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1 EGW 4BIO 380.4 (1983 Ellen G. White: The Australian Years: 1891-1900 (vol. 4))
The full W. C. White letter appears in Selected Messages 3:453-461, as a portion of appendix C.
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2 EGW 3BIO 123.5 (1984 Ellen G. White: The Lonely Years: 1876-1891 (vol. 3))
The account of the vision as it appears in Life Sketches of Ellen G. White brings to view James White, his fidelity and experience:
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3 EGW 4BIO 65.5 (1983 Ellen G. White: The Australian Years: 1891-1900 (vol. 4))
Then she put her finger on what appears to have been the cause behind the situation she was dealing with:
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4 EGW WV 254.7 (2000 Ellen White: Woman of Vision)
This she did shortly after the session closed, in the 26-page statement “Looking Back at Minneapolis” ( Manuscript 24, 1888 ), a major portion of which appears in Selected Messages 3:163-177 .
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5 EGW 1BIO 264.6 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
George I. Butler remembered the meeting and identified the man as Heman Churchill, of Stowe, Vermont, a man whose name appears often in reports of the progress of the cause. Butler writes:
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6 EGW 1BIO 354.1 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
Building on this, Everts entered into a well-reasoned conclusion that “it appears ... that the righteous dead have been under investigative judgment since 1844.”— Ibid. He declared:
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7 EGW 2BIO 357.3 (1986 Ellen G. White: The Progressive Years: 1862-1876 (vol. 2))
Their two children are, it appears to me, the best children, the most quiet and peaceable, I ever saw. The mother controls them in a quiet way, without noise, severity, or bluster.
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8 EGW 3BIO 74.2 (1984 Ellen G. White: The Lonely Years: 1876-1891 (vol. 3))
She is an editor. Writers are plenty, while good editors are scarce. It is in preparing, selecting, and arranging the thoughts of others that editorial talent appears.— The Review and Herald, January 31, 1878 .
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9 EGW 3BIO 245.1 (1984 Ellen G. White: The Lonely Years: 1876-1891 (vol. 3))
Meat seldom appears on my table; for weeks at a time I would not taste it, and after my appetite had been trained, I grew stronger, and could do better work.
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10 EGW 1BIO 122.5 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
Her eyes are always open, but she does not wink; her head is raised, and she is looking upward, not with a vacant stare, but with a pleasant expression, only differing from the normal in that she appears to be looking intently at some distant object.
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