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More Than a Biography This book illustrates the role that compassion, conviction and courage can play in overcoming the disappointments and obstacles of life. It further illustrates through one man's life how by faith and trust in the One who rules over all deception, discrimination and greed can be defeated. It gives the Biblical answer to prejudice. It also tells how Tommy McClain helped to overcome a learning disability through a memory system and gives you some tips on how to memorizethe books of the Bible, the Presidents of the U.S. and much more.
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This book is the third in a series of books on this family, my mother's line, KINNICK. It is the first of three on the twelve children of John and Ann Kinnick and their descendants who lived to adulthood and had families - reporting on the family of the fourth of these children, the third son, George Washington Kinnick. George, and his wife, Hannah, had ten children live to adulthood and have families. This book includes a full index of all primary numbered family names.
Someone…or some thing…is killing people across Sardis County. Sheriff Billy Napier and Deputy Alan Blake are trying their best to find the killer before someone else falls victim to the “Sardis Slasher”. The problem with finding the killer? No clues are left behind for the forensics team to evaluate. Katie Montgomery Blake and her aunt, Margo Sardis, are trying to help, but are also coming up empty. Carol Grace Montgomery and Mary Smalls have made a discovery, too…and that discovery ramps up the magic in Sardis County! And some newcomers to Sardis County offer their help in finding the killer, but they have a secret. Does the secret have anything to do with the father of Phoebe Smalls Napier’s children? Or is it just more magic? Find out in T. M. Bilderback’s fourth all-out, slam-bang Sardis County thriller – I’m Your Boogie Man – A Tale Of Sardis County!
Jimmy Stewart was at the forefront of the struggle for civil rights in Oklahoma for almost a half century. Among his many great qualitites were integrity and a passion for equality. As a national leader of the NAACP, he played a major role in developing local, state, and national civil rights policies. He headed the NAACP in Oklahoma City during tumultous times of school desegregation and integration.
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First home to Yokut Indians, then trappers, hunters, and fishermen, Lathrop was founded by Leland Stanford in 1869 as a railroad town and an answer to Stanford's frustration with his railroad attempts in Stockton. Lathrop's rich history includes the railroad, its Delta waterways, manufacturing and distributing industries, and the fascinating tale of California Supreme Court justice David S. Terry's murder (Terry had previously fought and won the last legal duel in California with U.S. senator David C. Broderick just outside of San Francisco). Reportedly named in honor of a relative of Leland Stanford Jr., today's Lathrop evolved from rugged railroad beginnings to a growing and vibrant community of close to 20,000 residents.