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	<title>Comments on: $10,000 Missing Person Reward &#8211; Goldie Hall Age 90</title>
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	<link>http://www.rewardstv.net/north-carolina-states/10000-missing-person-reward-goldie-hall-age-90/</link>
	<description>CrimePAY$-Rewards for Wanted Fugitives</description>
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		<title>By: Jo Layne Ward</title>
		<link>http://www.rewardstv.net/north-carolina-states/10000-missing-person-reward-goldie-hall-age-90/comment-page-1/#comment-4011</link>
		<dc:creator>Jo Layne Ward</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2012 08:11:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Is there there a remote possibility that Miss Goldie may have been in the beginning stages of dementia? I mean, did she talk of the past, of momma and poppa, and where she was born or came from? Did she forget things such as telling someone something and then 5 minutes forget she told someone anything? Did visitors come to visit, and in 5 minutes after they left, she forgot anyone had come to visit? Did she tell a story and in 5 minutes later the story had changed? Did she tell someone that she was giving something to someone and 5 minutes later she told someone she was giving it to someone else? My daddy, was in the early stages and later in the late stages of dementia. I knew it because I once worked in a nursing home that had patients with dementia. The day I knew my daddy was in the early stages, I was helping him move. Before I could take a load to my car and drop it off at the very same apt. complex, Daddy said, &quot;Jo Jo, here&#039;s the book the MANGER wants to read. I came back 5 minutes later and daddy said, &quot;Look Jo Jo, here&#039;s the book that YOU want to read! That&#039;s when I knew. In the late stages, deceased friends came to visit. He saw sheep in my living room. He had a conversation with a stuffed gorilla. He saw &quot;haints&quot;, ghost, in my sisters living room. He asked for coffee, but forgot it was sitting right beside him. He forgot his first granddaughters name. My great-aunt was in the late stages. She talked of Momma and Poppa and Kaufman, Texas. She was in a hospital bed, but called me because she was lost in the woods. She saw her best friend hopping in the bushes. My sister, who my aunt adored, was sleeping with her husband, or so she said. My aunt was funny and she loved to make people laugh. So we laughed at her wild tales. Miss Goldie may very well be headed to the place she loved most. Home, and Momma and Poppa. Someone needs to go down the path that Miss Goldie would have taken to go home. That&#039;s the best advice I can give you.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Is there there a remote possibility that Miss Goldie may have been in the beginning stages of dementia? I mean, did she talk of the past, of momma and poppa, and where she was born or came from? Did she forget things such as telling someone something and then 5 minutes forget she told someone anything? Did visitors come to visit, and in 5 minutes after they left, she forgot anyone had come to visit? Did she tell a story and in 5 minutes later the story had changed? Did she tell someone that she was giving something to someone and 5 minutes later she told someone she was giving it to someone else? My daddy, was in the early stages and later in the late stages of dementia. I knew it because I once worked in a nursing home that had patients with dementia. The day I knew my daddy was in the early stages, I was helping him move. Before I could take a load to my car and drop it off at the very same apt. complex, Daddy said, &#8220;Jo Jo, here&#8217;s the book the MANGER wants to read. I came back 5 minutes later and daddy said, &#8220;Look Jo Jo, here&#8217;s the book that YOU want to read! That&#8217;s when I knew. In the late stages, deceased friends came to visit. He saw sheep in my living room. He had a conversation with a stuffed gorilla. He saw &#8220;haints&#8221;, ghost, in my sisters living room. He asked for coffee, but forgot it was sitting right beside him. He forgot his first granddaughters name. My great-aunt was in the late stages. She talked of Momma and Poppa and Kaufman, Texas. She was in a hospital bed, but called me because she was lost in the woods. She saw her best friend hopping in the bushes. My sister, who my aunt adored, was sleeping with her husband, or so she said. My aunt was funny and she loved to make people laugh. So we laughed at her wild tales. Miss Goldie may very well be headed to the place she loved most. Home, and Momma and Poppa. Someone needs to go down the path that Miss Goldie would have taken to go home. That&#8217;s the best advice I can give you.</p>
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