Search for: milk
3641 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 15, 1895, page 170 paragraph 10
… the milk while the milking is being done. This is why milk does not agree with many people. Their stomachs have not the strength to destroy the germs and digest …
3642 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 15, 1895, page 170 paragraph 11
… with milk, as with water, is to boil it, or at least to heat it to 160 degrees. When the milk is heated to this temperature for fifteen or twenty minutes, it does not …
3643 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 15, 1895, page 170 paragraph 12
… of milk, but for gauging the heat of living rooms, of water for baths, and for numerous practical purposes. A suitable one may be procured at from fifteen to twenty …
3644 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 17, 1895, page 184 paragraph 1
… unsterilized milk and butter may we not expect that when a severe strain is brought upon us, or when some contagious disease is prevalent, the body will be …
3645 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 17, 1895, page 194 paragraph 11
Question. — Is it harmful to a weak stomach to eat milk and vegetables together?
3646 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 17, 1895, page 194 paragraph 12
… , while milk, under right conditions, will digest in one hour; but if both are in the stomach at the same time, the milk will be retained until the cabbage is digested …
3647 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 17, 1895, page 196 paragraph 9
… of milk sometimes produces a coated tongue and a bad taste in the mouth. Milk is not the most wholesome food for adults on account of the shape of the stomach …
3648 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 25, 1895, page 342 paragraph 11
… . of milk are daily sterilized for the table or made into sterilized butter, etc. The Nurses’ Dormitory was the next objective point; it is a four-story building …
3649 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 March 4, 1895, page 456 paragraph 12
… : butter, milk, eggs, potatoes, cabbages, bananas, peaches, etc.; and the only things that we shall probably have to pay for will be the butter and milk. We have the advantage …
3650 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 March 5, 1895, page 465 paragraph 4
… , and milking them as he supplies his customers. An odder spectacle than this is the sight of mares being driven through the streets, and milked in the same way …
3651 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 3 July 1, 1900, page 156 paragraph 6
… sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby: if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious. To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of …
3652 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 3 July 1, 1900, page 162 paragraph 1
… and milk without money and without price.” “Thus saith the Lord, Keep ye judgment, and do justice: for my salvation is near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed …
3653 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 4 April 22, 1901, page 394 paragraph 6
… and milk, but that is not so generally, so far as I have found it. Scattered through England are vegetarian societies with which are connected men of wealth …
3654 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 4 April 22, 1901, page 397 paragraph 17
… you milk the goats over the fence? Because here is some money I wish to give, though I am not a Seventh-day Adventist.”
3655 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 4 April 23, 1901, page 440 paragraph 6
… of milk I took doesn’t agree with me. That vegetarian dinner was not the best thing for me. He attributes it to some small thing. He says I overworked and exhausted …
3656 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 5 March 30, 1903, page 7 paragraph 9
… with milk and honey; and this is the fruit of it.”
3657 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 5 March 30, 1903, page 8 paragraph 7
… 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; their defense is departed from them, and …
3658 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 5 April 13, 1903, page 188 paragraph 9
… to milk awhile, and get the cream. If everybody would try to help the General Conference Association, instead of seeing how much they could get out of the General …
3659 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 21, 1909, page 105 paragraph 16
… the milk, and drawn from the breasts: for precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little: for …
3660 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 24, 1909, page 137 paragraph 4
… 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: their defense is departed from them, and …