Search for: James White
8381 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 162.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… getting 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 …
8382 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 166.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… time James and Ellen White first became acquainted with them, in 1845, he had reduced his diet to bread and water, on which, surprisingly enough, he flourished …
8383 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 167.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… days. James and Ellen White, Edson, Loughborough, Andrews, Smith, Waggoner, Bourdeau, and many others were victims of grievous physical disorders before the …
8384 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 167.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… . When 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 …
8385 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 168.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , as James White intimates in his addenda to Bates’ autobiography, the old veteran listened to his brethren when they suggested retirement, it is not apparent …
8386 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 172.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , including James and 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 …
8387 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 173.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… 1865, 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 …
8388 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 174.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… of James White at least often worrying over the problems that continually confronted them. This instruction from the Lord struck at the foundation of all …
8389 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 …
8390 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 176.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… . But James White happened to see in a newspaper an article by Dr. James C. Jackson, giving unorthodox but sensible directions for treatment of the disease, then …
8391 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 178.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… upon James White, seemed to forbid his letting up for even a moment, and to quite a degree this was also the experience of his principal colaborers.
8392 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 179.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… West, James White was stricken down at his home in Battle Creek, with a severe attack of paralysis, which prostrated him physically and mentally. It was his …
8393 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 180.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… of James White there developed a sharp though friendly difference of opinion and conviction between Dr. Jackson and Mrs. White as to treatment.
8394 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 180.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… of James White he felt that his malady was due in no small degree to his intense devotion to a religious idea. He therefore advised that he completely forget …
8395 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 181.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… as James White had always been, both physically and mentally, he sank in discouragement under the regimen at Dansville; and when they had been there three …
8396 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 189.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… . White’s vision in Otsego which pointed out the duty to teach the church and the world the principles of health and Christian ministry. James White and …
8397 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 190.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
James White, though elected that spring to the presidency of the General Conference, was too ill to do much promotion work. John N. Loughborough, then president …
8398 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 193.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… of James White and other parents, start a private school. This developed until it was taken under the wing of the General Conference, and the first building …
8399 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 194.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Creek. James White had been ill for sixteen months. Stricken down by paralysis in August of 1865, he had, after a month of unavailing home treatments, been taken …
8400 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 196.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , with James White presiding at least in the beginning over the committee. For he recovered, with strenuous labor on the part of his wife, who gave him daily water …