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9
21.
ibid.
22. Denslow, op. cit., p.82
23.
ibid.
24.
ibid.
25.
Biography of Americans.
26. Sutton, Antony C. America’s Secret Establishment.
Billington, MT: Liberty House, p. 84.
27. Boylan, Henry. A Dictionary of Irish Biography. NY: St. Martins Press, 1988, p. 345.
28. Mullins, Eustice. The World Order. Staunton, VA: Ezra Pound Institute of Civilization,
1985, p.
92
.
29. The Fabians.
30.
ibid.
31. Boylan, Henry. A Dictionary of Irish Biography. NY: St. Martins Press, 1988, p. 345.
32. Springmeier, Fritz. The WT & the Masons , pp. 9, 215.
33. Author’s geneological research in Hopkins Co. TX history.
34.
Early Convention
Report
35.
Evans, Richard L. A Century of Mormonism in
Great Britian. Salt
Lake City, UT: Publisher’s Press, 1937,
pp. 34-35.
36.
Gibbons, Francis M. John Taylor Mormon Philosopher Prophet of God. Salt
Lake City, UT:
Deseret Books,
1985, p. 129.
37. Utah Historical Quarterly , 1941,
Salt
Lake CIty, pp. 190-211.
38.
Boylan, op. cit., p. 344
39.
ibid., and Black,
George F. The Surnames of Scotland. NY: The NY Public
Library, 1962, p. 705.
QUESTIONING
OLD ASSUMPTIONS
There was enough circumstantial
evidence to lead one to question several assumptions.
I
began to
question the assumption that the W. T. presidents were unconnected
to each other. Another
supposition that was questionable
was that the WT Society did not have a hidden agenda.
C.T. RUSSELL’S
STORY
Once there was a Jewish family whose name was Roessel. They lived in early 17th century Germany.
They moved to a country called Scotland. There they re-spelled the name Russell. They took on the
ways of their new homeland. The English tried to settle Protestants from Scotland in Ireland in order
to control the Irish. When the opportunity
opened up to go to the Emerald Island (Ireland) with the
Scottish settlers who went to the plantation Ulster they went. It is possible, but not known for sure
that they learned to know the Rutherfords either in Scotland or Ireland. Scotland repeatedly appears
as the source of much of the religious heresy connected with the Power. That C . T. Russell’s family
were in Scotland for a period, and also from the German states which seem to be a hot bed for Jewish
Satanism may be only a coincidence and then again it might be a clue to understanding
the origin of
the Watchtower Society. This Author’s previous book
The Watchtower and the Masons
tells the story
how the Arian heresy began at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland and spread to the the
Presbyterians
of the Synod of Ulster. The book gives this Author’s reasons for believing that the C .
T. Russell’s family in northern Ireland were Arian in belief before coming to the U. S. and chances
are they were involved with Freemasonry also.
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