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General Conference Bulletin, vol. 4 - Contents
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    A VERY PLEASANT OCCASION

    The entire General Conference delegation, many of them accompanied by their wives, were entertained at dinner, by invitation of Dr. J. H. Kellogg, Sunday, April 14, at the Sanitarium. Fully three hundred persons sat down to a dinner of the most toothsome delicacies, consisting of grains and vegetables exquisitely served, followed by delicious fruits and assorted nuts. Everybody seemed to engage in the task before him, as if he enjoyed it. And why should it not be so? It was a dinner fit for any potentate of earth. One remarked that he did not see why anyone, with such food in abundance, should desire to gorge himself with the flesh of a dead animal. All in hearing agreed that such a menu was far preferable to the old system of meat diet. It was indeed a pleasant occasion, and one to which many will doubtless look back to as an excellent demonstration of what a proper diet should consist.GCB April 15, 1901, page 225.7

    “Of all responsibilities resting on man, fellowship with Christ is the weightiest trust and the greatest honor.”GCB April 15, 1901, page 225.8

    The gate of human opportunity is turning on its hinges, and the light is breaking through its chinks: possibilities are opening, and human nature is pushing forward toward them.—Emerson.GCB April 15, 1901, page 225.9

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