Search for: Horses

2881 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 86.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… our horses for miles had to plow through snow very deep, but on we came, feeling confident that our mission was of God. Last Monday we could get no food that was …

2883 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 105.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… or horse, but a goat, harnessed up just like a little horse. I thought if Willie had seen this, it would have pleased him so much. Only think, a goat drawing a wagon …

2884 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 106.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… little horse and carriage I ever saw.

2885 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 107.2 (Ellen Gould White)

From Cheyenne [Wyoming] the engines toiled up, up the summit against the most fearful wind. Two iron horses are slowly dragging the cars up the mountain.

2886 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 113.6 (Ellen Gould White)

… his horses to a sleigh and took Mary [Loughborough], Edson, and myself over the logway and over the bad going ten miles to the plank road. The road is very bad and …

2887 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 115.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… . The horses went up to their backs in drifts. We got out, lightened the sleigh, and again plowed through the snow, while it was steadily raining. After this we had …

2889 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 117.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… two horses and a sleigh, but it rained for twenty-four hours, and the snow was fast disappearing. My husband thought the journey must be given up. My mind could …

2890 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 118.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… the horses. Then took a little luncheon, and in one hour were on our way again to Monterey [Michigan]. The plank road is very rough, but for ten miles the road is very …

2891 “I’d Like To Ask Sister White ...”, p. 120.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… the horses, no oats, no water. They charged us fifty cents for sitting before their fire and being annoyed with the scent of tobacco. I was glad to go out again …

2892 Over My Shoulder, p. 18.3 (Ella May White Robinson)

… . A horse, cow, and some poultry went with the place. In fact, almost everything required to make it a nearly self-supporting home for a large family was ready at …

2893 Over My Shoulder, p. 20.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

… , by horse and buggy to Lake Goguac, three miles out of Battle Creek, in search of a certain young woman who was cooking for patients at the Sanitarium’s lakeside …

2894 Over My Shoulder, p. 27.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

… playing horse most of the time. And there are two little girls that talk Spanish. They have lived some years in Mexico, and there they only heard the Spanish …

2895 Over My Shoulder, p. 74.1 (Ella May White Robinson)

… the horse and cow, and kept things around the place looking spick and span. Miss Davis was seated at the opposite end of the table. Miss Campbell was there, of …

2896 Over My Shoulder, p. 77.4 (Ella May White Robinson)

… the horse and cow and chickens and keep the place in order?’ So that’s what Willie is doing. Your grandmother pays him sufficient to keep the family from dire …

2897 Over My Shoulder, p. 80.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

… the horses for her, and I thought it great fun.

2898 Over My Shoulder, p. 85.3 (Ella May White Robinson)

… her horse-drawn carriage nearly every afternoon. In the homes they visited they sometimes found distressing cases of sickness. Many of the patients they …

2899 Over My Shoulder, p. 85.4 (Ella May White Robinson)

… her horse and carriage to assist the students in conducting Sunday Bible classes.

2900 Over My Shoulder, p. 93.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

… riding horse and accompany the messenger to the home of the sick one; if in the daytime, Grandma would sometimes go with her in the carriage. At one such home …