== sync, corrected by elderman ==
Below we present a fragment of the book “Masonic Conspiracy! Provocation by Leo Taxila”:
The influences, money, meaning, contacts and strong position were not adequate for Taxil, who continued to work to exposure the mysteries of the masonry and to show in the full light of her god—the devil. So he created respective colourful but fictional characters: Doctor Bataille, Diana Vaughan, and Sophia Valder.
Dr. Bataille was a practicing Catholic who worked as a ship doctor. During many voyages it penetrated the most secret and darkest places, discovering and describing the secret practices of secret associations of Luciferians and palladians.
For the fresh hero, Taxil created a separate magazine that was titled “Devil in the 19th century” co-editor of “Devil”, a prominent aide and partner of Taxil was his erstwhile colleague, doctor Charles Hacks. Although Hacks was a notorious drunk, he continued to be a talent for his chief and together they formed a perfectly well-rounded squad of fantasy literates.
Created by them, Dr. Bataille described the factories of deadly germs managed by the masons, but besides the factories of magical objects, amulets and satanist obensils operating in Gibraltar. God - fearing readers of the Devil electrified the account of Bataille’s journey to Charleston, United States. There he met Gen. Albert Pike – a high-level free-murderer, Commander of Grade 33 of the Scots Rituary of the Old and the Recognized.
Bataille revealed that Pike was the founder and ultimate superior (invented by Taxil and Hacks) of the Palladian ritual, which was the secret summit of the Masonic pyramid of introduction. Bataille reported with horror that all Friday, at 3:00 p.m., Pike was revealed in his office to Lucifer and agreed on details of the rooting of religion and demolition of Catholicism. At the end of the conference, Pike was expected to send out the instructions to the planet utilizing ... phone. A visible sign of the contact between freemulation and Satan was the devil's relics in the form of recorded roulette of Satan's revelations carefully stored by the Brothers in aprons in the basements of the Charleston Lodge.
Taxila's most excellent marketing thought turned out to be Diana Vaughan's imaginary woman. Initiated in the United States, a mason, palladian, and Luciferian female appeared for the first time in pages 89 of the number “The Devil” (there were 240 of them).
Pursued for her unfaithfulness and sentenced to death by the Masons, Diana was to hide in France. In ‘his’ diaries published in ‘Diable’ and later in separate notebooks Diaries of the erstwhile palladist Miss Vaughan described her, made by Joanna d’Arc, a wonderful departure from the Satanist sect. Diana became a media character, responding to letters and sometimes providing financial support to church projects. The large and anticipated public event was its spectacular conversion from Protestantism to Catholicism, which occurred on 6 June 1885. Created by Taxil fakenews He ran around and electrified France and even Europe. Information about the conversion of Diana Vaughan reached behind the strictly closed clausure of the Carmelite monastery in Lisieux.
Excited by the triumph of religion and the triumph of the church, Sister Teresa of the kid Jesus (later Christmas) seized the pen and wrote the drama p.t. Humility TriumphWhich the sisters shortly exhibited in the monastery theatre. Teresa of Lisieux then sent Diana her picture, drawing on his reverse a fewer warm words to the converted sheep. Thankful for this gift, Diana responded to the Carmelite with just as kind a letter.
The last fantastic characters in the post office were the little celebrated Sophia Valder, the sworn enemy of the convert Diana, a high-ranking Mason, Satanist and adept of many occult sects, who was to be the great-grandmother of the soon-to-be Antichrist.
Read more in the book “Masonic Conspiracy! Provocation by Leo Taxila”














