Search for: 38

2421 Over My Shoulder, p. 38.8 (Ella May White Robinson)

After a time Mary found a way to supplement the family income. As she became acquainted with patients at the Sanitarium, she arranged to give day care to their …

2422 Over My Shoulder, p. 38.9 (Ella May White Robinson)

Dr. Kellogg had built a commodious house in the oak grove near our Kendall Street home and transferred his large family of orphan children to it, along with …

2423 Sister White, p. 38.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

So James White set out to print a little paper. Down in the State of Connecticut lived a good brother named Albert Belden. He had a farm at Rocky Hill, near Middletown …

2424 Sister White, p. 38.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

There was also a sister, a young woman named Clarissa Bonfoey, who had some furniture, enough to set up housekeeping with, and she offered to use this furniture …

2425 Sister White, p. 38.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

He had no money to hire a printer, but he stepped out by faith and wrote. Then he went to a printer in Middletown, who agreed to print the paper and receive payment …

2426 Sister White, p. 38.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

It was eight miles from Rocky Hill to Middletown. Having no horse then, James White walked those eight miles time and again, to see to the printing of the paper …

2427 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 38.1 (Ella May White Robinson)

The last meetings they held were happy ones. The troublemakers had been subdued, and the meek followers of Jesus thanked Ellen Harmon and the Jordans for coming so far to help them and their young preacher bring proper order into their meetings.

2428 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 38.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

At the last meeting in Orrington, Ellen was informed in a short vision that her work there was finished and that she must return to Portland at once. Otherwise …

2429 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 38.3 (Ella May White Robinson)

Early the next morning James White, Ellen, and the Jordans got into a rowboat with a friend of James’s and paddled down the river to Belfast. There Ellen and …

2430 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 38.4 (Ella May White Robinson)

James couldn’t help feeling anxious about Ellen. She was so young and so frail, and surrounded by many dangers! How much she needed someone to go with her and …

2431 There Shines A Light, p. 38.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

As the years went on, these exhibitions of the open vision grew less frequent, until about 1884 they ceased. But not less really or frequently, thereafter, did …

2432 There Shines A Light, p. 38.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

Why this change? Because, in that early beginning time, there was necessity for a dramatic impression to be made upon the minds of believers and opponents …

2433 There Shines A Light, p. 38.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

During the year 1848, a series of six “Sabbath conferences,” as they were called, was held by James and Ellen White and Joseph Bates, with various helpers, in New …

2434 A Gift of Light, p. 38.1 (Roger W. Coon)

Sensing the situation immediately, Ellen White abruptly asked him, “Sam, would you like to come to my kitchen and have me show you how to prepare these things?”

2435 A Gift of Light, p. 38.2 (Roger W. Coon)

“Oh, yes,” he quickly and gratefully responded.

2436 A Gift of Light, p. 38.3 (Roger W. Coon)

“Then come here tomorrow afternoon at 2:00.”

2437 A Gift of Light, p. 38.4 (Roger W. Coon)

He did, and he continued to come the next day, and the next, and the next. Then, when the lessons were finished, Ellen White asked him if he would like a job as apprentice …

2438 A Gift of Light, p. 38.5 (Roger W. Coon)

One day Ellen White entered her kitchen and told Sam, “Pack your bags.” Wondering if this meant that she was dismissing him from her service, Sam asked her why …

2439 A Gift of Light, p. 38.6 (Roger W. Coon)

Paradise Valley had once been a lush semitropical area worthy of its name. But near the turn of the century a drought set in that continued for eight or nine …

2440 A Gift of Light, p. 38.7 (Roger W. Coon)

The 50-room defunct spa had cost $25,000 in construction costs alone, but Mrs. White was able to purchase the 20 acres and the building for $4,000. (She borrowed …