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At the time this book was written, the youngest person recorded with Alzheimer's Disease was 28 years old. Since I learned about Alzheimer's with my maternal grandmother suffering from and succumbing to the disease in the 1980's, the ages of Alzheimer's patients have been steadily becoming younger and younger. In my mother's memory care unit was an educator who died of early onset Alzheimer's at the age of 53. There is a new diagnosis of Alzheimer's every 67 seconds and it is estimated that one in every three people in the United States will have Alzheimer's by the age of 85. This disease lasts from 2 - 25 years. If this trend continues then every family in this country will be visited by Alzheimer's and the affects on caregivers will also affect this nation. This book is both a personal story of a decade-long journey of caregiving as well as a call to arms for funding and research of this terminal disease.
Reverend Nathan Gilbert Joyner (1825-1880) was born in Mississippi or Alabama. He was a pastor of Fellowship Primitive Baptist Church (now Gumlog) in Lauderdale County, Mississippi. He married Sefranah Jane McCraw (1828-1909) 1841. She was born in Alabama to Ivy McCraw and Sarah Pitts. Descendants live in Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, California and elsewhere.
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This volume clearly challenges us to question our born-again experience if we feel no call to personal sacrifice, separation from the world, and the hatred of sin. It will create in you the desire to live a life truly dedicated to God.
Hereditary Crohn's disease, an intestinal ulceration, a diagnosis of cancer waiting to be confirmed, and debilitating daily pain had knocked McCormick down. When it seemed like she only had two options-- a slow and painful death or a sudden and quick death-- she decided to find a third option. She developed a list of foods that would not only keep her out of her sick bed but also have a positive healing influence on her body. That's when the real healing began. Her book will give hope and solutions to those dealing with similar problems.
James Mitchell (1767-1846) and Nancy Campbell (1771-1844) were married in 1791. They moved from Virginia to Kentucky, to Indiana and back to Kentucky. James, Jr. fought in the War of 1812. Descendants lived in Kentucky, Arkansas, Tennessee, Indiana, Oklahoma, Kansas, California, Iowa, Massachusetts, Washington, Colorado, Idaho, Texas, Oregon, Indiana and elsewhere.