PHONES

Monday, 21 April 2014

Must Read: 3 Sisters, ALL Over 100 Years Old Share Their Secrets to a Long Life.


To live a long and happy life, just listen to sisters Rubye Cox, Ruth Branum and Rose Shloss, who are each over 100 years old.

So how exactly did the women – who survived the Great Depression and the World Wars and were witness to the dawn of electricity, among other things – live this long?

“My motto in life has been, ‘I would rather wear out than rust out,’ ” Branum, 104, tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.


  From left, ca. 1926: Rubye Cox, Ruth Branum and Rose Shloss

COURTESY FAMILIES OF RUBYE, RUTH AND ROSE GAWF

From left, ca. 1926: Rubye Cox, Ruth Branum and Rose Shloss
COURTESY FAMILIES OF RUBYE, RUTH AND ROSE GAWF
- See more at: http://nigeriana.org/blog/68656.html#sthash.O17DqsFw.dpuf

 Continue reading after the cut...


Whether it was managing her grocery store for 30 years or staying at home, she stressed the importance of staying active.

Cox, 110, a former teacher, attributes it to her belief in a higher power: “Faith can relieve life’s stresses.”

As for Shloss, 101, who worked in payroll for the U.S. Treasury, she credits the family’s healthy eating habits.

The sisters and their four other siblings (who have all passed) grew up cooking from scratch, using ingredients grown on their farm in Muskogee, Okla.

After being separated by distance for over 10 years, the sisters were reunited for the first time on April 10.

An employee at Rose’s 
Brookdale senior living community in Sarasota, Fla., connected the sisters with Wish of a Lifetime, a nonprofit helping seniors fulfill their late-in-life desires. The foundation, which has a partnership with Brookdale, organized the reunion at Rubye’s Rhode Island nursing home and paid for the travel arrangements

Whether it was managing her grocery store for 30 years or staying at home, she stressed the importance of staying active. 

Cox, 110, a former teacher, attributes it to her belief in a higher power: “Faith can relieve life’s stresses.” 

As for Shloss, 101, who worked in payroll for the U.S. Treasury, she credits the family’s healthy eating habits. 

The sisters and their four other siblings (who have all passed) grew up cooking from scratch, using ingredients grown on their farm in Muskogee, Okla. 

After being separated by distance for over 10 years, the sisters were reunited for the first time on April 10. 

An employee at Rose’s Brookdale senior living community in Sarasota, Fla., connected the sisters with Wish of a Lifetime, a nonprofit helping seniors fulfill their late-in-life desires. The foundation, which has a partnership with Brookdale, organized the reunion at Rubye’s Rhode Island nursing home and paid for the travel arrangements.  - See more at: http://nigeriana.org/blog/68656.html#sthash.O17DqsFw.dpuf
To live a long and happy life, just listen to sisters Rubye Cox, Ruth Branum and Rose Shloss, who are each over 100 years old. 

So how exactly did the women – who survived the Great Depression and the World Wars and were witness to the dawn of electricity, among other things – live this long? 

“My motto in life has been, ‘I would rather wear out than rust out,’ ” Branum, 104, tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.  - See more at: http://nigeriana.org/blog/68656.html#sthash.O17DqsFw.dpuf

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