Fundraisers planned as part of Walk to End Alzheimer’s on Sept. 27

By Ginny Kropf, correspondent Posted 3 September 2025 at 10:06 pm

Photo courtesy of Mary Lou Tuohey: Nicole Tuohey holds a string of links which she makes every year and sells to support the Alzheimer’s Association.

MEDINA – No one knows better the heartbreak a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease brings than the family of Mary Lou and David Tuohey and their children Nicole and Casey.

Since both Mary Lou’s parents were lost to Alzheimer’s, the family has heavily supported events and sponsored fundraisers to benefit Alzheimer’s research. This includes participating in the Walk to End Alzheimer’s for more than 24 years, when it was still held in Lewiston. When the walk moved to Albion, and then Medina, they continued to come up with more ways to raise money for the cause.

Photos by Ginny Kropf: Mary Lou Tuohey hangs a sign in the window of Hans’s Bakery, former home of her Case-Nic Cookies, where she held a basket raffle every year to support Alzheimer’s research.

For at least the last 15 years, and before she retired from Case-Nic Cookies last December on Main Street, Mary Lou made cutout cookies of an elephant, a symbol alluding to the saying elephants never forget.

While coming up with a project to keep daughter Nicole busy in the store, Mary Lou hit on links which Nicole could make out of construction paper, glue together and sell in the store with a cookie for $1. All the money goes directly to the Alzheimer’s Association. Hopefully, one day, a link to the cure of Alzheimer’s will be found.

Since Tuohey retired and sold the building for Hans’s Bakery, Hans Rosentreter has agreed to bake the cookies and sell the links in the bakery. Before the official announcement of the fundraiser this year, the family has already sold more than $400 worth – a lot at the recent Super Cruise and more from private donations. Mary Lou said that fundraiser annually raised $2,000 to $3,000.

In addition, Mary Lou had come up with an ingenious way to have a basket raffle to support the Alzheimer’s Association, in which people could participate even when the store was closed. Previously, the basket raffle was only set up on the day of walk in State Street Park.

But Case-Nic Cookies at 439 Main St. had two very big display windows, and during the Covid pandemic, Mary Lou devised a system, where a non-profit could use the window space on one side of the door for a basket raffle. She created order sheets with all the baskets listed, put them in an envelope with instructions, a pen and the stub from a sheet of raffle tickets.

The envelopes are placed in a covered bucket in the entryway and all one has to do is take an envelope, include cash or a check for $10 for one sheet of 26 tickets, mark the items they want to win and the number of tickets they want placed in the drawing for that item. Mary Lou and her committee will then distribute their tickets accordingly.

With their selections made, the envelope is sealed and dropped through the mail slot in the store’s door, unless the store is open.

This year’s raffle has a new wrinkle. Two very generous items have been donated – a $100 gift certificate to Miller’s Bulk Foods on Ridge Road and a lottery board with $100 worth of tickets on it, donated by Kathy Vicknair. Two separate raffle tickets are included in the envelope for those items. The purchaser tears the tickets in half, keeps the receipt end and drops the other in the envelope with his selection of baskets.

“I am glad the community has been so supportive of our efforts,” Mary Lou said.

While putting final touches on a basket raffle in the window of Hans’s Bakery to support the Alzheimer’s Association, Mary Lou and Nicole Tuohey, from left, were visited by several friends, Carolyn Wagner and Michele Szulis, both committee members of the Walk to End Alzheimer’s.

While she was arranging a sign in the window this week, Michele Szulis and Carolyn Wagner, members of the Walk to End Alzheimer’s Committee, stopped by to chat. Michele had done a practice walk of the designated route, checking for rough spots.

The Walk is schedule Sept. 27 with check-in to begin at 9 a.m. in State Street Park. Refreshments will be available and the Promise Flower Ceremony will begin at 10 a.m., followed by the start of the walk at 10:15 a.m.

Anyone can donate by logging on to the 2025 Walk to End Alzheimer’s – Orleans County site.

“Nicole watched her grandpa and grandma fade from life,” Mary Lou said. “That is why she sells her elephant links for $1. All the money she raises is donated directly to Alzheimer’s for research and, hopefully, a cure. Nicole does not want to see her mom fade away from life and forget who she is.”

The public is encouraged to step into Hans’s Bakery and buy a link or participate in the basket raffle.

“Until you have walked the walk of Alzheimer’s Disease, you really have no idea how hard it is on the person or their family,” Mary Lou said.