Search for: Horses

961 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 130, 1897, par. 12

… games, horse racing, and intemperance of every description. The fever swells every vein, and the heart throbs with the restless tide of unhallowed emotion …

962 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 138, 1897, par. 23

… angry horse seeking to break loose and rush over the face of the whole earth, bearing destruction and death in its path.

963 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 145, 1897, par. 36

… the horses in drawing brick and sand and various things. Brother James is now able to do all we have to do. Therefore I shall tell Brother Connell that we have …

964 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 149a, 1897, par. 6

… and horses are dying with hunger and thirst.

965 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 149a, 1897, par. 27

… my horse and phaeton nine, ten, twelve miles to speak in the evening. There was not a place where I could be accommodated and I have ridden back, getting to my bed …

966 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 161, 1897, par. 2

… our horses and carriages through the thick growth of young trees—wattle, ti tree, black oak, and Australian gum—over longs and around logs, breaking down the …

967 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 164, 1897, par. 7

… the horse comes to piazza, they will both run to grandma, their two pairs of little arms stretched out, saying “Gegee, Gegee.” This is about all the words they speak …

968 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 167, 1897, par. 19

… accommodate horses, carriages, and feed for stock.

969 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 167, 1897, par. 21

… the horses between the school and me. We shall have a severe time of it. The _____ they use will be broken and injured, and the school must stand the expense of getting …

970 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 167, 1897, par. 31

… the horse dicker, the strangest piece of business I ever heard of being done. Tonight we have this matter investigated—Brother Lacey, Brethren Wooden, Connell …

971 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 168, 1897, par. 1

… the horse was taken up and discussed. There is the same kind of dealing in all the work of Brother Lawrence, but he is, I am thinking, beginning to see things more …

972 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 176, 1897, par. 5

… the horses are hitched up they run to me with arms stretched out saying, “Gee, gee, gee, gee.” They must have hold of the lines. If they have hold of the end of them they …

973 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 186, 1897, par. 3

… for horses. We met there Mr. Pringle, who asked why we did not come out and get blackberries; said there were plenty of them about his place. It was cloudy and we …

974 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 186, 1897, par. 12

… my horse and cart to move their goods. The horse, hands, and cart, were employed constantly in moving your things, and I told Connell they simply could not have …

975 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 190, 1897, par. 3

… of horses before the surrey to meet her dear brother whom the Lord has spared to us, Brother and Sister Herbert Lacey, and Crissie from Tasmania with her boy …

976 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 195, 1897, par. 6

… of horses and cows, but there is not any aptitude in him as manager. He has been a continual worriment to me. I think our brethren, many of them, feel as I do in the …

977 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 198, 1897, par. 4

… our horses and carriage that they just screamed with delight. They are now nearly eighteen months old.

978 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Lt 216, 1897, par. 4

… the horse Lawrence sold to him. He becomes very passionate. He is not a converted man, and yet he places himself in as high a place as he can get. These things have …

979 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Ms 5, 1897, par. 2

… a horse by the Board to Brother Lawrence. The facts in reference to it were laid before me. I thought that we had better have this matter understood, so that it …

980 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 12 (1897), Ms 5, 1897, par. 3

A statement made by Brother Hare in regard to the sale of the horse was then read, after which Sister White said: