Search for: White
78901 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 160.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , James White, visiting there, said to the little group, “Brethren, if you are faithful to the work, God will yet raise up quite a company to observe the truth in Battle …
78902 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 162.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… James White to come to Battle Creek, and who induced his three friends, Palmer, Smith, and Kellogg, to go in with him in the investment which built the first owned …
78903 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 163.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… another-White, Smith, Loughborough, Andrews, Byington-they were drawn as by a magnet to Battle Creek, the patriarch of them all, the pioneer of Michigan, came …
78904 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 166.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Mrs. White near the end of his life, of his daughter who shared his home. But in 1865 he reports the death of his “only son” Joseph, at sea, at the age of thirty-five. The …
78905 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 166.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… G. White, the strong-willed and conscientious Bates had framed his own health regimen, casting off the habits of drinking spiritous liquors, the use of tobacco …
78906 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 167.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Ellen White, Edson, Loughborough, Andrews, Smith, Waggoner, Bourdeau, and many others were victims of grievous physical disorders before the health reform …
78907 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 167.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… James White, in 1865, was so sorely smitten with his most severe stroke of paralysis, when Loughborough almost immediately came into danger of the same disaster …
78908 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 168.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… James White intimates in his addenda to Bates’ autobiography, the old veteran listened to his brethren when they suggested retirement, it is not apparent …
78909 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 169.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
IT WAS in the house of A. Hilliard, at Otsego, Michigan, June 6, 1.863, wrote Ellen G. White, “that the great subject of health reform was opened before me in vision.” Ellen G. White in The Review and Herald, October 8, 1867
78910 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 171.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Sister White had her vision. The dimensions of either sitting room or parlor seemed too small to hold the company of workers then present, and perhaps the …
78911 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 172.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Ellen White, drove the thirty miles to be with them over the week end. It was in the midst of the Civil War; it was just after the formation of the General Conference …
78912 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 172.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Mrs. White sometimes resorted for recuperation. So they went this time to Brother and Sister Hilliard’s. As the Sabbath came on, the workers in the tent company …
78913 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 173.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
“Sister White was asked to lead in prayer at family worship. She did so in a most wonderful manner. Elder White was kneeling a short distance from her. While praying …
78914 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 173.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Sister White, expanding and illuminating the principles of health, the practices of hygiene, and the rational cure of disease. It is a precious legacy that …
78915 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 173.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , James White was laid low with his most severe attack of paralysis, which invalided him for two years. Ellen White, bearing up bravely during that ordeal, while …
78916 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 174.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Mrs. White started their work in poor health, back in 1846; she a consumptive, he a dyspeptic. They ignorantly and devotedly transgressed some of the laws of …
78917 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 174.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… White, John Andrews, or Uriah Smith. But Bates went further, and left off the use of tea and coffee. In this his example was early followed by the Whites, who …
78918 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 175.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Mrs. White’s own habits. She was a great meat eater; she could not endure bread; without the third meal in the evening she felt weak and faint. Yet immediately …
78919 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 176.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Mrs. White wrote of it: “The medical missionary work is as the right arm to the third angel’s message which must be proclaimed to a fallen world.... In this work the …
78920 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 176.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Ellen White, then living in Battle Creek, Michigan, were stricken with pneumonia. The medical practice of the time was to shut the patient away from all outside …