SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
November 24, 2016
The Catholic Spirit • 13A
2016
Senior Services Guide
Pope Francis greets an elderly woman during his general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican in May. CNS/Paul Haring
Pope tells grandparents: Promote culture of life, inclusion, hope By Carol Glatz Catholic News Service In a world that glorifies physical strength and appearances, grandparents must uphold the values that really matter and bring hope and wisdom to younger generations, Pope Francis said. “We are called to work for the development of the culture of life, showing that every season of life is a gift
of God and has its beauty and importance, even if it is marked by fragility,” the pope told thousands of grandmothers and grandfathers Oct. 15. Groups and organizations, too, can do more to help older people participate, contribute and share their talents as well as to protect and uphold their dignity, he said. Continued on next page
STAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD!
Walk to Daily Mass When You Live at 1440 Randolph Ave! Reasonably priced, spacious 1 & 2 BR Apartments* for Independent Seniors 55 and Better. Come see our stylish and modern kitchens! On a bus line, within blocks of supermarket, Walgreens Pharmacy, local coffee shops, Cretin Baseball games and just a little further Highland National Golf Course and the Grand Avenue Shops! • ELEVATOR • Underground heated/outside garages* • On-site Management • State-of-the-art Monitored Fire & CO System
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The Best Kept Secret in Highland Park!
Located adjacent to Holy Spirit Catholic Church and School, in the lovely Highland Park area, this building provides a quiet, simple, yet elegant living atmosphere for independent seniors of 55 and Better who wish to "Stay in the Neighborhood" or live in close proximity to a Catholic Church and the Sacraments. Guests are greeted by classical music just inside the entry of the building's upscale, smartly appointed and warmly finished Lobby. Summer months on our quaint patio offer the calming sounds of a graceful fountain beside an inviting cafe table and umbrella in addition to a bench upon which to rest and enjoy the sunset at the close of each day.
Christmas
Open House Nov 30th, 12 Noon to 2PM
651-690-4961
For more information, contact MJ Properties of Saint Paul, LLLP
www.1440apartments.com
MJ PROPERTIES OF SAINT PAUL, LLLP
14A • The Catholic Spirit
SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
Continued from previous page “It’s necessary to oppose the harmful throwaway culture, which marginalizes the elderly, believing them to be unproductive,” he said. He reminded political, religious, educational and cultural leaders that they, too, are called to “dedicate themselves to building an ever more welcoming and inclusive society.”
“Your maturity and wisdom, accumulated over the years, can help the youngest, supporting them in their journey.” Pope Francis
The pope met with about 7,000 grandmothers and grandfathers in the Vatican’s Paul VI audience hall in a belated celebration of Grandparents’ Day, which in Italy was Oct. 2, the feast of the Guardian Angels. The Church looks upon older people “with affection, recognition and great esteem,” he said, as they are an “essential part of the Christian community and society.” Older generations represent “the roots and memory of a people,” making them “a precious treasure” crucial for looking to the future “with hope and responsibility,” he said.
“Your maturity and wisdom, accumulated over the years, can help the youngest, supporting them in their journey” as they grow, face events as they unfold and seek their own path. Older people can offer an important witness that, no matter how hard things get, “one must never lose faith in God and in a better future,” the pope said. So many grandparents hand down essential spiritual and cultural values to their grandkids in very simple ways, he said. In fact, grandparents were the ones who cherished and passed down the faith “underground” to future generations in countries that experienced serious religious persecution, he said. In a world where “strength and appearance are often idealized, you have the mission of witnessing to the values that truly count and that always remain,” he said. “Talk to your grandchildren, talk. Let them ask you questions” because even though they may have different interests and taste in music, “they need the elderly [and] this dialogue to continue to give them wisdom, too,” he said. The pope also thanked those who serve the elderly and help them live with dignity, underlining how much earlier generations have contributed to society. He reminded all institutions — such as nursing homes and assisted care facilities — that they are called to be “places of humanity and loving attention, where weaker persons do not end up being forgotten or neglected, but visited, remembered and taken care of like older brothers and sisters.”
November 24, 2016
To our readers The descriptions of senior housing and services in this section were provided by the facilities and service agencies, which are responsible for the accuracy of the content. The Catholic Spirit
Catholic Eldercare Catholic Eldercare’s new Transitional Care Unit (TCU) at 149 Eighth Ave. NE in Minneapolis will help you get back to health and back to home, so you can feel like “you” again. The licensed 24-bed care center offers a comprehensive array of amenities, therapies and equipment to make your stay as relaxing as possible in a calming, home-like environment. The only fully-dedicated unit in Northeast Minneapolis, the TCU is designed to strike the right balance of advanced care and personal comfort. Come see for yourself how this TCU can help you reach your rehabilitative goals. Schedule a tour or learn how to inform your hospital discharge planner of your TCU preference. Call 612-379-1370 or visit www.catholiceldercare.org.
The Glenn With the founding principles of a belief in the dignity and value of each individual and the understanding that every senior desires to live in a welcoming, vibrant and supportive community, The Glenn Hopkins and The Glenn Minnetonka offer a senior community that is not just a place to stay, but a place to LIVE. Offering independent living, assisted living, memory care, adult day services and care suites, The Glenn provides the amenities and services that create a vibrant retirement lifestyle. You’ll experience a spiritual environment in which people of all faiths are welcome. Mass, interfaith services, rosary, Bible study and beautifully designed chapels for quiet reflection and prayer are a few of the amenities supporting your spiritual journey. Our Community Life programs embrace the physical, intellectual, emotional, social and community stewardship roles in seniors’ lives through scheduled bus outings and numerous recreational opportunities. For more information or to schedule your personal tour, please contact: The Glenn Hopkins — 952-933-3333, www.theglennhopkins.com and The Glenn Minnetonka — 952-352-1000, www.theglennminnetonka.com.
Transitional Care Unit
NOW OPEN!
• Amenity-rich private rooms to help you heal in comfort • State-of-the-art services and therapies • Easily accessible for family and friends
• The only fully dedicated TCU in NE Minneapolis Most insurance accepted——including Medicare.
“She’s spent a lifetime looking after me. Now I can return the favor.”
Announcing St. Therese Southwest is now The Glenn Catholic Senior Communities. With age comes wisdom. And an opportunity to define the next chapter. Whether you’re looking for a new living option or helping a parent on their search, we can help. The Glenn is a welcoming Catholic community that provides daily spiritual support, a warm sense of family, and the ability to modify your living arrangements from independent to assisted or memory care to suit your needs. Visit us at TheGlennHopkins.com | 952-467-8498 or TheGlennMinnetonka.com | 952-479-8160.
149 8th Avenue NE Minneapolis, MN 55413 To learn more, contact us today. catholiceldercare.org
612.379.1370
November 24, 2016
SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
The Catholic Spirit • 15A
Benedictine Health System
Trojack Law Office, P.A.
The Benedictine Health System is one of the largest Catholic senior care organizations in the country, operating more than 40 communities in six states; including nine in the Twin Cities. BHS is a mission-based, nonprofit health system headquartered in Minnesota, sponsored by the Benedictine sisters of St. Scholastica Monastery in Duluth. BHS provides complete long-term care services for aging adults, including independent housing, assisted living, skilled nursing and rehabilitation services. For more information, visit www.bhshealth.org.
A three-step strategy is used with each client. First, we emphasize counseling, taking time to understand each person’s needs. Second, we assist in keeping the clients’ plans current. Third, we show our clients how they can pass along their wisdom as well as their wealth. John Trojack will work hard to help you give “what you own, to whom you want, when you want and the way you want.” To ensure an “estate plan that works,” he maintains a formal updating program. And, the office assures you of fully-disclosed and controlled costs. For more information, call 651-451-9696.
Washburn-McReavy Funeral Chapels Washburn-McReavy is the oldest family-owned funeral business in Minnesota. Established in 1857, before Minnesota became a state, Washburn-McReavy is a fifth-generation business. Quality, personal service, and funeral and cremation services are available at all of our chapels and cemeteries. For more information, visit www.washburn-mcreavy.com or call 612- 377-2203.
St. Vincent de Paul Cemetery St. Vincent de Paul Church in Brooklyn Park is proud to have a beautiful cemetery that dates back to 1856. In 2014, there was an expansion that included garden and courtyard sections with 300 new traditional grave sites, 70 cremation grave sites and a beautifully designed columbarium containing 300 niches for cremation. The expansion includes new opportunities to remember and commemorate loved ones, with monuments and walkways, as well as a location for outdoor Mass and other liturgical services. For more information, visit www.saintvdp.org or call 763-425-2210.
Saint Therese Saint Therese is a nonprofit Catholic organization that has focused on the wellbeing of individuals since it opened in 1968. We provide secure, stress-free living and the very best in senior care and housing with a commitment to each individual. Saint Therese offers a full continuum of programs and services to individuals throughout the metro area with locations in New Hope, Brooklyn Park, Robbinsdale, Shoreview and Woodbury. For more information, visit www.sttheresemn.org.
Crest View Senior Communities Crest View Senior Communities is a faith-based nonprofit organization that has been providing services to older adults since 1952. Crest View Senior Community in Columbia Heights offers a continuum of care and services, including senior housing, assisted living, home health care, memory care, rehab care, end-of-life care and skilled nursing care. This fall, Crest View opened a new campus in Blaine that includes 152 units of senior housing, assisted living, home health care, memory care and care suites. For more information, visit crestviewcares.org, or call 763-782-1601 for Columbia Heights, or 763-762-8430 for Blaine.
The Catholic Cemeteries When we are baptized into the body of Christ, we are welcomed into the Christian faith community. When we or one of our loved ones die, our faith tells us it is not the end, but a transition to what is to come. While awaiting the promise of eternal life, our Catholic tradition provides for the burial of our bodily remains in a Catholic cemetery among the community of the faithful departed. The Catholic Cemeteries are sacred places of prayer and remembrance, offering a resting place until the resurrection. The staff of The Catholic Cemeteries is available to help you make a thoughtful and meaningful decision — one that fits your budget and truly reflects your wishes. For more information about traditional and cremation burial options at Resurrection, Calvary, Gethsemane, St. Mary’s or St Anthony’s Cemeteries, call 651-228-9991 or visit www.catholic-cemeteries.org.
Visit any of our
Senior Living Communities throughout the Twin Cities. Maple Grove, Eagan, Inver Grove Heights, Lilydale, Oak Park, Shoreview, West St. Paul, St. Paul From independent living to assisted living and memory care, we provide our residents with the opportunity to live happy, healthy lives in a safe, secure environment, while remaining as active and independent as possible.
Contact us today for more information or to schedule a tour!
SouthviewCommunities.com
16A • The Catholic Spirit
SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
November 24, 2016
The Wellington Senior Living and The Alton Memory Care The Wellington Senior Living and The Alton Memory Care are located in the Shepard Park neighborhood of St. Paul’s Highland Park. The area offers retail shopping, various community centers, places of worship and beautifully landscaped park areas. A free, scheduled transportation shuttle is provided during the week to a variety of locations in this area. The Wellington Senior Living offers independent living, assisted living and 24-hour care suites. Our team is dedicated to providing premier senior living with an emphasis on living. We offer a variety of services from restaurant-style dining with meals prepared by a chef, housekeeping and a full array of social activities. Health care professionals, including licensed nursing staff and certified home health aides, are trained, dedicated and available to meet the needs of residents needing these services. The Alton Memory Care is committed to providing “person-directed” care in a fun environment that meets the specific needs of each individual, helping families spend quality time together by providing peace of mind knowing residents are well cared for in all aspects of their lives. When a person encounters memory issues, unique challenges arise for the person affected and his or her family members. At The Alton, we focus on each person’s strengths and provide programs and services to support each individual. For more information or to schedule a tour, visit www.shepardparkseniorcampus. com, or call The Wellington at 651-699-2664 or The Alton at 651-699-2480.
MJ Properties of St. Paul, LLLP Walk to daily Mass when you live at 1440 Randolph Ave. in St. Paul’s Highland Park. Our newly remodeled, value-priced apartments are perfect for today’s independent seniors, age 55-plus. Adjacent to Holy Spirit Catholic Church, 1440 provides a quiet, simple and elegant atmosphere for independent seniors wishing to “stay in the neighborhood” and live close to a Catholic church with ready access to the sacraments. Nearby are parks, restaurants, fuel, car repair, pharmacy, groceries, coffee houses, medical/dental offices, beauty/barber shops and more. The building includes granite kitchens, a modern elevator, underground heated parking or outside garage, fitness center and a resident lounge with Wi-Fi access and cable TV. 1440’s a great value for the budget-minded! To schedule a showing, please call MJ Properties of St. Paul at 651-690-4961.
St. Benedict’s Senior Community St. Benedict’s Senior Community’s mission is: “Our actions are guided by the belief that ‘All Shall be Treated as Christ.’” With foundational values and beliefs rooted in the tradition of the Catholic faith, St. Benedict’s Senior Community in Monticello welcomes people of all faiths. Our campus features retirement, assisted living and memory care apartments. Amenities include a chapel, theater, general store, fitness center, club room and enclosed outdoor courtyard. We take pride in building lasting relationships with our tenants. We take the time to get to know you and your lifestyle needs. We believe exceptional service still counts! For more information or to schedule a tour, call 763-295-4051.
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Our expansion includes contemplative gardens and courtyard areas with traditional graves, cremation graves and a beautifully designed columbarium with more than 300 niches for cremation.
Find out more at: www.saintvdp.org/cemetery or (763) 425-2210
COME SPEND AN HOUR WITH THE LORD Urgently needed for the following chapel adoration hours at St. Jerome Church in Maplewood. • Mon. 2-3 p.m.; 3-4 p.m. • Tues. 4-5 p.m. • Wed. 3-4 p.m. • Thurs. 3-4 p.m.; 6-7 p.m. • Fri. 3-4 p.m.
Can you spend a weekly hour in silent prayer or meditation with the Eucharist? If so, call Connie at 651-774-2678
God Bless You! St. Jerome Church • 380 E. Roselawn Ave. • Maplewood, MN 55117
www.TheCatholicSpirit.com
November 24, 2016
SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
The Catholic Spirit • 17A
For CRS’ Carolyn Woo, next step is ‘refirement,’ not retirement By Rhina Guidos Catholic News Service Many mornings Carolyn Woo has arrived to the relative solitude of a chapel at the Baltimore headquarters of Catholic Relief Services, and as the bustling city comes to life, she has looked inside the serene space for a particular quiet spot, the place where she arms herself with prayer. “That plant is my coffee table,” she said inside the chapel, pointing to a leafy pot nearby where she hides papers, coffee or whatever she might be holding on her way in. “I do my readings for the day,” she said, explaining her morning routine during an October interview with Catholic News Service, one of the last she’ll do as CEO of the agency. “I sit with the Blessed Mother. There’s one chair there ... that’s where I do my prayer, and then I start the day.” Prayer is something she’s needed while managing one of the largest charities in the country. The days have meant little sleep and lots of meetings, lots of visitors, lots of travel and challenges, joy and sadness, some which she never expected she’d see at the official international humanitarian agency of the country’s Catholic community. The end of 2016 will mark the end of her five-year stint with CRS, but also more than four decades of a demanding professional life largely rooted in the halls of business academia and board rooms, and one which led her to the
Carolyn Woo, outgoing CEO of Catholic Relief Services, reflects after a Feb. 4, 2014, Mass at a church in Tacloban, Philippines. She was visiting CRS programs assisting people affected by Typhoon Haiyan, which hit the Philippines in November 2013. Woo will end her five-year term as CEO of CRS at the end of 2016. CNS/Laura Elizabeth Pohl, courtesy Catholic Relief Services halls of the Vatican and to the world’s poorest communities. Soon, she’ll be trading that in for drawing classes, piano lessons, line dancing, flower arrangement and trying to learn to speak Spanish so she can sing with others at Mass. “Everybody tells me that I’m going to be bored,” she said speaking of her upcoming retirement. “But I’m so excited. They say women look forward to their retirement while men dread it. I think of it as ‘refirement,’ not
retirement.” The way Woo, 62, sees it, some of the best parts of her life are about to start. “My life always had a set of professional identities: professor, administrator, dean and so on. ... I’m now going to that phase of my life where I’m going to let go of those titles for my most important roles: mother, wife, sister, aunt, friend and a servant of God,” she said. However, when you’re the kind of person the pope has invited to help
present one of his most important encyclicals — which Woo did when she helped present “Laudato Si’” in 2015 — it’s hard to just ride off, or line dance, into the sunset. “I’ll continue to serve on several boards. I write a column for Catholic News Service that will continue. There are speeches, but more important, I want to experience and do things that I’m not good at,” she said. Continued on next page
We Mend Bodies and Spirits Throughout the Benedictine Health System, our residents, patients and their families are welcomed and treated with love and respect. As one of the largest Catholic senior care organizations in the United States, with nine communities within the Twin Cities, we believe our Benedictine Core Values of Hospitality, Stewardship, Respect and Justice are not just posters on the wall; those values guide the work we do every day. We provide high quality senior living services, including independent and assisted living, long-term care, short-term care, memory care, in and outpatient therapy as well as adult day services.
For more information or to schedule a tour: Benedictine Health Center at Innsbruck 1101 Black Oak Drive | New Brighton 651-633-1686 | bhcinnsbruck.org
Cerenity Senior Care – White Bear Lake 4615 2nd Avenue | White Bear Lake 651-232-1818 | CerenitySeniorCare.org
Benedictine Health Center of Minneapolis 618 E. 17th Street | Minneapolis 612-879-2800 | bhcminneapolis.org
Interlude Restorative Suites 520 Osborne Road NE | Fridley 763-230-3131 | Interluderestorativesuites.org
Benedictine Senior Living at Steeple Pointe 625 Central Avenue | Osseo 763-425-4440 | steeplepointe.org
Regina Senior Living 1175 Ninninger Road | Hastings 651-480-4333 | regina-seniorliving.org
Cerenity Senior Care - Humboldt 512 Humboldt | St. Paul 651-220-1700 | CerenitySeniorCare.org
St. Gertrude’s Health and Rehabilitation Center 1850 Sarazin Street | Shakopee 952-233-4400 | stgertrudesshakopee.org
Cerenity Senior Care – Marian of Saint Paul 200 Earl Street | St. Paul – Mass six days a week 651-793-2100 | CerenitySeniorCare.org
To review the full list of communities and services go to: bhshealth.org 001-226 Metro Ad v4.indd 3
2/22/16 8:35 AM
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SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
November 24, 2016
Continued from previous page
Business acumen For now, she’s busy wrapping up the past five years of her life, reviewing the challenges, successes and opportunities of managing the U.S. bishops’ overseas relief and development agency. She’s been witness to the work of her colleagues in the 100 or so countries where CRS serves the poorest and most marginalized communities on the planet. She said that while she didn’t know as much as her colleagues about international relief and development when she took over in 2012, she knew about business, especially about strategy, which could help CRS position itself for the future. She comes alive when talking about the intricacies of strategy and how she got students to explore it at the University of Notre Dame when she was the dean of the top-rated Mendoza Business School. She gave up tenure there after CRS tapped her to become its CEO in 2011. “I actually don’t know of any other Chinese immigrant who has given up tenure,” she said. “I’ve worked for stability. Security and stability were my brass rings. Everything else just happened to come along because I tend to overprepare.” At CRS, she has aimed to make the agency a more effective organization, she said, one that develops its leadership from within, one that looks at the shortterm and long-term benefits for those it serves, and one that communicates its Catholic identity to the world. “The most important thing to me is
Carolyn Woo, the outgoing CEO of Catholic Relief Services, is seen preparing to greet the staff during a July 2015 visit to the CRS field office in Nazret, Ethiopia. CNS/Petterik Wiggers, courtesy Catholic Relief Services that we represent the Church well, and that we understand the privilege of being able to serve the people that God sends to us, the people we serve,” she said. That means having enough resources to help alleviate poverty, to respond to increasing natural disasters such as the recent hurricane that swept through Haiti or to the historic displacement of people around the world who are forced to flee their homelands.
Worldwide needs Her tenure has seen one of the largest displacements of people in history: 65.3 million at the end of 2015, according to figures from the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. It surpasses the number of those displaced after two world wars, one which led to the founding of CRS in 1943, as the Catholic bishops of the United States established
the agency to help war-torn Europe and its refugees recover. As it did in the past, CRS has helped the present wave of displaced people with basic necessities, as well as education and counseling. “The magnitude of the problems exceeds the resources in the world, but it does not exceed our ingenuity and our Continued on next page
Trojack Law Office, P.A. • Wills • Trusts • Probate
John E. Trojack, Attorney at Law
• Guardianships • Conservatorships
• Powers of Attorney • Health Care Directives
Call to attend complimentary workshops We offer tailor-made, client-focused estate planning and related services from a Catholic Perspective
Trojack Law Office, P.A. • 1549 Livingston Ave., Ste. 101 • W. St. Paul, MN 55118
Phone: 651.451.9696 • www.TrojackLaw.com
“Where neighbors are friends, and people really care.”
Epiphany Pines Independent Senior Housing 1800 111th Ave NW. Coon Rapids
Epiphany Assisted Living & Memory Care 10955 Hanson Blvd., NW Coon Rapids
Indoor walkway to the Church of the Epiphany
Call for a tour! 763.755.0320 763.772.1066 EpiphanySeniorHousing.org
SENIOR SERVICES GUIDE
November 24, 2016
The Catholic Spirit • 19A
Continued from previous page ability to solve problems, if we can work together,” she said. That’s not an easy task considering that most people haven’t come in contact with the displaced, whether refugees or migrants, making it hard to understand what they face, Woo said. “They just watch this on television. There are different stories. There are stories about migrants. There are stories about terrorism. They’re all kind of put together,” she said. “When we run across situations where people don’t see things the way we do, when they don’t agree, I think the key is not to label them, it’s not to get frustrated, but it’s to say, ‘Would you like to meet some of these people?’”
Unexpected challenges Fighting, attacking, labeling, none of it helps to carry out the work of the Gospel, she said, and she’s seen her share of it at the helm of the agency. She remembers a particularly difficult day that began with an email about a blog post accusing CRS of storing and distributing condoms in Madagascar, saying that the bishops there were angry at the agency because Catholic Church teaching prohibits artificial birth control, and the agency was violating that teaching. “This was so far from the truth,” she said. “You can imagine the type of sadness, to be accused of something that is completely false.” Meetings with the Madagascar bishops and New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, then president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, had to be arranged; translators had to be hired; and schedules across several time zones had be arranged, all just to clean up a baseless attack, she said. “The day when I got that email was a very bad day,” she recalled. “In addition to addressing these particular issues, it’s sort of a loss of idealism to recognize that there are bodies within the Church that would do that … not only is it false, not only is it malicious, but actually, it prevented us from spending our energies serving the people who needed help.” The Madagascar bishops refuted the reports and publicly supported CRS in 2013, but the attacks continued. “I could not imagine this type of
“We can pat ourselves on the back and say, ‘We served 100 million people,’ or we could ask the question, ‘What about the [others who aren’t receiving help].’” Carolyn Woo
malice to be in the Church,” she said. “I think that was the part that I was unprepared for.”
Gospel-driven mission While attacks may come and go, the mission of CRS remains, she said, and it’s one that began with Christ and will continue when Sean Callahan, the present chief operating officer, takes over the top spot at the start of 2017. “The mission of CRS comes from the Gospel, which is where Jesus told us to go out and serve, particularly raising up those who are without power, those who are without wealth, those at the margins of society,” Woo said. It’s a mission she hopes to continue but on a different path, and one kept in focus by the fleeting images of those she’s met on her CRS journey, of families like hers, selling everything they own to help a son or daughter escape toward a safer or better future, of a young man who reminded her of one of her two sons, but lives with shrapnel embedded in his body. “We can pat ourselves on the back and say, ‘We served 100 million people,’ or we could ask the question, ‘What about the [others who aren’t receiving help],’” she says. “I hope that’s one thing I’ve done, to say have courage … step up. … I’d like to have our colleagues not be afraid to hold ourselves accountable because we do all this to serve [people] and to serve God. And if we trust in the Lord, the Lord will take us there.”
The McReavy Family
Family owned and operated for over 150 years, WashburnMcReavy is dedicated to serving families with caring and professional funeral services. Please contact us at any of our 17 metro area locations for more information about our services, or visit our website at www.washburn-mcreavy.com.
IT’S TIME TO START LOVING YOUR AGE! Leave behind the work and worry — move to an apartment home at St. Benedict’s Senior Community and enjoy maintenance-free living. Visit centracare.com, click on locations, senior living.
763-295-4051
Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis • archspm.org
Blaine Pre-Arrangement Center 763-231-0506 10450 Baltimore Street NE Bloomington 952-884-8145 2300 W. Old Shakopee Road Columbia Heights 763-789-4436 4101 Central Ave NE Coon Rapids 763-767-1000 1827 Coon Rapids Blvd Eden Prairie 952-975-0400 7625 Mitchell Road Edina 952-920-3996 5000 W. 50th & Hwy 100 Hopkins 952-938-9020 1400 Mainstreet New Brighton 651-636-9821 706 4th Ave. NW Nokomis Park 612-721-1651 1838 E. Minnehaha Pkwy
Northeast Minneapolis 612-781-6828 2901 Johnson Street NE North Minneapolis 612-529-9691 1600 Lowry Ave N. Robbinsdale 763-537-2333 4239 W. Broadway Uptown 612-377-2203 2301 Dupont Ave S. Crystal Lake Cemetery 612-521-3677 3816 Penn Ave N., Minneapolis Dawn Valley Memorial Park 952-941-7686 9940 Bush Lake Road, Bloomington Glen Haven Memorial Gardens 763-533-8643 5125 W. Broadway, Crystal Hillside Cemetery 612-781-1999 2610 19th Ave NE, Minneapolis
info@washburn-mcreavy.com