, all six boys were members of Iroquois Platoon.

The Platoon often used to drill at the fair grounds in South Mountain: people recalled watching them training in a few open areas around Iroquois. As raw recruits, the six from St. John’s parish learned about the Ross Rifle, even heard a little bit about the great trenches – and not enough about mustard gas, barbed wire, flame throwers, hand grenades, land mines, tanks and sky bombers. 

With their buddies, the six St. John’s boys probably sang the popular songs of the day: Mademoiselle from Armentieres, Pack up Your Troubles, Tipperary. They went to farewell dances. They took last walks by the river. They dreamed of the years “after the war.”  

If Hell does exist, it must look a lot like the bloody, reeking, soul destroying trenches of World War One. 

Private William Brock Wells died of terrible wounds January 11, 1916, at Ypres Salient. That was on a day that Major General Currie praised his brigade, but wrote in the War Diary, “While I deeply regret their casualties, I do not think they were excessive.” Brock lies in plot 1A7 in the Dranoutre Military Cemetery.

Private William Franklyn Wert was grievously wounded at the battle of Thiepval. He lived long enough to be delivered to the General Hospital at Wimereux, near the coast of France, but it was far too late. He was laid to rest, September 27, 1916, at Wimereux Communal Cemetery. He lies at stone marker IQ 22A. 

Lance Corporal Franklin George Osborne died November 18, 1916, at the horrific Battle of the Somme, where 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed. On that plain of death, his body was never recovered. Instead, his name is inscribed on the Menin Gate at the Vimy Memorial.

Sergeant Charles Allen Fisher was killed by a sniper’s bullet on May 3, 1917, somewhere near Vimy Ridge. Patrols couldn’t recover his body in subsequent shelling. There is a single photo of him, in uniform, on a wall at the Iroquois Legion. His name is also carved on the Menin Gate on the Memorial.

Captain William E. Thwaite was killed at the battle of Amiens on August 10, 1918, while leading his men through the gunfire and bombs.  He is buried in the Fouquescourt British Cemetery. A small rose bush blooms every year over his resting place, plot 111E.I.

Private David Allan Robertson was killed on October 12, 1918, at Valenciennes. Possibly he got to see his 23rd birthday. His body was never found. His name appears at Vimy, carved into the Tyne Cot Cemetery. Less than four weeks after Allan Robertson died, on November 11, 1918, the German forces surrendered unconditionally. The Great War was over. 

But Brock Wells, Frank Wert, Allan Robertson, Will Thwaite, Frank Osborne and Allen Fisher, of St. John’s Anglican parish, Iroquois, didn’t come home: For God, for King, for Country.  

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Upper Canada Playhouse Launches New Theatre Season

 

 “It’s exciting and crazy and very hectic at the Playhouse when we officially announce the new season,” said Upper Canada Playhouse artistic director, Donnie Bowes. “People were in the parking lot by 7 a.m., and we didn’t even open until 9 a.m. The front office staff was swamped. The phone lines were frozen with individuals and companies calling in. The web site was swarmed.”

“I actually go into my office, hide under the desk, and close the blinds,” Bowes laughed, “leaving everything in the capable hands of Roseann Kelly, and the rest of the great front of house staff. Bill Halman of the Corus Entertainment radio station out of Cornwall did a live remote from the Playhouse office November 3.” 

The moment the new season is announced and seat sales and flex pass sales are available, patrons are ready. Drawing over 40,000 visitors to the area makes the Playhouse one of the biggest tourist attractions in South Dundas. The response to this year’s announcement of eight new shows starting in April 2015, is already overwhelming. “Generally, we have 50 per cent of our seats pre-sold by Christmas time,” Bowes said.

Tickets to the 2015 season will provide patrons with passports to hilarious comedies, uplifting concerts, fascinating characters and unforgettable stories.

April will see Oh, Canada, We Sing For Thee! a blockbuster live concert of the smash hits of Canada’s legendary artists from Gordon Lightfoot and Michael Bublé to the Barenaked Ladies, Shania Twain and the Guess Who. Leisa Way and her sensational band will headline in this showcase. 

The summer will bring four stellar comedies to the theatre, leading off with Stag and Doe by Mark Crawford, a hot new show taking Canada by storm. A hilarious look at a small town where both a stag and doe and a wedding reception are scheduled for the same hall on the same night, it promises to leave audiences roaring with laughter.

Hilda’s Yard, written by Norm Foster, and featuring the great playwright/actor himself, is set in the back yard of a 1950s home where Sam and Hilda Fluck are happily settling in to be “empty-nesters” until their grown children both land back home to stay! 

Touch and Go by Derek Benfield arrives in August with the wit, the insanity and the huge laughs of the British sitcom tradition. When a man’s wife is away, he lends his flat to an old friend who plots to have a liaison with a lady friend. Colourful characters, clever lines and outrageous antics will leave audiences laughing.

Rounding out the summer comedies will be Norm Foster’s The Gentleman Clothier, a magical tale where a Halifax tailor makes a wish that transforms his life in wonderful ways he definitely did not expect. This is a comedy filled with lots of laughs, and plenty of heart.  

In the fall, the irascible, opinionated and hilarious Lucien, AKA Marshall Button, is coming to town for a brief run. But this time, Lucien is bringing along his old pal, Jimmy the Janitor (popular comedian, Sandy Gillis) and the two are off to find work at the Alberta Oil Sands. Can Canada’s petroleum industry survive this Fort Mac Attack of comic chaos?

Next up will be the live musical revue, Memories of Rhythm & Blues, brought to the Playhouse by Chris McHarge and Colin Stewart, the same team whose sensational Memories of Rock & Roll was sold out in hours at the Playhouse this fall. 

Usher in Christmas 2015 with the world premiere of Have Yourself a Swinging Little Country Christmas, with the wonderful Leisa Way and her Wayward Wind Band. This show features music and dances that will delight the hearts of the very youngest to the very oldest. It’s a Christmas show for the whole family.

Contact Upper Canada Playhouse to pick up your tickets for the wonderful 2015 theatre season. 

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South Dundas endorses water levels Plan 2014

South Dundas council adopted a resolution of support for Plan 2014, a modern water levels plan for Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River.

Save the River, the Upper St. Lawrence Riverkeeper organization asked South Dundas to consider a resolution of support.

According to Lee Willbanks, Upper St. Lawrence Riverkeeper executive director, “The current regulation plan ‘Plan 1958D’ has caused clear environmental harm to fish populations, wetlands, coastal habitats, and the myriad economically and environmentally important species of plants and animals they harbour, thereby degrading the quality of life for all citizens of the Lake Ontario-St. Lawrence region.”

Last June, Plan 2014 was been referred by the International Joint Commission to the U.S. and Canadian federal governments, and is now communities along the waterway are being asked to formalize their support with resolutions. According to Willbank, “Plan 2014 will increase production of hydropower by dams in the St. Lawrence River, and maintain the benefits that regulation of the river and lake has provided to international shipping. By restoring some of the natural fluctuations in water levels, while avoiding extreme high and low levels, Plan 2014 will restore the plant and animal diversity of coastal wetlands without public investment and dramatically increase opportunities for hunting, fishing and wildlife viewing.”

“Our communities need this. In the River region our economy is directly tied to our environment. Plan 2014 will improve both. We can no longer claim that we don’t understand the effects of our out-dated water levels plan – we have the data and knoweldge we need to restore the Lake and River.”

South Dundas council approved the resolution at the November 4 meeting.

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HungerCount reveals alarmingly high need for food banks nationally, even more need locally

 Far too many Canadians are being left behind and counting on food banks to get by, according to HungerCount 2014, a national study released last week by Food Banks Canada.

Food bank use increased slightly in 2014 by 1 per cent. The report shows that in a typical month, food banks in Canada now provide food and other supports to more than three quarters of a million separate individuals – 841,000 people. The report also highlights the troubling trends that contribute to the increase in household food insecurity and food bank use across the country.

“The job market is very tough right now,” said Katharine Schmidt, Executive Director of Food Banks Canada, which coordinated the national study involving more than 4,000 food programs. “The unfortunate combination of low-paying jobs, inadequate supports for the unemployed, and a lack of training opportunities for Canadians is keeping food bank use near record levels.”

Ian McKelvie, Administrator for the Dundas County Food Bank, reports that food bank use at its two locations in Morrisburg and Winchester increased by 16 per cent in 2014. 

“It’s discouraging to see that the increase in the number of people using our local food banks is so much higher than what the HungerCount is reporting nation-wide” noted McKelvie. “One statistic that mirrors the study” McKelvie adds, “is that 40 per cent of those requiring assistance in our community are children.”

The Dundas County Food Bank now assists 580 people including 355 families.  

“The coming holiday season is a crucial time of year for providing emergency food for people in need. We are still seeking more donations of food and extra funds to purchase other items such as milk, fresh fruit and vegetables and meat,” said McKelvie.

The HungerCount 2014 study found that:

• Each month, 90,000 Canadians are forced to ask for help from a food bank for the first time.

• 4 in 10 of those relying on this assistance are children.

• The number of single adults helped by food banks each month has doubled since 2001 – from 80,000 to 158,000. 

“It has been six years since the recession sent food bank use soaring,” continued Schmidt. “It is time to stop waiting for things to improve – it is time to start acting to make real investments in policies that will reduce the need for food banks.”

The HungerCount 2014 report proposes key policy recommendations that can make significant progress in reducing the number of people who need help from food banks. These include:

– Investing in affordable housing,

– Providing more effective supports to low-income families with children, and

– Helping Canadians get the skills they need for the well-paying jobs of today.

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Another successful food drive

The results are in, and the Community Food Drive, which takes place annually on Halloween, reached its goal.

The food drive, organized by the Dixon’s Corners Community and Williamsburg Christian Reformed Churches collected $194.46 and  2910 items for the Dundas County Food Bank, which they delivered to the food bank’s Morrisburg location.

This number is similar to the amount collected last year.

Small groups went door to door, rather than trick or treating, collected food items.

This food drive has become one of the largest that the food bank relies on annually. 

This was the 14th food drive by this group.

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Healthy food program dropped

The Green Food Bag program has been suspended indefinitely.

South Dundas recreation and program coordinator Ben Macpherson reported that November 19 will be the last pick up date for the program that has recently seen a large decline in participation.

The green food bag program was essentially a service the municipality provided to its residents. Those participating would pay $10 to receive a bag of fresh produce. The money was pooled and used to buy items in larger quantities at a savings, thus providing program participants with a variety of fresh produce at a great value.

“At the peak of the program in 2012 there were an average of 130 bags being purchased monthly.

In January, 71 green food bags were ordered and this month it dropped to 31.

“Thirty-one bags allows for $310 to purchase produce to fill the bags,” said Mcpherson. “With the rising cost of produce, especially in winter, this will be a difficult task and will amount to a limited variety and quantity of fruits and vegetables.”

Along with the decline in participation, the program, which relies on volunteer manpower, has been struggling to recruit volunteer help. 

“The program has relied on the same five people for several years. Recently, two of these people have decided to step away from the program, increasing the workload on the others who remain. Attempts to recruit volunteers have been unsuccessful.

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Free well water testing

You get your drinking water from a private well. Is it safe? It’s easy to find out by having your water tested. 

The Eastern Ontario Health Unit (EOHU) provides a free well water testing service to households that get their drinking water from a residential well. 

Although your water looks clear and has no smell, it might not be safe to drink.

“Bacteria in water sometimes cause illness so severe that it can require hospitalization and can even cause death,” says Caroline Kuate, Program Manager, Water quality. “It is important to test your private water source to ensure its safety.”

Water quality can change over time, or it can happen suddenly and you may not notice a change in look, taste or smell. That’s why your water should be tested at least three times a year, especially in early spring when melting snow may cause water run-off to enter your well. 

Testing your well water on a regular basis is the only way to ensure the quality and the safety of your drinking water. 

The test results help you to address specific problems and to avoid any potential contamination.

Pick up your water test bottle at the EOHU and drop off your sample any day except Fridays. 

Better be safe than sorry and get your well water tested today!

For more information on well water testing, contact the EOHU at 613-933-1375 or 1 800 267-7120 and ask for Health Line or visit our website www.eohu.ca.

 

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Hali Adair Joins Horner & Pietersma

 

“Dreams really do come true,” is actually inscribed on the inside of Hali Adair’s law school ring.

After 22 years of service with the OPP, this native of South Dundas is now a barrister, solicitor and notary, and has accepted a position with the law firm of Horner & Pietersma in Morrisburg. Her dream of practising law has taken her along exciting and challenging paths.

Raised  in “the big city of Iroquois”, where her parents still live in the same house, on the same street, Hali attended Iroquois Public School, and graduated from Seaway District High School. She then chose to follow in the footsteps of her grandmother, Helen Smith, “who was a real force in my life,” and attend McMaster University where she earned a degree in sociology, with minors in history and political science.

“I hadn’t completely made up my mind about a career when I graduated,” Hali laughed, “but I did know that eventually I would be a police officer, and, one day, a lawyer. Blame Miss Gibb’s Seaway law class for that decision: I got hooked then on the law and I stayed hooked. But I felt that I also needed to get out and taste the world.”

Policing, she felt, offered a combination of paper work and action that interested her. In her 22 years serving with the OPP, Hali experienced virtually every aspect of police work.

“I served as a motorcycle officer, and worked undercover to arrest drug dealers. I dealt with riots in Toronto where I was out on the streets with Molotov cocktails flying. I’ve worked everything from murder investigations to traffic citations, even to dealing with terrorists. I’ve run the gamut of experiences. My life definitely didn’t lack excitement,” she added.

Hali served in a platoon, then became a detective constable, a detective, a platoon sergeant and eventually a detective sergeant in the intelligence branch of the OPP.

“Yet I always knew that I wanted more. There was always that draw to go back to Law school, and meet new challenges.”

“Members of the platoon I supervised often saw me reading case law, and examining and tackling different scenarios and they finally said to me, you’ve got to go ahead and try. And I really did want to be a lawyer.”

In 2007, Hali applied to Western Michigan University, to the Thomas M. Cooley Law School, which offered an accelerated program where she could complete her law studies in two years rather than four. Her police background was also taken into consideration by the school. She rounded out her American education by becoming licensed in New York State (since 2011). She then returned to Ontario, taking a full year of law school at Queen’s University followed by articling in the Crown’s Kingston office, 2012-13.

“I truly believe that every person is entitled to the best legal defence he can get, whether he is guilty or innocent. I feel, if missteps have been made, well, I have seen the impact that can have on an innocent person’s life. I don’t believe the end justifies the means.”

During her time in Michigan, Hali took part for eight months in the Innocence Project, which works to free wrongly convicted persons under the DNA Act. The cases she examined with the Project have had an effect on her views.

“I realize that having been a cop gives me a unique perspective on a case. When I look at a criminal case, I walk through the investigation. What is missing? What may have been overlooked? I like to investigate a case thoroughly. I want to see all sides, and there are often three sides to every story.”

Her police training has taught her to be calm, to carefully set aside emotions, even in a situation of utter chaos, to deal with the reality of “death and pain and deep sorrow,” with professionalism. For every scenario in law, Hali often has a corresponding real life experience upon which to draw. This allows her to listen to what people tell her, and not to leap to judgement.

“I love what I do now. I just love it,” Hali said. “The law is so interesting and challenging. And I am so fortunate to have Eldon and Eric here and acting as mentors too. I’ve only been here three weeks, but, boy,” she added laughing, “they’ve thrown a lot at me in those three weeks.”

Conversant in both civil and criminal law, Hali Adair brings a unique wealth of experiences to her new career in the legal profession. 

“I hope to be a good lawyer and a good litigator. Sometimes the art of being a good lawyer is knowing when to be on your feet in a courtroom, and when to sit down and negotiate.”

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Move back on track, food bank appeal

The Dundas County Food Bank is seeing a 15 to 20 per cent increase in usage over the same time last year, the food budget has been depleted, and a $46,000 renovation project is looming as the Morrisburg location prepares to move into its new location next year. 

Still, the board of directors is optimistic about the future as they prepare to launch a new fund raising campaign. 

“The food bank is not in desperate circumstances,” Jim Wilson, Dundas County Food Bank board member and fund raising coordinator, told The Leader, Monday.

“This food bank has been run astutely, frugally and intelligently, from a financial perspective,” he said, as he explained the food bank’s strategy to handle the expense of a capital building project, while the charity organization continues with their number one purpose, which is to help channel the community’s generosity to those who are in need of some of that generosity.

On the food front, the year’s food purchasing budget has been exhausted. Although the year is not over, and monetary donations are down, the community has provided generous support through recent food drives, and currently the shelves are well stocked.

Having faith that individuals in Dundas County will donate enough monetarily to keep up with cash flow needs, Wilson and the members of the DCFB board have a plan to cope with the cost of the $46,000 renovation that will set the food bank up, long term in its new location in the former library at the base of the Morrisburg arena.

While the Municipality of South Dundas has provided the DCFB with a $46,200 line of credit to help with the renovation. The money will have to be paid back. 

To do that, they are making an appeal to the South Dundas businesses to support the Dundas County Food Bank directly. The idea is that if businesses provide some sort sponsorship money at a corporate level, rather than at the individual level, where most of the donations now are generated, they will tap into a new revenue source, without taking away from individual generosity which they have relied on since their inception.

A food bank initiated campaign is something different for the DCFB, which is usually more passive, with people coming to them looking to donate.

Wilson explains that 30 appeal letters are being sent to businesses in South Dundas, mostly in Morrisburg and Iroquois, asking the businesses to consider making a commitment to  regularly donate an amount they are comfortable with, over a certain term. Sponsorship arrangements will allow the food bank some cash flow predictability as they work towards loan repayment.

Businesses that do not receive a letter but would consider a sponsorship commitment to the Dundas County Food Bank, can contact the food bank. 

Wilson and the board see the renovation as an opportunity for the food bank to explore new fundraising avenues and to build a stronger relationship with the business community.

Hopefully, this relationship will become a long term relationship, with the potential to last beyond the repayment of the capital project loan.

Ideally, this long term relationship could help stabilize the food bank’s cash flow situation, which frequently experiences peaks and valleys.

The schedule for the Morrisburg Food Bank move is back on track. A month ago, it was thought that the move might not happen until spring.

The biggest part of the renovation for the food bank will be the installation of a new loading dock, and Wilson believes that project contractors should be secured late this month. 

Food bank officials thought they had to wait for the South Dundas portion of the work to be completed before they could start work. This  is not the case. South Dundas and food bank work on the shared space will take place concurrently. 

“My guess, and it’s only a guess right now, is that we will be able to start setting up the new location for the food bank in the new year,” said Wilson. 

Occupancy will follow, maybe as soon as late January.

“Staff and our volunteers are really anxious for that to happen,” added Wilson.

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Vic Admiral Tim Laurence special guest at Crysler Farm Memorial

The Friend’s of Crysler’s Farm Battlefieild, this week announced the time for a special event taking place November 11 at the Battle of Crysler’s Farm Memorial at Upper Canada Village.

As always, at the memorial, the day will start with the traditional, time of remembrance for the brave men who fought and fell in the Victory of Crysler’s Farm at 9 a.m. Later in the day, at 2:40 p.m. another observance ceremony will take place with a special guest – Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence.

A couple of weeks ago it was announced that Sir Tim Laurence, would be visiting the Crysler’s Farm Battlefield Memorial, but the details of the visit had not been released. 

The Princess Royal (Princess Anne) and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence are in the National Capital November 10 and 11, 2014 and will participate in the National Remembrance Day Ceremony activities at the National War Memorial. The memorial, originally built as a tribute to those Canadians who paid the ultimate sacrifice in the First World War, was unveiled 75 years ago by Her Royal Highness’s grandparents, Their Majesties King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother).

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