HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Citizen, 1998-04-08, Page 23HURON
SUPERIOR
MEMORIALS
ESTABLISHED OVER 70 YEARS
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Serving Blyth and all of Huron County
MICHAEL FALCONER
Beattie-Falconer Funeral Homes
& Tasker Chapel
153 HIGH STREET, CLINTON
Bus.:' 482-9441
Res.: 482-3664
Evening appointments available
Jennifer and Ian Croft
Brussels Mennonite Fellowship
He Is Risen!
7:30 a.m. Sunrise Service
8:15 a.m.. Breakfast
9:30 a.m. Worship Service
10:45 a.m. Christian
Education
Everyone Welcome
Pastor Ben Wiebe 887-6388
You are Welcome at the
BLYTH COMMUNITY CHURCH OF GOD
9:45 a.m. - Sunday School for Children and Adults
11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship
Bible Studies - Wednesday 10 a.m. & 7:30 p.m.
Phone 523-4590 McConnell St., Blyth
Good Friday
April 10 at 10:30 a.m.
Easter Sunday Sunrise
April 12 at 6:30 a.m.
at Howson Mills - east of Blyth
Easter Sunday
Church Service
at 11:00 a.m.
MELVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
BRUSSELS
Good Friday - April 10 - 11:00 a.m.
Joint Service - United at Melville
Easter Sunday - April 12 - 8:30 a.m.
Sunrise Service at Doug Hemingway's
9-10:30 a.m. - Church School
Easter Breakfast
11:00 a.m. - Workshop Service
- Special Easter Program for young children
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. - Bible Study
Wednesday, 2:00 p.m. - Bible Study
Wheelchair accessible
Nursery care available
We welcome you to come and worship with us.
Rev. Cathrine Campbell - 887-9831
Holy Week Mass Times
St. Joseph's, Clinton
St. Michael's, Blyth
St. James, Seaforth
Holy Thursday, April 9, 1998
Celebration of the Lord's
Supper
7:30 PM - St. James, Seaforth
followed by Adoration of the
Blessed Sacrament until Midnight
7:30 PM - St. Joseph's, Clinton followed by
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament until Midnight
Good Friday, April 10, 1998
Celebration of the Passion and Death of Christ
1:00 PM - St. Michael's, Blyth
Liturgy of the Passion, Cross and Communion
3:00 PM - St. James, Seaforth
Liturgy of the Passion, Cross and Communion
3:00 PM - St. Joseph's, Clinton -
Liturgy of the Passion, Cross and Communion
Easter Vigil, April 11, 1998
The Most Important Celebration of the Year
8:00 PM - St. Joseph's, Clinton
8:00 PM - St. James, Seaforth
-t 46 56° April 12, 1998
9:00 AM - St. Michael's, Blyth
10:00 AM - St. James, Seaforth
11:00 AM - St. Joseph's, Clinton
Permanent Mass Times for Cluster
Parishes (effective April 18, 1998)
Saturdays - 5:15 PM - St. James, Seaforth
Saturdays - 7:15 PM - St. Joseph's, Clinton
Sundays - 9:00 AM - St. Michael's, Blyth
Sundays - 11:00 AM - St. James, Seaforth
(gCeofry &te/ic/
THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8,1998. PAGE 23.
Memory
not what you lose, but what you use
Are yOu concerned that you're
losing your memory? Do you fmd
yourself forgetting names or faces
of people you know? Do you worry
because you sometimes can't
remember the names of places,
refer to objects as
"whatchamacallits" or forget why
you came into a room?
Relax. These minor episodes of
forgetfulness occur more
commonly as we get older, and are
usually nothing to worry about.
That's because our ability to
CROFT-ROULSTON
Jennifer Roulston, daughter of
Keith and Jill Roulston, RR 3,
Blyth and Ian Croft, son of John
and Diana Croft of Mill Village,
bituaries
JAN "JOHN" HAAN
Jan "John" Haan of RR 2,
Brussels died at Seaforth Hospital
on Sunday, April 5, 1998. He was
96.
Born in Leer's, The Netherlands,
on March 2, 1902, Mr. Haan was
the son of the late Fokke and
Renske (DeBoer) Haan.
He was married to the late Aafka
DeVries.
Mr. Haan was a retired farmer.
He was a member of Blyth
Christian Reformed Church.
He is survived by his children
Renny and Jacob Hulzebos of RR
2, Brussels and Piea and Henry
Drost of Clinton. Mr. Haan is also
survived by one brother, Bertus
Haan of The Netherlands. Five
grandchildren and 11 great-
grandchildren are also surviving.
Mr. Haan was predeceased by
one great-grandchild, two sisters
and three brothers.
Visitation was held -at the
Beattie-Falconer Tasker Chapel in
Blyth on Tuesday, April 7. The
funeral service will be held at the
Blyth Christian Reformed Church
on Wednesday, April 8 at 2 p.m.
with Rev. Adrian Van Geest of
Blyth Christian Reformed Church
officiating.
The pallbearers will be Joe
Hulzebos, Ken Nesbitt, John
Jordan, Raymond Drost, Hugh
Bergsma and Bert Buffmga.
Interment in Brussels Cemetery.
encode and process information
with our brain declines with age.
Researchers have found that
middle-aged and older people have
greater difficulty doing unfamiliar
tasks that require rapid or complex
processing than people in their
twenties.
For example, older people tend to
be less adept than younger ones at
learning to program a videocassette
recorder. (Maybe that's why
manufacturers have made the
newer VCRs easier to program.)
N.S. were married on March 29,
1998 in Banff, AB.
The couple will be living at
Oromocto, NB.
FWIO news
Continued from page 22
Women's Institutes of Canada.
FWIO is one of 365 member
societies of the Associated Country
Women of the World (ACWW), an
organization with non-
governmental (NGO) status with
the United Nations.
The 22nd triennial conference of
the ACWW is being held in April
in Pretoria, South Africa.
But when it comes to
remembering the really important
things, most older people do just as
well as younger people. The
average person in his or her
seventies does just as well on
memory tests as the average 20-
year-old
Most common memory problems
are resolved by themselves. The
memory problem that we
experience most often is dubbed
"tip of the tongue" phenomenon by
memory specialists. It occurs when
you have a name on the tip of your
tongue but can't quite get it out.
Eventually, the name will pop into
your head as environmental clues
jog your memory.
Researchers have found that
college students are least likely to
experience this type of memory
lapse. They are followed by people
in their thirties and forties who
experience this phenomenon less
frequently than those in their 60s
and 70s.
Memory experts suggest running
through the alphabet to find a
"sound trigger" to help you
remember the missing word, or else
leaving your attempts for a while.
The errant word will eventually
surface in your mind.
You can also use notebooks, lists,
calendars and computers to jog
your memory. If you continue to
misplace your keys, your watch, or
your sunglasses, get into the habit
of keeping these items in the same
place.
There are things you can do to
give your mind a "mental workout"
so that your brain stays active and
alert. The best way to keep your
memory sharp is to stay stimulated.
Use your brain by reading,
socializing, playing games or
developing new interests.
This message is brought to you by
the doctors in your local branch of
the Ontario Medical
Association
Former Blyth girl weds in Banff