Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 7 Nov 2019, p. 16

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th ei fp .c a Th e IF P -H al to n H ill s | T hu rs da y, N ov em be r 7, 20 19 | 16 FULL-SERVICE RETIREMENT HOME 905-877-1800 222 Mountainview Road North, Georgetown www.mountainviewresidence.com Seniors enjoy an independent lifestyle with comfortable accommodations, personal care and other supportive services. Retirement living can be the best of times when you live in an atmosphere of comfort and family caring. Mountainview Residence Of Georgetown THE 2020 MILK CALENDAR IS HERE. Sign up to receive your FREE COPY at calendar.milk.org HURRY! SUPPLIES ARE LIMITED. It's about trust. Our rela- tionship with our readers is built on transparency, hon- esty and integrity. As such, we have launched a trust ini- tiative to tell you who we are and how and why we do what we do. This article is part of that project. A vivid mental image of Sylvia Rudge cherishing the earring she helped remove from her daughter's ear the last time she saw Amanda, 27, started reporter Louie Ro- sella's cold case story. Published online on April 2, 2017, the story of Amanda Rudge's disappearance was the first in an ongoing series by Torstar Corporation Community Brand journal- ists. What began as a digital project of nine community websites to tell stories about unsolved police investiga- tions has expanded to in- clude all 27 Torstar commu- nity sites and the Hamilton Spectator. Under the search- able tag "Ontario Cold Case," these articles are added ev- ery Thursday morning to websites serving communi- ties from Ottawa to Windsor and Niagara Falls to North Bay. Every week, community journalists throughout Tor- star reach out to victims' families, former and present police investigation teams, old friends and often previ- ous articles to shed light on the unsolved cases of the murdered and missing from our communities. Some of the 130 stories are decades old and fading fast in the collective memory of the community. Others are high- profile cases, including a three-part series about the murder of nine-year-old Christine Jessop in 1984. Written by Jeremy Grimaldi, the series resulted in six peo- ple contacting police with new information. Our Nov. 7 story by Rick Vanderlinde follows a tip from a Hamilton Spectator reader regarding Ken Worth's execution-style mur- der in 1975. Reporters Danielle Marr and Sarah Bissonette retold the story of the 1998 murder of Renee Sweeney in Sud- bury. Thanks to great police work, an arrest was made in the case in 2018. And while not every story has resulted in new leads for police or arrests, we look at Ontario Cold Cases as a part- nership with our readers to remember those we've lost to tragedy, to help police solve cases and to remind those families affected that we will never forget what happened to their loved ones. If you would like us to tell a story about an unsolved case in your community, please reach out with the de- tails. You can sign up for our cold case newsletter, "Un- solved," at theifp.ca. It is de- livered to your inbox every Friday. Lori Martin is editor-in- chief in Simcoe County. We welcome your ques- tions and value your com- ments. Email our trust com- mittee at trust@metro- land.com. COLD CASE PROJECT KEEPS UNSOLVED INVESTIGATIONS IN PUBLIC EYE OPINION SIGN UP FOR OUR UNSOLVED NEWSLETTER AND RECEIVE AN ARTICLE EACH WEEK, LORI MARTIN SAYS LORI MARTIN Column We care about your hearing! Professional Arts Building 99 Sinclair Ave., Suite 210, Georgetown 905-873-6642 Serving the community of Halton Hills and surrounding areas since 1992 The Georgetown Part 2 * Understanding speech is a brain function and although the hearing instruments will give your brain the tools it needs to understand speech, it takes training and patience to improve your ability to understand. * Different listening situations will offer different abilities to understanding. Noisy situations are harder to hear conversation even for normal hearing individuals; hearing instruments should improve your ability, but will not allow you to perform as a normal hearing individual. * Many sounds that you hear will sound different, or more distinct, to you. This is because your diminished hearing over a long period of time has trained your brain to accept the slight differences in the sounds you normally hear. Wearing hearing instruments will bring back the original sounds as they should be heard, although different to you. With time your brain will accept the new changes to these sounds. * Hearing instruments should allow you to understand speech better in most situations than without your hearing instruments. . . . Lend MeYour Ears WHAT SHOULDYOU EXPECT FROM HEARING INSTRUMENTS! By Cory Soal R.H.A.D.

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