Search for: Horses
9761 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 February 22, 1899, page 54 paragraph 26
… four-horse power boat, with a cabin. Captain Christiansen, from Norway, was placed in command, and Brother Fintel, who has been a pilot in the Hamburg harbor for …
9762 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 February 23, 1899, page 57 paragraph 6
… , his horse ran away, and he met with an accident which resulted in his almost immediate death. Had he lived until the April following, he would have been sixty …
9763 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 February 23, 1899, page 66 paragraph 29
… . Their horses are small but very strong, faithful, and easily kept. The people are sober, thoughtful, honest, and religiously inclined. Nearly all belong to the …
9764 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 2, 1899, page 134 paragraph 17
… a horse and an ear of corn is that in the corn is stored up the energy that the horse is to use. If you put corn in the stove, it will burn; and out on the Western prairies …
9765 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 2, 1899, page 134 paragraph 19
… a horse, and the animal gets energy from the corn. The body is a machine, differing from other machines only in that it is the best and most economical machine …
9766 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 2, 1899, page 135 paragraph 6
… a horse, there will be ashes and smoke. The nose is the chimney of the horse; and smoke is being poured out all the time, and it is a deadly poison, and the very same …
9767 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 3, 1899, page 142
… Three horses, 17. 0. 0 Nineteen head of cattle, 60. 0. 0 Four dozen fowls, 3. 0. 0 Twenty-three swarms bees, 23. 0. 0 Appliances for apiary, 5. 14. 6 Growing crops in garden, 15 …
9768 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 3, 1899, page 144 paragraph 1
… his horse, ‘If I ever get low enough down to eat such stuff as that I will shave my head and paint it red like a turkey-buzzard.’ And I have often wondered where people …
9769 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 7, 1899, page 167 paragraph 54
… no horses, nor wagons, nor roads in that country; so the first thing was to get half a dozen donkeys and a dozen boys, and thus take the material across the ridges …
9770 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 8 March 7, 1899, page 171 paragraph 6
“Though the cart creaks, it will get home with its load, and the old horse, broken-kneed as he is, will do a sight of work yet.”
9771 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 11, 1895, page 91 paragraph 4
… , and horses, etc. which they can find, and take them to a place where the whole animal is rendered and utilized for some purpose or another. The skin is used for …
9772 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 11, 1895, page 96 paragraph 6
… on horse-back, so we are dependent on boats. We need a missionary boat of from thirty to forty tons that could be used in the distribution of books and tracts …
9773 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 13, 1895, page 129 paragraph 9
… , and horses, and chariots, and slaves, and souls of men.”
9774 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 15, 1895, page 155 paragraph 6
… in horse-racing, in betting, and various similar lines, is increasing the poverty of the country, and deepening the misery that is the sure result of this kind …
9775 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 15, 1895, page 155 paragraph 8
… , the horse-racing, the theater-going, the great importance placed upon holidays, all is a species of idolatry, a sacrifice upon idol altars.
9776 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 15, 1895, page 156 paragraph 4
… as horse-racing, betting, and the offering of prizes. The very atmosphere of these cities is full of poisonous malaria. The freedom of the individual is not …
9777 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 21, 1895, page 274 paragraph 2
… provided horses and soldiers, and sent him out of the village. But the work continues there, and one after another is added to the Lord.
9778 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 25, 1895, page 342 paragraph 11
… -five horse power, six of which are in constant use, and the dynamos which furnish the light for all the premises came next. Then the creamery, where twelve bbls …
9779 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 March 3, 1895, page 437 paragraph 6
… finest horses, of one color; and he, drawn by these, with all the spoil and the captives in his train, would parade up and down the streets of Rome, around about, everywhere …
9780 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 December 1895, page 639 paragraph 4
… theaters, horse-races, gambling hells, and the highest excitement prevails; yet probation’s hour is fast closing, and every case is about to be eternally decided …