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PAGE FOUR
€lif f ananiwb Wihm
Established 1875 SOL 0. JOHNSON
By J H DEVEAUX 1889—1954
MRS. WILLA A. JOHNSON--Editor & Publisher
EZRA JOHNSON-............Asst, to Publisher
J. H. BUTLER...................Asso. Editor
9 W. GADSDEN....... .-Contributing Editor
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— ■ ...... TZ^=.-—-- • ........I— . — t
Entered as Second Class Matter at the Posl
Dfflce at Savannah. Ga., under the Act of
March 3, 1919.
“Prejudice is a social problem. Like
illiteracy, disease, and poverty, it has
causes that we must try to understand
if we are to work together to correct its
evils. It does not necessarily follow that if
we know the facts we all immediately
change our attitudes toward others, but
factual information is necessary for any
intelligent action. The scientific way of
thinking can help to teach the lesson that
mankind has never fully understood;
namely, that many races, many religions,
many nationalities can live together in un¬
derstanding and in peace.”
—Ethel J. Alpenfels.
A DRIVE FOR REGISTRATION
The decision of leaders to concentrate
on an effort to register three million Ne¬
gro voters in the South is recognition of
the fact that it is not enough to win bat¬
tles in the courts. If the effort is as suc¬
cessful as the drive to win cases in the
courts has been, one weakness which has
hampered the enjoyment of rights grant¬
ed by the Supreme Court will he over¬
come. This decision on the part of the
NAACP is in line with our belief that
there are things Negroes can do for them¬
selves that nobody else can do for them.
Registering to become a voter is one of
those things. It is generally conceded
that the dominance of southern politicians
in national as well as in local and state
government for 90 years, has been due
largely to the fact that Negroes have not
registered and voted, for well known rea¬
sons. This has been a considerable factor
in keeping the one-party system entrench¬
ed and a tradition, so that it was easy to
establish and maintain Democratic sen¬
iority in the Congress. Therefore u jt is to
be*expected that anything which threat¬
ens to breakdown tins dominance is ac¬
cepted as a call to politicians of the South
to fight to the last ditch. It is the reali¬
zation of the meaning of this threat that
lias sparked the opposition of southern
congressmen to the administration’s civil
rights bill.
To get 3,000,000 Negroes registered and
prewired to vote will not be an easy job
especially in the deep South states which
do not intend to obey the law. The gover¬
nor of Mississippi has already given notice
that the majority of Negroes in his state
are not ready to vote. This means that
we may not expect many more than 22.000
registered three years ago out of 522,000
that are eligible. The leaders of the move¬
ment have plans that will include for the
present Georgia, Virginia, sections of Mis¬
sissippi, South Carolina and North Caro¬
lina. An indication of the magnitude of
the job is this sample from Alabama: ten
counties in that state with a population of
33,608 Negroes registered only six of
them. In one county in Alabama it is re¬
quired that a Negro must have three white
men to certify as to his good character be¬
fore he can register. However, though
fear and intimidation will add to the dif¬
ficulty of the task, if all these who can
give valuable assistance will do so, a good
job can be done. There are communities
where there will be no trouble, rather
there are communities which will appreci¬
ate the importance of having larger num¬
bers of citizens anxious to assume the civic
responsibility which voting involves. The
Tribune urges everybody to lend a hand to
this effort.
“THE WHITE MAN S DURDEN”
The most reactionary, most intemperate
arid the most irresponsible newspaper pub¬
lished in the South, carried in a recent is¬
sue parts of a speech delivered in Congress
by Rep. James Davis of the Fifth Georgia
District, in which he laments that the Ne¬
gro in the South is the white man's burden
and implores the non-South to share it.
The editor comments in his most reaction¬
ary best which has to be read to be ap¬
preciated. We quote the following from
Rep. Davis’ speech:
“We have provided for the Negroes in
the South uncomplainingly, and ... the
great majority of them are in the South
. . . Now, if any obligation rests upon
white people to carry these burdens, it is
not an obligation which rests upon the
South alone.”
“If you want them treated better, take
your share of them, and deal with them in
your own States and in your own jurisdic¬
tions. . . . We have, known all through the
years that we have to carry the tax bur¬
den. We have carried it uncomplainingly,
and are now carrying it uncomplainingly
because we know that if the burden of edu¬
cating their own children were carried by
Negroes, they simply would not be edu¬
cated.”
In the first place, the speech carried out
National Advertising Representatives
Associated Publishers
31 West 46 Street
New York 36, New York
168 W. Washington St.
Chicago 2, 111.
Whaley-Slmpson Co.
6513 Hollywood Boulevard
San Francisco 5, California
Whaley-Simpson Co.
New Montgomery Street
Los Angeles, California
the policy of southern spokesmen to the
hearings before the judiciary committee
and the House as a medium for getting the
South’s point of view known throughout
the world, and for keeping their constitu¬
ents reminded of their qualification for
political promotion-for keeping their po¬
litical fences in good repair. While their
fight against civil rights is sincere, it is
secondary. Besides being fictitious and
hard-hearted, the speech was an expres¬
sion of base ingratitude. The congress¬
man either forgot his history or he de¬
liberately ignored it. The Negro was not
originally in the South of his own choos¬
ing, but because the South needed him and
welcomed him upon whom to found its
economy which made it able to bear the
burden (?) of the South’s own making,
about which the South should not really
complain, of which it should be ashamed.
The provision which the congressman
“complains” the white man has made
through all the years without complaint
( ?), involves elements of the burden which
vexes him now. It involves the scars left
by the Black Codes on the souls of Ne¬
groes, which die-hard former owners em¬
ployed to maintain the master-slave rela¬
tionship which as late as fifty years ago
clung to life in the peonage system, pre¬
valent in some of the hard core states of
the south. It provided poor wages, poor
housing, poor schools, the evils of share-
cropping and little or no medical and hos¬
pital care-all of this helped to make the
burden. Those to whom the speech was
delivered know the fallacy and fiction in
the often repeated claim that white people
pay all the taxes. The obvious falsity of
the claim makes refutation unnecessary.
But suppose it were true, couldn’t people
of good heart, wanting to be fair, recall
that they are under an obligation to these
people whom they call the white man’s
burden, who worked 244 years, from sun¬
up to sun-set in soul breaking toil, with¬
out a pay day. Somebody has figured out
the debt they are owed at the paltry rate
of $100 a year as being around fifty billion
eight hundred thousand dollars, enough
to pay for the provisions and taxes about
which the congressman complains that he
does no complain about.
The speech failed in one respect. It did
not stop the passage of the administration
bill for civil rights. There is no doubt
about its affect on the folk back at home
for whom it was primarily intended.
THE FIGHT AGAINST THE NAACP
When one reviews the attitudes of the
white South over the years toward the
race question; when one recalls the advice
given by such southerners as Calhoun,
Stevens, Grady, Tillman, Glass and Wil¬
liams, and remembers the cold and ruth¬
less disregard held by the average south¬
erner for human life and human rights, it
causes no surprise that the U. S. Supreme
Court is being so bitterly condemned and
that the NAACP is being persecuted in
five states of the Deep South. It is a curi¬
ous fact that highly educated men—law¬
yers, preachers, educators, and judges of
the courts—can permit themselves to be¬
lieve in such fallacies as racial superiority,
white civilization and Negro inferority. It
is difficult to believe that they are ignor¬
ant of what history, science and Christian¬
ity have established as fact. The fight on
the NAACP is just as obdurate and irra¬
tional as the attack on the Supreme Court.
Every honest and intelligent person in
America who knows the aims and the rec¬
ord of the NAACP, knows that it has vio¬
lated no Constitutional law, that it is not
subversive, that it does not advocate vio¬
lence, that it has resorted, to courts for
justice to seek redress for the grievances
of Negro people. The fight against the
organization is intended to prevent it
from pressing to secure equality for Ne¬
groes as citizens of the United States. It
seeks to take no rights away from white
people which they are entitled to under
the laws of the land. Of course in the
process of securing civil rights for Ne¬
groes it runs counter to out-worn tradi¬
tions that were wrong in the first place.
Attacks on the NAACP have apparently
succeeded in several states, but they have
failed in one state and our own state is
uncertain at present as to the validity of
its attack. The attacks have not been un¬
mixed evils. They have brought new
friends to the organization and have stim¬
ulated old ones to strengthen their loyalty
and to increase their support. They may
have caused some of its foes to re-examine
their consciences. They have caused the
organization to re-afl'irm its belief in the
righteousness of its purposes. We have
the secret for getting rid of the NAACP.
THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE
FEDERAL COM. PROMISES PROBE OF
FOR
NEW YORK, June 20.—In re¬
sponse to an NAACP complaint,
the executive director of the Pres¬ ;
ident's Committee on (ioveinment
Employment Policy said this week i
that if necessary he will bring
"the full force of our authority" '
to bear on the government office 1
which inserted a want-ad in an i
Ohio State Bar Association pub¬ !
lication asking for a "white law¬ i
yer.” j
Ross Clinchy of the President’s :
Committee noted that the adver¬ |
tisement “is, of course, a flagrant !
violation/ of the federal non-dis¬ ;
crimination policy.” His statement
was in the form of a letter to |
Herbert Hill, NAACP labor sec¬ |
retary, who last week requested |
the committee to investigate the !
Ohio want-ad.
SET TRIAL FOR M^N
CHARGFD WITH KILLING
BUNCHE’S RELATIVE
WASHINGTON (ANP) — Two
men charged with robbing and
killing Roscoe W. Harris, brother-
in-law of Dr. Ralph Bunche, will ■
go into their third tr ial on Sep- j
tember 9, after their second hear- |
ing ended in a mistrial. |
Harris, a prominent real estate
man of Washington, was found
bound and gagged in his office ‘
j last August. Charged with the j
! crime were Lindsey McDaniel, 25, i
Thomas Williams, 31, and Jackie
boxer. !
J. Floyd, 21, former heavyweight i
Floyd has been declared insane j
and committed to St. Elizabeth ;
Hospital. The other two men are
charged with first degree murder. :
They went to trial last month 1
which ended in a hung jury after j
three days of deliberation. j
The second, trial which began j
la t Monday came to a close at |
3:45 Friday when it resulted in
a mistrial because one of the J<J- i
"ors The became jury had ill. been debating the | j
verdict for three hours when the
foreman notified Judge Bolitha J. |
Laws that a member of the jury |
was ill. After ordering a doctor j
to examine her, the Judge said [
he did not think he should force \
her to continue.
--,
laHimnre Civic Leader
To Address Florists
WASHINGTON. Mi's. Vivian
Garth Alleyne, vice president of
the Board of Trustees of Provident
Ilospital and a member of the
Maryland Society for Medical Re-
search, Inc., will he the guest
speaker here Tuesday, July 9, at
'he fifth annual banquet of the
International Florists’ Association,
Inc., in convention at Hotel
Statler.
William O. Perry, of Miami,
president of the association, and
Evelyn Chisley, Washington, cx-
ecu tive secretary and convention
chairman, said they expect over
500 delegates and visitors to at-
tend the four-day meeting, begin-
ning July (5.
Highlights of the convention will
include an address on Sunday,
July 7. by the Reverend Mr. Earl
L. Harrison, pastor of Shiloh Bap-
tist Church. Reverend Mr. Hand-
son will speak on the convention
theme, “Flowers and Faith.”
The convention schedule also
calls for a pilgrimage to the Fred-
crick Douglas Home, the Lincoln
Memorial and Arlington National
Cemetery, where wreaths will be
placed.
Cafl Murphy, president of the
Afro-American Newspapers, and
I Judge Andrew J. Howard will pre¬
sent certificates of merit to Wash¬
ington Flower and Garden Guild |
students.
Moss II. Kendrix, I). C., public ■
relations man, will serve as toast- |
naster at the banquet, and mem-
iers of the Precola DeVore School .
.f Charm will participate in a
Flowers and Fashions” parade.
The Washington Flower and ■
larden Guild, host chapter of the
\ssociation, will conduct work-
hops during the convention deal- 1
ng with floral schemes and de-
ignilig, to be held between Lusi. |
less sessions.
The association now has mem-
lership in all sections of the na-
.ion. It was organized in 1952
>y Mr. Perry in an effort to meet i
•ertain needs of Negro florists not
•therwise being served at that
KY. METHODISTS j
TO EASE UP j
.
(Continued from Page One) !
who objected to the integration !
resolution. Dr. John B. Horton do-
■lared that he was no reactionary,
but felt that “the conference was
stepping into the affairs” of the
colleges. ,
All articles for publica¬
tion in The Tribune must
be typewritten or written in j
ink and should be in the
office by Tuesday noon.
:--
| J BER J AN VFEP
VISITS PRESIDENT __
j | -
(Continued from Page One)
-----------------------
; this countr Y about four months.
Following his White House visi<
the V,ce Plcsident was entertain-
j cd with an elaborate "option »’
: the Siberian Embassy by Ambax
| sador and Mrs - Geor ^ e A - Pad
| mole -
The hundreds of distinguished
« fUcsts vvere entertained by Pear
Primus > the hi « h Pncstess of th/
Dance ' and P( ’'Gval Horde, ape
| c:ahst in Caribbean Folklon
j ! hythms and chants. They wer
accompanied by Trinidad stee'
band percussionists Art Bart, Johi
Cayenne, and Andrew Primus,
NoarIy 50 diplomats includin'
ambassadors, ministers and Charge
d’Affaires from as many Embas-
sies and Legations attended the I
reception.
Also in attendance were mem- 1
tiers of congress, Cabinet members j
and top officials of the Depart- I
ment of State.
A m o 11 g other distinguished I
* uests in attendance were E. Fred- j
u, ' c ^ Mot row of thc White House j
staff; Val Washington of the Re- 1
publ,carl Natlonal Committee; Dr. i
Mordeeai Johnson, president of I
Howard University and Mrs.
Johnson; Dr. Martin Jenkins, pres-1
,d( ' n t (>f Morgan State College and ;
•'D’ s ' Jenkins; Judge and Mrs. Ar 1
mond W. Scott; Dr. John W . Dav- |
!S ’ pormer director of ICA in Li- ;
heria, and Mis. Davi>; Claude A.
Barnett, director of Associated Ne-
K1 ° p,e -' s ! (>en. and Mrs. B. O.
Davis, Si., and Dr. A. Grayiand
^m.ver, president of D. C. Friends
Libeiia and Mis. Smyer.
ro TOUR EUROPE
(Continued from Page One)
Germany, Rome, Italy, Paris.
France, Switzerland, and Cop-
enhag-an. Denmark. In Denmark
Miss Whitaker will visit Miss
Ester Sondergaard. the sister of
Mrs. Arensa Sondergaard, who
was Miss Whitaker’s adviser at
Columbia. Miss Whitaker will
collect folk tales to do a book
for children.
3,475 awards have been made
for heroism by the Scouts’
National Court of Honor since
1911.
The want-ad said in part: “Gov¬
ernment office in Central Ohio has
need for male, white lawyer as¬
sistant, preferably with some ex-
oerience.”
*Ir. Hill told the President’s
Committee that "if this advertise-
ment was placed by an agency of
the U. S. Government for the pur-
pose of soliciting applications for
employment with a federal agency,
then it is clearly a violation of
Presidential Executive Order
10590.”
In his letter, dated June 38, Mr.
promised that a “full re¬
will be sent to the NAACP
as soon as an investigation is
He noted that before tak-
ing action, it is necessary for the
to "find out the cul¬
FIRST COACH OF RACE
WIN COVETED
MONOR
BALTIMORE, Md. Morgan
Eddie Hurt, for more than
decades a maker of cham-
has become a champion
himself- this time through
election to the National As-
of Intercollegiate Ath-
Hall of Fame,
The 57-year-old Hurt, senior
of the famed Hurt-Hill
combination and mentor
athletic greats in basketball,
track and field, is the
of his race to win the na-
coaching honor.
He was elected to the Hall of
by the Helms Foundation
was presented during a spe-
awards luncheon at the recent
Championships in Sat
California.
A . native of . _ Brookneal, , . Va., , r and ,
Kraduate of Howard University,
has bcen one of the nation ’>
ce i ebrated coaches in th,
eollepre field for thir,y-thre<
twenty-nine of them at
Stat( .,
Hurt - coached football team;
won thirteen CIAA cham-
and tied for one, and hi;
and field stars have wo>
and international acclaim
Named “Track and Field Coach
of the Year” in 1950, he has pro
duced such individual stars a
Olympic Champ George Rhoden
Pan-American 400-meter hurdle
titlist Josh Culbreath, high jump-
rs George Dennis and Bob Barks-
dale, sprinter Art Bragg and quar-
ter-miler Boh McMurray, ne»
NAIA 4-10-yard champ.
DR DeCOSTA NAMED
PROJECT CONSULTANT
' NEW YORK (ANP). - Dr.
Krank A. DeCosta, nationally ;
kno’vn educator, has been added to
the list of national consultants for
the Phelps-Stokes Fund Project
for the improvement of instruction
; in secondary schools. j
In addition to Dr. DeCosta,
there are ten national consultants
in the ureas of language arts,
mathematics, science, social
studies, administration and human
\ relations. Dr. DeCosta will fill
j the the untimely place recently left vacant by
I death of Dr. Howard
! H. Long, Central State College,
who served as consultant in evalu-
; ation.
Dr. DeCosta earned the A.B.
degree at Lincoln University
i (Pennsylvania), the A.M. at Co¬
lumbia and the PH.D. at the Uni¬ |
versity of Pennsylvania. He has
j held such professional positions
! as Director of Burrell Normal i
1
; School, Florence, Ala.; Director,
Avery Institute, Charleston, S. C.;
Dean ------- of the Graduate School,
South Carolina State College and
Director of Instruction at Ala-
I bama State College. As of Sep-
| tember 1, 1957, he will serve as
| Supervisor of Practice at Morgan
j I State TC College. pVT^gt I
j, e u -P s -St°ke^ r 1 und , r. F roject, • ♦ j
>egun a nee-yeai s udy in
’ aS m ’" ntly been granted
a two-year extension by the Gen- 1
eral Education Board which fi¬ I
nances it. Three universities, six¬
teen colleges and sixteen high
schools in five states and the Dis- 1
Diet of Columbia are involved in
he project. !
MAN KANGS HIMSELF j |
IN UNION STATION I
(Continued from Page One)
Gvmei in Atlanta. Inci-
dentally, shortly after the body I
was discovered a local man I
trrived on the scene He recog- ;
lized the dead man as one who I
'
tad served in the same ccm- j
any with him in World War II.
.. No found „
money was among ;
the effects recovered from the
lns F " cketS ’ !
The dead man’s wife, Mrs. j
•olen Hsills of 1082 McDaniel |
treet, S.W., Atlanta, was gotten j
n touch .with shortly after the ;
discovery of the body. From the I
’-.cj.rtr-M-'n gi'-en her through !
the identification papers found
1 the pccAet of his coat which !
nng, neatly folded above his
'ody in the rest room, she;
cadily identified the man as
er husband. 1
She said 11 that , she 1 , left ,, , her 1
, -
,
ng when she went to church
md was quite surprised not to i
Und him heme when she re-
urr.ed a little after noon. I
When Hollis arrived in Savan-
iah and how he came here i§
lot known as his car was re-
lorted by his wife as standing
n front of their home when she
vas notified of his death.
Hollis who was employed by a I
neat concern in Atlanta, is sur- ;
ived by a stepson in addition j
0 his wife. I
The body was sent to Atlan-
r Tuesday by the Rake-straw 1
Funeral Heme.
YAZOO CITY, Miss. (ANP)
For no apparent reason other
the fact that he sat at dinner
his sister, a white
farmer slew a young Negro
man and then casually called
police to come and get him
cause “I’ve just killed a Negro.'
Charged with the murder
Raiford Walton, who confessed
shot and killed 20-year-old
man Third Class Charles
when he found him sitting at
BISHOP GREENE TO
SUPERVISE DIS r R T CT
OF BISHOP NICHOLS
(Continued from Page One)
sessments and
in office of the church.
Bishop Nichols has been strip-
ped of his duties until the issues
settled and the charges given
a hearing. The bishop stepped
on his own volition
‘’j 11 " f ° rce on the * ood .
Florida any cloud , . of suspicion,
no matter 4 . t now fraudulent * j i j or ca-
pricious P1 Uh ‘trial ”
The date for Bishop
Nichols has been set for July 30
at the Mt. Zion AME church in
Fla. The
mpl , t was made by Bishop R. R.
Wr ight of New Orleans, president
the AME Bishops Council.
Bishop Wright will conduct the
Bishop Nichols denied all
with the statement, “I am
more concerned with the final
outcome of this thing as I
going home tqnight.” He
“the whole thing is an at-
tempt to embarrass me. A lot
don’t like my supposed ag-
They want to break
Negro leadership.”
Bishop Nichols declared that “a
l(!t of these charges are the result
not taking advice about par-
in NAACP activities in
Florida - 1 was advised not to take
active part in the NAACP and
preach only the gospel. I preach-
the gospel in Florida just as
T did am in • Bethel » .. , church , , in . New
„
A " I tC>e IV Tl
r b f B,sh ' ,p w VVn « ht wd ’ b car
.
nd , r “ le on charRes aKa,nst Bl ? hop
.
IC 0 v
The Rev, M. M. Lindsay, a pre-
elder of Florida filed
against Bishop Nichols
submitted them to Bishop
About a dozen other
r are reportedly willing to fol-
suit ’
Bishop Nichols became a con-
figure after he was
to Florida in May 195G
the First Episcopal District
H ' 8
the "news aVid . controversy be-
hini and Dr. William B.
president of Edward Wa-
College in Florida causcd
friction.
I)r. Stewart was dismissed from
AME school three weeks ago.
Of Dr. Stewart’s dismissal
Nichols stated that he and
school head didn’t get along
famously, but he added that
was the hoard of trustees
decisions discharged Dr.
from duty at the school,
Bishop Nichols is reported to
raised some $241,000 for the
Salary Fund in his dis-
the largest amount reported
WANTS ACTION ON BRUTAL TREATMENT OF HUNGARY, BUT ALABAMA
MAKES HER BLUSH.
* *.....EKf.:
SATURDAY, JULY 6. 1957
FARMER SLAYS AIRMAN
I d j nner table with the farmer’s sis-
j ^ County Attorney Griffin Nor-
i sajd ‘ instigators had not
j esUlb)|8hcd a definite motive ill tl*
jJ . ,
^ Raiford a ng ‘ l had ® waived sa ! ' A a preliminary ...... ..tli.-..J,.'.,
hearing and was being held in
the Yazoo County jail.
Norquist said Walton would not
explain the incident and his rela¬
tives who witnessed the killing
"don’t want to talk about it.”
in any district, according to the
bishop.
Serious penalties face Bishop
Nichols should he be found guilty
of any or all the charges against
him.
ADVENTISTS TO
OBSERVE 50th ANNIV.
(Continued noin Page One)
— —---;-—------— - —
seas countries. Pastor Patzer said,
but the July J 12-13 meeting at Mt.
i m the official .
j Vernon is commcmor-
to , be sponsored . , by the
j a tive event
wor ‘ d headquarters of the Advent-
’ ^ Chuich.
j DrPP1 e - vb cmfwy pU PVP
Directing the short but action-
j packed two-day program is Theo-
dore E. Lucas, of Washington, D.
. C., world youth leader of tne Ad-
j ventists Church. Making all local
; details and taking charge of two
j major programs for the weekend
i ls Arthur J. Patzer, of Washing-
ton, D. C., director of all Adventist
1 y°uth activities in Ohio, Penn-
| sylvania, New Jersey, Maryland,
j Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia
j and the District of Columbia.
j from More all than 4,009 North youth America delegates
1 over are
I expected to attend the event, most
| °f whom came from cities of Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and other nearby
states. It is expected to be the
largest Adventist parley in Ohio
during 1957.
Ohio Adventist church leaders
who are scheduled to take an ac-
tive part in the program include
, Donald r . .. W. ... Hunter, president of
:
the Ohio Conference of Adventists;
wa* , , .
J. O. McLeod, socratury-
I treasurer of the Ohio Confdrwce-
of Adventists; and J. it.-Skull,
principal of Mt. Vernon Academy!
all of Mt. Vernon.
The opening and keynote session
G scheduled to take place on Fl i¬
i day night, July 12 at 7:39 o’clock.
j WOMAN FOP.C '■$ ENTRY
INTO HOME OF
BISHOP GRACE
t
I (Continued
aueu rrom from page nwo n 1 )
^ playiflg the piai13 ’
1 W p'“ the pastor of thc House
I “L/T/ f at W a ' ' ked do:ng ( Mrs thcre - D 'D'slas she
j | _ n P hed „ ^ she r.-as taking ’ over
and further expressed that she
| had a three years secret
marriage to the Bishop and was
1 in power to demand possession
1 of his home. She also claimed
j herself to be the secretary of
1 the Bishcp ard Jesus.
The law was called in, and it
| was P 10ven she was an impos*
^ Cl S u; ded by an evil mind, and
tipon investigation she was
proven to be religiously un¬
balanced.
Elder P. A. Lawson