End of the Loving Time

Some of it is true

Russell the man

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Old post 23-Aug-04 15:41Aug 23, 2004
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Post 6744 of 7659
since 14-Mar-01

Supreme One

This piece will not deal with any of C.T. Russell’s teaching and false prophecies. Instead, it will deal with Russell the man.

Many ex-dubs still operate under the misconception that Russell was a kind and honest man. At times, he was. At other times he was cruel, petty, vindictive, arrogant, manipulative and a brazen liar. In that respect, he was much like his predecessor in Watchtower Crime, Fred Franz.

I will leave his lying to last.

Russell claimed that he and his wife Maria had agreed before their marriage not to consummate it. Rather than following the instruction in 1 Cor. 7:2-5 for spouses not to refuse their mate the marital due, Russell justified his forced celibacy by citing Rev. 14:4 which deals with the 144,000 “not being

defiled with women.” Perhaps this was part of the reason Maria decided to separate from him. No one alive really knows.

In the October 19, 1908 transcript of their divorce appeal much information was revealed about Russell the man. For example, Russell told Maria that if they separated, he would give her the house they were living in. If she refused, he would give her nothing. Nothing? Nothing after 18 years of working full time with him in his pet religion? Nothing after giving up the
prospects of having a normal family so Russell to devote all of his time to promoting his fantasies?

Maria refused his offer, and true to his word he gave her nothing. After living with her sister for a year and a half, a house that Russell owned had become vacant and Maria moved into it for four years. She rented out rooms in order to support herself. Although Russell gave her no money, he did provide
some furniture for the house. Maria set out to expose Charles for the mean and vindictive person he was. She did this by circulating a tract which was documented by quotes from letters he had written to her.

When Charles found out about this he and some other men descended on the house without any warning, took possession of it and evicted her. Russell even took her pocket book which contained money she he received as rent for the rooms. As a result, Maria went to court and the court ordered Charles to pay her forty dollars per month. Keep in mind, this order was five and one half years AFTER they had separated, during which time Russell had paid her nothing. He refused to pay the court-ordered support. At the conclusion of their divorce
proceedings the Judge ordered Russell to pay Maria one hundred dollars per month. Russell claimed he couldn’t do it as he had no money? How could that be? Shortly before the alimony order, Russell had transferred all his personal assets to the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society. The Court considered this
action to be a fraud against Maria and ordered Russell to pay $9,000 worth of back alimony. Rather than paying it out of his own money, he got a group of Bible students to pay it for him.

Was Russell really that poor? The divorce transcript showed that in addition to the Watch Tower Society’s assets (valued at $317,000 at the time) and AFTER he sold his clothing stores, Rusell was involved in real estate, rental property, oil and other companies. These included Brazilian Turpetine Company, Pittsburgh Asphaltum Company, Silica Brick Company, and Pittsburgh Kaolin Coke Company.

When Jesus selected his apostles, they all gave up everything they had to follow him. When God “chose” Russell to be his only faithful and discrete slave, Russell continued on as a business tycoon!

Russell The Liar

Charles T. Russell lied several times in Court during his divorce proceedings. He did this to try to hide from the fact he had yet ANOTHER business enterprise going right there at Watch Tower headquarters! It was called the Solon Society, or Solon Association. He was asked about this association in
court:

Q: Well, where was it organized?
A: I really do not remember anything about it.
Q: What is the Solon Society; what does it do?
A: I don’t know anything about it.
Q: You have heard of it?
A: I have heard of the Solon Society, yes, sir; but I have nothing to do with it.
Q: Where is its office?
A I do not know; I think it is in Cleveland.

There are FOUR distinct lies in this small piece of testimony and three more that followed. Russell was asked if the Solon Society was organized in the Watch Tower building and run by three “girls” there.

He replied, “I think they do not; I do not know anything about it, I tell you, I do not know anything about it, and how can I swear to what I do not know.”

The three “girls” were called to the stand. They were Alice Land, Gabrielle Logan and Laura Whitehouse. They testified that they allowed their names to be used to form the firm “Logan, Land & Whitehouse.” This firm was used by the Solon Society to purchase merchandise (household goods, furniture, clothing, etc.) at wholesale prices. All three of these women testified that Russell himself approached them and asked if they would allow their names to be used to create a company.

Alice Land testified: “I understood it was formed for the purpose of purchasing goods at wholesale prices from the manufacturers for an association called the Solon Company or association…Mr. Russell was their representative.”

A bit of clarification is needed here. The company who sold the products wholesale would not sell to individuals, only companies. Russell’s Solon Society only promoted and sold merchandise. The three girls at Russell’s request formed a company using their last names to do the actual purchasing of
the merchandise.

Another woman by the name of Christina Weir who worked in the Watch Tower Annex was called to the stand:

Q: Well, in the (Watch Tower) Annex, what business was carried
on there…?
A: During the year 1905 there was some business carried on
there by the Solon Society.
Q: And what did the business consist of?
A: The buying and selling of goods at wholesale prices.
Q: Selling them, I understand, to the subscribers to this
Solon Journal, is that the idea?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Was or was it (the Solon Journal) not sent out with the
Watch Towers?
A: I saw it wrapped there during one issue in the same
packages as the Watch Tower and taken over to the post office.
Q: Did you know a firm doing business in that building by the
name of Logan, Land & Whitehouse?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: And what business did that firm carry on, if any, and if you know?
A: It carried on the business of the Solon Society.
Q: Then the Logan, Land & Whitehouse firm, was substantially
the Solon Society?
A: That was what I understood.

Maria Russell testified in this trial that although she was Secretary and Treasurer of the Watch Tower Society, she never once was allowed to look at the Society’s financial records.

Only Russell saw them. How then, could Russell be totally unaware of a business being run in his own property and also not know that his own Watch Tower magazines were being stuffed with promotional material from that business?

Well, he wasn’t, because then a MIRACLE happened! He was caught in a pack of lies while under oath and he knew it and had to do something about! So, he magically got his memory back!

Note this cross examination:

Q: Now, to come back to the late firm of Logan, Land & Whitehouse, you say you suggested to these young ladies that they permit the use of their names?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Who were these people that wanted to use the names of these young ladies?
A: I remember one was Mr. John G. Koehne, of Cleveland, Ohio, and another one was Mr. Clayton J. Woodworth of Scranton, Pa.; they were the two principals.
Q: And they were the men who transacted the business?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: But they did it in the name of Logan, Land & Whitehouse?
A: No, sir they did it in the name of the Solon Association.

Russell then denied that he had any financial interest in the Solon Association and added, “I bought this suit, of which is the coat, from the Solon people for $16.00.”

For those of you who don’t know, Clayton J. Woodworth mentioned by Russell above was the principal co-author of that marvelously wacky piece of science fiction known as “The Finished Mystery.”

There’s more. The Solon Association was mentioned FOUR times in the Watchtower Magazine. The WT of December 1, 1904 offered a free four-month subscription to the Solon Journal and stated, “The managers of the Solon are well-known to us as in every way honorable and reliable and we give this announcement without solicitation for the benefit of WATCH TOWER readers,—that they all (as well as the Bible House force) may benefit by the
wholesale purchasing arrangement, effecting large savings in our purchasing yearly.”

Let’s review again what Russell said in earlier testimony about the Solon Association:

“I really do not remember anything about it.”
“I don’t know anything about it.”
“I have heard of the Solon Society, yes, sir; but I have nothing to do with it.”
(Where is it located?): :”I do not know; I think it is in Cleveland.”
“I think they do not; I do not know anything about it…”
“…I tell you, I do not know anything about it…”
“…and how can I swear to what I do not know?”

In an article called “Investigating the Investigator” in the Journal “The Continent”, September 26, 1912 W.T. Ellis interviewed Charles Russell. He stated:

“I sought a prophet and found a business man! Instead of a humbler seeker after truth, I found the cleverest propagandist of the age — a man before who John Alexander Dowie, Mary Baker Eddy, Madame Blavatsky, Abbas Effendi, ‘Elijah’ Sanford and Joseph Smith pale into puerile ineffectiveness.”

Indeed. Would the Lord God Jehovah use as his only spokesman on earth a man who would abuse his wife and marriage, a man who would refused Court orders to support his own wife, and man who had a whole portfolio of different business enterprises, a man who hide his own financial records from everyone including his very own wife, a man who would use his Watch Tower magazine to promote a business and then willingly lie about knowing about that business in Court?

If “Jehovah” did choose Russell knowing these things, then “Jehovah” was either stupid or unbelievably desperate.

April 29, 2008 - Posted by Admin Staff | C. T. Russell, Christianity, Jehovahs Witnesses | | No Comments

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