’Atta Boy
March 22, 2018[…] what time he ought to close his window. It was going to be a tongue-hanger today. But for now, the morning was still dewy and bearable. He pulled his half-glasses up to his nose. […]
[…] what time he ought to close his window. It was going to be a tongue-hanger today. But for now, the morning was still dewy and bearable. He pulled his half-glasses up to his nose. […]
The Widower Eric W Jepson Four years had passed since Mary had died; Torrance still wasn’t com fortable dating and yet here he was, getting married. Five years with Mary may have been too […]
Badge and Bryant Braunhil were first cousins, but they could have passed for fraternal twins, having—both of them—bright blue eyes, big grins, and unkempt blond hair. They lived in Linroth, a Mormon town in […]
[…] but in a non-Western, non-Christian culture these difficulties are frequently of greater magnitude and require more ef fort to reach a solution. One of the major problems facing the Church in Asia is that […]
[…] was squat and white with a round, tower like appurtenance on the front. It was once mistaken for a dairy, but I think now it may have been a true community center. There was […]
[…] tour of the fallen cities that were built on the soil of the American continent long be fore our more recent ancestors so rudely invaded these shores. Nevertheless, there are flaws. I mention them […]
[…] which the Mormon health code was received and its establishment many decades later as a binding requirement for good standing in the Church. A third essay recently received provides a natural and informative transition […]
[…] revelation received 4 February 1831, Edward Partridge was called to be the first bishop in the newly formed Church of Jesus Christ. Before that time, the Church’s structure consisted of elders, priests, teachers, and […]
[…] background or youth, or his other feelings about the Church. He had served as president of the Fort Klamath Branch of the Klamath Falls Oregon Stake, on the high councils in Roosevelt, Utah, and […]
[…] Leonard J. Arrington, then Church Historian, as general editor, and Deseret Book Company as publisher. Although the format for editing and publishing this monumental work has changed, volumes once intended for the series have […]