Search for: milk

3321 The Present Truth, vol. 14 April 28, 1898, page 261 paragraph 6

… and milk without money and without price.... Incline your ear, and come unto Me.” Isa. lv. 1-3. This Gospel invitation is repeated by the Saviour in the flesh, saying …

3322 The Present Truth, vol. 14 May 12, 1898, page 290 paragraph 4

… and milk without money and without price.” Isa. lv. 1. “And the Spirit and the Bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And …

3323 The Present Truth, vol. 14 June 2, 1898, page 338 paragraph 1

… with milk and honey; and this is the fruit of it.”

3324 The Present Truth, vol. 14 June 2, 1898, page 338 paragraph 6

… with milk and honey. Only rebel not ye against the Lord, neither fear ye the people of the land; for they are bread for us; for their defence is departed from them …

3325 The Present Truth, vol. 14 June 16, 1898, page 370 paragraph 9

… sincere milk of the Word,” in order that we may be filled with righteousness.

3326 The Present Truth, vol. 14 July 14, 1898, page 433 paragraph 4

… and milk without money and without price.” Isa. Iv. 1.

3327 The Present Truth, vol. 14 September 8, 1898, page 574 paragraph 12

… and milk before use, to use no fruit, and to be sure that all food is sufficiently cooked.

3328 The Present Truth, vol. 14 September 22, 1898, page 606 paragraph 30

… the milk supply has suffered, both in quality and quantity.

3329 The Present Truth, vol. 14 October 6, 1898, page 640 paragraph 8

… infectious milk was pouring into our cities,” there were no powers under which this milk could be seized, of the supply stopped. As to meat affected with tuberculosis …

3330 The Present Truth, vol. 14 October 6, 1898, page 640 paragraph 9

… was milk white and luminous. The sea for miles looked like a great white sheet, and there was no mist at all, what seemed at a distance to be fog being only the light …

3331 The Present Truth, vol. 14 October 20, 1898, page 669 paragraph 1

… infectious milk is pouring into our cities, and that the matter is true one of urgency.” This milk may pass all the tests required, and yet may be spreading disease …

3332 The Present Truth, vol. 14 October 20, 1898, page 670 paragraph 15

-A fine of ?50 has been imposed on demand for selling putrid condensed milk. It was marked as unfit for human use, but he obliterated the marks, and tried to dispose of it.

3333 The Present Truth, vol. 14 December 29, 1898, page 829 paragraph 18

… of milk and meat, also through expectoration which dries, turns into particles of dust, and so circulates in any atmosphere. The Association also expects …

3334 The Present Truth, vol. 15 January 5, 1899, page 16 paragraph 16

… condensed milk. The item of condensed milk is significant for it has recently been stated that this can be utilised for various forms of confectionery, whatever …

3335 The Present Truth, vol. 15 March 30, 1899, page 206 paragraph 16

… of milk, are dying from exhaustion. The so-called bread obtainable has no nutritive qualities, and produces “all the symptoms of poisoning.” The peasantry, having …

3336 The Present Truth, vol. 15 March 30, 1899, page 206 paragraph 17

… condensed milk be required to print on their labels the actual strength of the article, as compared with cow’s milk. The chairman of the Public Health Committee …

3337 The Present Truth, vol. 15 May 4, 1899, page 275 paragraph 13

9. “Whom (say they) would He teach knowledge; and to whom would He impart instruction? “To such as are weaned from the milk, as are kept back from the breast?

3338 The Present Truth, vol. 15 May 4, 1899, page 277 paragraph 2

milk of the Word,”-say contemptuously, “Whom will He teach knowledge? and whom will He make to understand the message? them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn …

3339 The Present Truth, vol. 15 May 25, 1899, page 334 paragraph 14

… condensed milk preserved by means of wood alcohol is poisonous, and that this material is used for embalming bodies. It has also been discovered that tarred …

3340 The Present Truth, vol. 15 July 27, 1899, page 478 paragraph 17

… for milk alone. Nearly 12,000 of these “milk machines” spend their lives in sheds, and hardly ever see daylight, so to speak; 4,000 horses are engaged in delivering …