Search for: The Estates 1
41 Manuscript Releases, vol. 20 [Nos. 1420-1500], p. 1.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… her estate. As the years passed, these Trustees and their successors became increasingly aware of the potential usefulness to the church of this gold mine …
42 Manuscript Releases, vol. 21 [Nos. 1501-1598], p. 1.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… her estate. As the years passed, these trustees and their successors became increasingly aware of the potential usefulness to the church of this gold mine …
43 A Place Called Oakwood
… the Beasley estate in Huntsville, Alabama, for $8,000 in 1895. This land was expressly bought to be the site of the Oakwood Industrial School and the acreage …
44 A Place Called Oakwood, p. 174.6 (Ellen Gould White)
Spalding, A.W. Lights and Shades in the Black Belt. (unpublished book manuscript) Washington, D.C.: Ellen G. White Estate File: DF3471-1.
45 Testimony for the Church — No. 30, p. 191.3 (Ellen Gould White)
1. The value of all the property of the Association, including real estate, personal, and the value of its lists of subscribers and copyrights of books, is not less than $180,000.
46 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1), p. 14 (Arthur Lacey White)
… . White Estate Document File EGW Ellen G. White Ev Evangelism EW Early Writings GC The Great Controversy GCB General Conference Bulletin GSAM The Great Second …
47 Ellen G. White: The Progressive Years: 1862-1876 (vol. 2), p. 18.1 (Arthur Lacey White)
The vision was given at the setting of the sun, Friday evening; she wrote it out shortly after. In the White Estate files is the handwritten draft of the document …
48 Ellen G. White: The Lonely Years: 1876-1891 (vol. 3), p. 413.9 (Arthur Lacey White)
… by the Ellen G. White Estate, a fifty-page section, “Christ Our Righteousness,” in Selected Messages, Book 1, published in 1958, and the 122-page Faith and Works, published …
49 Ellen G. White: The Australian Years: 1891-1900 (vol. 4), p. 142.1 (Arthur Lacey White)
… on the acceptance of the Sabbath he lost his position. The failure of the banks climaxed the situation. The man who bought the furniture at auction offered …
50 Ellen White: Woman of Vision, p. 306.7 (Arthur Lacey White)
… has the appearance of a river, for it is a wide, deep stream” [ Letter 82, 1894 ]). The estate was attractive at the low price of $3.00 an acre (1 hectare) (high-priced land …
51 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. ADMINISTRATOR.2 (Noah Webster)
1. a man who, by virtue of a commission from the Ordinary, Surrogate, Court of Probate, or other proper authority, has the charge of the goods and estate of one dying without a will.
52 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. ATTACH.2 (Noah Webster)
… of the person by a civil process; being never used for the arrest of a criminal. It is applied also to the taking of goods and real estate by an officer, by virtue …
53 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. ATTACHMENT.2 (Noah Webster)
1. A taking of the person, goods or estate by a writ or precept in a civil action, to secure a debt or demand.
54 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BENEFICIAL.2 (Noah Webster)
1. Receiving or entitled to have or receive advantage, use or benefit; as the beneficial owner of an estate.
55 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CENSUS.2 (Noah Webster)
… and estates, their quantity and quality, with the wives, children, domestics, tenants, and slaves of each citizen. Hence the word signifies this enumeration …
56 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONDITIONAL.2 (Noah Webster)
… if the donee shall die without such particular heirs as are specified, the estate shall revert to the donor. Hence it is a fee restrained to particular heirs …
57 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONSUMPTION.2 (Noah Webster)
1. The act of consuming; waste; destruction by burning, eating, devouring, scattering, dissipation, slow decay, or by passing away, as time; as the consumption of fuel, of food, of commodities or estate, of time, etc.
58 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CURATE.2 (Noah Webster)
… in the place of the incumbent, parson or vicar. He must be licenced by the bishop or ordinary, and having no fixed estate in the curacy, he may be removed at pleasure …
59 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. DAMAGE.2 (Noah Webster)
1. Any hurt, injury or harm to one’s estate; any loss of property sustained; any hinderance to the increase of property; or any obstruction to the success of an …
60 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. DEMAIN.2 (Noah Webster)
… , or estates held in villenage, from which sprung copyhold estates.