. 5; 32 On Dec.inbe~ 5 anct 4, 1956, ~ Eni~a1ine He~ was intervielsi at her ho~ ‚ 239 Gain~ ~re*I. . ~ writer i,.aä vieite~ ~s • n~ear~ px.viousiy~ ana jt was at her own requeat taiat another vj~j~ was made, This ~vi~i~ wa~ upposeã to be one to obt~1fl iMormation and 8tøriea on the practice of eônjtu~e. on two ~‘róyious occasiofll Mrs. Heard‘ s storiea had~ proved very interesting, au~ i imew as ~ i sat taier, waiting foi‘ h~ to begin that she had eon~thiug very gool to tóU. n~. She began: “Chile, this story euz told ter n~ b~r ir~ ~ather ùu~ I know he aho wouldn‘t l~S~ Every v~rd of it is the trute ; tact, everything I abber told you ~iz~ the trute. Now, my pa had. a brother, old. Uncle Martin, and his wits wuz na~ 3‘ulianue~ Aunt 3ullanhiS used ter have spell. eiid tight end kick a].l the tine. They had doctor after doctor but none did. her a~y good. 3C~bO~ told Uncle Martin to go t& a old eonj~er and let the do etox‘s go cause they wan‘ t doing nothing fer her anyway. 5ho nuff he got one ter come see her and give her some n~d1eine. This old man sai6 she had bugs i~ hei‘ head, and af$r giving her the inedisins he started rubbing her head. While he rubbed her head he said: ‘Dar‘ s a bug in her head; it looks J•.t like a big black roach • Now, he ‚ s coming out of ber ~ head through her ear; ~i atever you do, don‘t let iiim get aw~ cause I i ant hia~. whatever you 10 ‚ oatoh him; be ‚ s going ~ ter run, but vthen he hit a the p iliow ‚ greb ‚ em. I ‘m go take him and turn it back o~ ths one w~o I 8 trying ter send. you ter the ~‘ave‘ Sho nuft that bug drap out her eaa‘ and flew; ehe hollered, and old Uncle Martin ran in the rood, anatohed the be~ clothes oft but they neYer did find him~ Aunt Yulienne neYer did get better and soon she died. Th• conjurer said. it they had a ~aught the bug she would a li~e~.“ The next story is a true story . The sots at~ told by Mrs • Reert wer• also witnes5ed by her ; 8.3 it deals with the oonjuring ot one of her eons . It is r dat ed in her exact wca~da as nearly as possible. “I got a eon named Albert Heard. He is liviz~ and well; but mils, there ~z a tinie whet he ~iz aln~st ter his grue. I wuz liYthg in town th.z and ilbert aM h18 wite iuz livuig in the country with their two cthill~*. ~Røll~ ilbert €ot down