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iC *IP'- Saturday, February 15, 1919 18 SIR CONAN DOYLE IN COM MUNICATION WITH THE SPIRITS OF THE DEAD. Written By J. Godfrey Raupert, K. S. G., For Central Bureau Press *h Service. ii. The second fallacy contained In Sir Conan Doyle's argument Is his as sumption that the spirits of the se ance-room are the spirits of the dead who have proved their identity. To the student, unacquainted with the in tricacies of the subject, the evidence presented in support of this claim will seem strong but it is neverthe less utterly worthless and proves noth ing of the kind. It falls to the ground entirely when it is borne in mind that we have cases on record in which similar striking evidence of identity was given but in which the spirit, caught in a falsehood, finally himself confessed that he was not what he had claimed to be. A single instance of this kind shows how complex the problem is and what sources of information must be at the disposal of these spirits—how difficult, if not impossible, it is to prove their identity. All experienced spirit ists are fully alive to this immense dif ficulty and have striven by various de vices to overcome it but so far they have not been successful. The ques tion of identity is still the bitter cross of psychical research, and Sir Conan Doyle must be aware of it. It is his "will to believe" which causes him to pass over it so lightly. It is won derul how this "will to believe" blinds the mind and perverts the judgment. Although it is well known and admit ted that the spirits habitually imper sonate the living, each individual ex perimenter tries to persuade himself that his particular spirits are doing nothing of the kind. It is often only after many months and even years that the deception is discovered and that the disillusionment comes. In one of his works the late Mr. Stain ton-Moses, for many years the leader of the English spiritists and a highly educated man, admitted that "all the information ever given him in proof of the presence of the departed might, in harmony with his experience of the Spirits, ha^e been first obtained and then imparted by a false intelligence." Prof. L. P. Jacks of Oxford, President of the British Psychical Research So ciety in 1917 and personally a high authority on the subject, made this statement in his presidential address: "Take the question of imposture. Mediums are not the only impostors. How about the communicators? Are they masquerading? You can have no absolute proof that there is no Im posture on the other side. I think that the whole meaning of personal identity needs to be very carefully thought out and considered before we begin to produce evidence in favor of personal identity." I had myself a striking experience of this kind of spirit-impersonation many years ago. A spirit, claiming to be a departed per sonal friend of mine and intimately ac quainted with the individual's life history, was, after many months, dis covered in a falsehood and then freely and boastingly admitted that he had managed to trick us so successfully by drawing the information required from our own sub-conscious memories. Indeed, the evidence available today fully demonstrates the fact that the main sources of information of these spirits are the subconscious minds of the living, although it cannot be claimed that' these are their only sources of information. They have probably access to knowledge by methods wholly unknown to us and quite beyond our power of imagina tion. I have dealt with this aspect of the subject very fully in some of my books. The circumstance that Sir Conan Doyle regards the presentation of intimate knowledge respecting some deceased pesonality as evidence of identity goes to prove how very imperfectly acquainted he is with the subject. The cases he cites in his ar ticles are too briefly stated to admit of a critical examination and judg ment but I am convinced that they all find an adequate explanation in the activities of his own subconscious mind and in the sources of informa tion at the disposal of these astute beings. I am persuaded that no in formed and unbiassed student of the subject would today regard any one of them as furnishing proof of identity. What has probably impressed the read er of his articles most of all is the evidence supposed to be furnished by photography. "In two cases," he tells us, "the figures of the deceased lads have appeared beside the mothers In a photograph." But this is, as a mat ter of fact, the weakest and most worthless evidence of all. Their fig ures are not the Individuals they to be but mind-images taken from the of the living and exterior The Facts and Fallacies of Modern Spiritism -tt ized and clothed with subtle matter by the spirit-intelligences. This is amply proved by the strik ing evidence which is available. Some years ago the deceased British Card inals were very much in evidence in English seance-rooms. The late Card inal Newman especially was believed to appear regularly at a house well known to me. I was several times present at his materialisation and seen many post mortem photographs of him. But I found that they all diff ered very considerably and that this difference could be traced back to the image of the late Cardinal which the individual observer had in his mind, or to a published photograph of him which he had seen. They could not therefore be presentations of the Card inal as he exists now in the other life and in his "spirit body." We have furthermore photographs in which the materialised spirit is presented at various ages—in one case as a child or youth, in another as a grown up person, the presentation evidently cor responding with the peculiar mind image which the experimenter had of the deceased. I have in my possession a photograph obtained in a city which I had never visited before and in which there appears by my side a fair ly good picture of a deceased member of my family, but alas, for Sir Conan Doyle and his theories! there is on the same photograph also the image of a person well known to me who is still living, but not as she is now—an el derly lady, but as I knew her years ago and as I best remember her—a young married woman. Proof positive this, surely! that these images are not photographs of the living dead, but materialised phantasms taken from the subconscious memories of relatives and friends. The masquerading spir its clearly cannot always distinguish the phantasms of the living from (those of the dead, and it is here where the critical investigator gets on the track of the deception. Space does not permit me to carry jthe argument any further but suffi cieht has been said to show that Sir I Conan Doyle's evidence in favor of the identity of the communicating spir its is utterly worthless, and that his prodigious claim harbors a fundamen tal and fatal fallacy. PRESIDENT WIL80N NAMED ARCA DIAN BY BENEDICT XV. Cardinal Gibbons, Too, Joined to Body of Which Archbishop Is Member. Rome, Jan. 3. 1919. One suggestion, as timely as it is genial, is attributed to the Fifteenth Benedict these days, viz., that of mak ing President Wilson an Arcadian, member of the famous literary society that originated in the Vatican Gardens in the sixteenth century. To Cardinal Gibbons, father of the Bishops of the world, the sturdy Cardinal Mercier, and to the Prince Bishop of Trent, a similar honor is done by the Arca dians. The four famous Arcadians will find themselves in excellent company as far as dignity, fame and learning. Leo XIII and Plus were members of the Arcadia. Benedict XV is one with the title Pontlfex Maximus. The King of Spain and the Queen of Sweden are also members. Most of the Cardinals in Rome belong to it, a small number of foreign bishops, and many lovers of letters all over Europe. On becoming an Arcadian, one re ceives from the society a Greek name by which he is to be known on its register. The name given by it to Mr. Wilson is "Dicearces Mericies." Archbishop Mundelein of Chicago is an Arcadian. This signifies member ship in the Pontifical Academy of Ar cadia, a unique association of Catholic scholars whose purpose is the produc tion and patronage of what is finest |and purest in literature. Archbishop Mundelein was elected to this Acad emy on April 20,1907. To the present he and Bishop Hennessey were the only American members of the Arca dia. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WILL BE BONE DRY BY MARCH STH. The District of Columbia will be come "bone dry" on some day be tween February 22nd. and March 5th„ unless all signs fail. The war revenue bill, reported to the House by the con ferees, carries in it the Senate amend ment extending to the District the pro visions of the Reed "bone dry" law, which prohibits the sending of alco holic beverages Into territory where the laws prohibit the manufacture and sale of these beverages. The proposed law will become ef fective the day after the revenue bill is signed by the President The Presi dent has announced that he will sail for this counter February 16th. The revenue bill will be awaiting him on his arrival at the White House, accord ing to the congressional leaders. LW.W. AGITATION MEANS ANARCHY American Divine Links its Propa ganda Work With System in Russia. EXPLAINS SLAV RULE Re. G. A. 8lmona, Recently Returned From Patrograd, Telia 8«nate Committee Government Is Military Dictatorship. Washington, Feb. 14.—The Bolshevik regime in Russia was described by the Rev. G. A. Simons in testimony before the senate committee investigating lawless agitation in the United States, as a minority military dictatorship sup ported by terrorism. Dr. Simons, who for many years has been head of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Russia, said most of the Bolshevik leaders were Jews, many from the East Side of New York and that they had set aside large sums for the spread of their doctrine in all the countries of the world. Links I. W. W. and-Bolshevik. The I. W. W. movement in this country was said by Dr. Simons to be identical with the Bolshevists' system. Bolshevik propaganda apparently is be ing carried on in the United States, Dr. Simons said, by means of speakers, pamphlets and articles in newspapers and magazines. He declared that John Reed and Albert Rhys Williams, Amer ican writers, had been closely affiliat ed with the Bolshevik government in Russia. The witness said publishers of Bolshevik literature in the United States included the Rand School of So cial Science in New York, Charles H. Kerr & Co., ^Chicago The Socialist Literature company, New York, and Novymir, a Russian newspaper in New York. Close to Bolshevik Leaders. Dr. Simons, whose headquarters were in Petrograd before he fled the country last October, told the commit tee that John Reed and his wife, Louise Braynt, were very close to the Bolshevik leaders in Petrograd. Reed was described as "persona grata to the Bolshevik government so that that wanted to make him consul gen eral in New York." "Was he regarded by Americans there aB American or Bolsheviki?" questioned Senator King of Utah. "As a Bolshevik," replied the wit ness. "There were a number of Amer ican Bolshevik sympathizers there. We referred to them as 'mushheaded mlddleheaded.'" Albert Rhys WllllamB frequently participated in Bolshevik meetings, Dr. Simons said, and "was heart and soul with them, speaking in very ten der termB of them." FINAL ACTION IS DEFERRED 8eiiate Fails to Reach Vote on War Revenue Bill. Washington, Feb. 14.—Final action on the conference report of the $6, 000,000,000 war revenue bill was de ferred by an early adjournment of the Senate in observance of the birth day anniversary of Abraham Lincoln. This unexpected move came after Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania, senior Republican of the conferees, had precipitated a general debate with a three-hour attack on what he termed extravagance and waste of appropria tions since the war began. While promising the revenue meas ure his support, the Pennsylvania senator said it taxed the country about to the breaking point and asserted that the American people were "alarmed if not disgusted by congres sional appropriations." BREAKS TWO AUTO RECORDS Ralph De Palma Shows Some Speed at Daytona, Fla. Daytona, Fla., Feb. 14.—Ralph De Palma broke the world's automobile records for both a mile and a kilo meter in straightaway dashes on Day tona beach. The time for the mile as announced by officials of the Automo bile association of America was 24.02 seconds against Bob Burman's record of 25.40 seconds made in 1911. DePal ma's kilometer time was 15.86 seconds or two seconds below the record. NEW HAMPSHIRE STAYS DRY Legislature Refuses to Modify the Prohibition Law. Concord, N. H., Feb. 14.—The state house of representatives, by a vote of 173 to 140, killed a bill to legalize the sale of beer and light wines. The pro hibition law adopted by the legislature two years ago made illegal the manu facture and Bale uors and the THE IRISH STANDARD of all intoxicating bill modified the law. liq killed would have Time Will Not Be Extended. Washington, Feb. 14.—Treasury of ficial reiterated that there would be no extension of the time for filing Income profit tax returns beyond March 16. This applies alike to Individual in comes, corporation incomes and profit returns and to similar reports re quired by the law on that date. OflW dais dolled rumors reaching the (Teas* ury that extension might be granted la certain eases for these returns. Ad ditional time may be granted, however, for so-called "informatics at the President Said to Have Agreed to Use of Troops if Found Necessary. TEUTONS MUST DISARM Wilson Gives First Formal Notice ot Intention to Return to France Conference Expects to Com plete Work by June 1. London, Feb. 14.—The British delegates at the peace conference have been deflntely instructed to claim an indemnity which will in clude the cost of the war as well as the damage actually caused, it was announced in the house of com mons by Andrew Bonar Law, gov ernment leader in the commons, in reply to a question. A commis sion is now considering the amount to be claimed, the method by which the indemnity should be guaranteed and the means of en forcing payment, Mr. Bonar Law added. Paris, Feb. 14.—In a written reply to a delegation of the French Association of the Society of Nations, President Wilson made known formally for the first time his intention to return to Prance. The president says that he accepts the suggestion that after his return to Paris a great public meeting be ar ranged in celebration of the conclu sion of the work of the peace confer ence. Arrangements have been completed for President Wilson's departure from Paris Friday night and his embark tlon from Brest Saturday. He plans to return to France March 15. There now is belief in official circles the peace conference will be able to complete its work by June 1. Brief Armistice First. The supreme war council has de cided, says a Havas report, that the armistice with Germany will be re newed Feb. 17 for a very brief period with the Allies reserving the right to suspend it at any time in the event Df Germany's failure to carry out new clauses or those which have hitherto not been executed. It is said the terms will provide that the Germans must cease hostilities against the Poles and maintain their forces within fixed limits. Permanent Armistice Planned. During the brief period of the re newed armistice a special commission will definitely draft the conditions of an armistice which will last till the signature of the peace preliminaries. These conditions, which the supreme war council is reported to have ap proved in a rough form, have in view, it is said, the demobilization of the German army and the disarmament of the enemy under the supervision of the Allies. These terms, it is under stood, will be communicated to Ger many so that the national assembly at Weimar will have time to deliberate upon them until the provisional armis tice expires. Must Take Precautions. It is reported that M. Clemenceau made an impressive speech at the sitting of the council, showing the necessity of taking all desirable pre cautions against Germany. President Wilson is declared to have adopted the same viewpoint, affirming that all the Allies were agreed on that point and that divergencies which cropped up during previous discussions bore solely on the most suitable meth ods of obtaining the necessary guaran ties. Wilson Ready to Use Troops. President Wilson according to the report is understood to have declared in conversation that a resumption of hostilities was a grave eventuality to which he would agree only on the most absolutely essential considerations and not for any secondary motive. The report states that, in Mr. Wil son's opinion, the non-cxecution of terms of the armistice by Germany would be an incident of sruch a nature as to justify the resumption of war and it is stated that he would not hesi tate in that case to order the Ameri can army to take up arms again. YANKS REINFORCE THE ALLIES March 30 Miles to Reach Hard Pressed British and Russ. Archangel, Feb. 14.—American rein forcements, marching over 30 miles of forest trail, reached the hard pressed British and Russians in the region of Sredmakrenga. The bolsheviki, who had been launching strong attacks in this region, evidently feared they would be cut off, and withdrew. Conditions on other sectors of the northern Russian front are unchanged. Denies World Army Report. Paris, Feb. 14.—Lord Robert Ceo®, the British representative" on the league of nations' commission, denied a report spread in Paris that the league of nations commission had ap proved the creation of an immediate International army and that the Unit ed States and Great Britain had con ceded a point to France. Lord Robert said that In his opinion the commis sion would decline to approve any such plan. He added such a report must have originated from an enemy of the peace conferenoe TO COMPEL HONS De Valera The Hera tf Sin TOOBSERVETM A Leader Whose Genius Has Trans formed The Irish Situation in a Few Years. (From Current Opinion) A capacity for the quiet manage ment of emotional men and women, never before displayed so complete ly by any Irish leader, and a born mathematician's sense of proportion applied to politics afford the combina tion that seems to explain the career of Bamonn de Valera to mystified London newspapers. He is a man of genius, however misapplied, If we are to be guided by the London News, while the Manchester Guardian thinks that anywhere but in Ireland he would now be a statesman in reasonable of fice, swaying the destinies of his coun try. In a period that he remains still, a character, unfamiliar and mysterious, he has converted an obscure and pro scribed revolutionary society into the dominant Irish political party. He has routed the entrenched leadership of the Redmonds and the Dillons, the O'Briens and the Devlins all com bined. He has revolutionized the attitude of the Roman Catholic hierarchy, at one time openly hostile to him. He has composed feud after feud within his following through his perfect, sympathy with Irish human Nature and a rare comprehension of its merits and defects. Results of this sort, as the Liberal Manchester organ remarks, are never achieved by mediocrities, and those British newspapers which at first hailed de Valera as an interloper and a foreign er, coming from nowhere and rep resenting nothing, are now inclined to agree that, humiliating as it must be to the politicians in London, he has matched his wits against theirs and made even the great Lloyd George, to say nothing of Sir Edward Carson, seem a trifle inefllcient by comparison. The mystery in which the name and the career of de Valera are involved include his present whereabouts. No body seems to know definitely, so rig id is the Irish censorship, whether he is in jail or out of it or just what part of Ireland he calls home. The prison experiences of the past four or five years have aged the man, our contem porary says, and he now looks, with his lined and pinched face, somew'hat older than his thirty-seven years. He is fine looking still, says the Lon don News, altho he was never band some, like Parnell in his prime, or aristocratically elegant, like the mar tyr Emmet. Nature seems to have given him the heavy build of O'Con nell, but he has not grown fat, like that liberator. The wide open eyes of de Valera, set far apart, are large and staring, forming an essential fea ture of the physiognomical impression as a whole. The lips are firm and compressed in repose. The nose is slightly hawklike and the skin by its swarthiness reveals the Iberian de scent. The father of de Valera is un derstood to have been a political ref ugee from Spain when he met and married the Irish girl who was to be come the mother of the Sinn Fein hero. The little boy received the name of Bdmond in baptism, not Eamonn. He learned to lisp the English tongue in America. When he first arrived In Bruree in county Limerick he was only six. He spoke Spanish and French from childhood and in Ireland be learned to ride like a centaur and to swim and to shoot. He was educated at a big school near the college of Blackrock. His mother despised the English all her life and from the first he was passionately Irish, with a strong tendency to play with tin sol diers. He must have the llngustic gift, for it Is affirmed that he could speak Gaelic with fluency when he was only twelve. His mathematical genius —the most astonishing of his endow ments—disclosed itself when he was seventeen and he thought at one time of becoming an astronomer. Before he had passed on to the college of Blackrock be was applying mathemati cal formulas to every conceivable problem. His sense of proportion and of order, his foresight, his construc tiveness, his ability to plan far ahead, are aspects, to all who know him, of his mathematical genius. He was a successful tutor in consequence and he astonished the examiners, when ap plying for his degree, with abstruse cal culations of planetary weights that re vealed no error at any stage of Intri cate computations that filled reams of paper. In a quieter period of history, writes one who knows him to a Lon do& paper, he might have become a Newton or worked out fresh theories of dynamics. He seems to have thought at one time of going into the army, for his military aptitudes, among his fellows at any rate, are rather high Indeed. His ringing laugh, his athletic prowess, unexpected In one of his ro mantic and poetical personal appear|party, ance, and the alertness of his man- SjS.^y ywj.r "T-^SF-T..^fj* -"-.)- Fein and all Ireland ner do not suggest the brooder over figures. He is a brilliant talker, says the Lon don News, and he seems to have no reserve on the subject of his dreams of glory for Ireland. His courage Is beyond question and he readily faced death at Boland's bakery in the 'revolution." He rallies his men un der fire as only one with the grit ot command and of Inspiration can. He received a death sentence calmly, with one of his favorite works, the "confes sions" of St. Augustine, under his arm. He was not in the least moved, his jailers reported, when a reprieve was read to him In his cell. It would be erroneous to infer that he is cold or impassive. He is emotional but self-controlled. Naturally he is nerv ous. At times he talks incessantly. His temperament is sanguine, not to say enthusiastic. He is lucky in hav ing that fine physique, for it shows up conspicuously before an audience and prejudices every observer in his favor. His oratory is a blend of the sarcastic, the anecdotal, the polished, the enthusiastic. The spark of fire Hashes early from it. He does not rank either. Indignation flames. The soul shines forth from the flashing dark eyes. Such are the impressions of reporters for the London press. He has a tragic platform manner. He conveys or communicates emotion with his arms, now folded across his breast or again held behind him until they wave in the air as he darts for ward at a decisive moment. One de rives an impression of youth, precise ly as in the time of the orthodox Home Rulers of the Redmond school one beheld middle age or gray and bespectacled maturity talking about castle government in slightly cracked accents. There is nothing cracked in the accents of de Valera, altho there is an occasional hoarseness. He has moments of oratorical frenzy when he seems anything but the cool and calculating geometrican. He might occasionally be deemed diffuse, if not incoherent and irresponsible. In a moment more he is calm, collected, narrating some fresh instance of Brit ish stupidity. Stupidity, as the London World says, is the indictment of the British always when de Valera is called up on to frame It. There are moments when de Valera goes so far as to say that the British are not oven ordin arily bad. They are simply stupid. The topic is dwelt upon with a wealth of felicious illustration from the Irish point of view. It Is one of the para doxes of his situation that de Valera is personally quite popular with many of the English in Ireland. He has not the cold aloofness of I'arnell in dealing with everybody, bis own fol lowers included, nor yet the somewhat aristocratic hauteur of the late John Redmond, suggesting the English country gentlemen, nor the vehement hatred of all things British that char acterized Danien O'Connell. In fact, de Valera can be good-natured, if sarcas tic, in his allusions to the English. "The English," he is quoted as having said at East Mayo, "are not like the Bourbons, who never learned anything and who never forgot anything. The English learn many things but they never know how to apply their knowl edge. When a German learns anything he proceeds to apply the knowledge but an Englishman lets his knowledge accumulate in his head until it has be come solid." De Valera's favorite illus tration of the stupidity of the English is drawn from the state of Ireland, a country .very easily governed, he in sists, inhabited by a people who respect strong government intelligent ly administered. In fact, de Valera's observations upon the English would make an interesting volume, especial ly as he affirms that, instead of hating them, he really loves them at a dis tance. At Dublin he predicted once that when the English put him to death they will in their stupidity im part a superfluously sanguinary char acter to the act.—Current Opioion. Two Mexican Bishops have died re cently, Msgr. Pagaza of Vera Cruz and Msgr. Dominguez of Tepic. At the time of his death the latter was a street sweeper. That such a thing should have been possible seems in credible to Catholics "up north," but. the report of the bishop's humiliation is well authenticated. To take a bishop in his seventieth year and de-v grade him and his office to such an extent is—well, worthy of Carranea. GERMANY DOWNS RADICALS. JM if Berlin, Jan. 31.—Unofficial returns from Sunday's elections to the Prus sian assembly, without taking Po-,^|| sen's twenty-one delegates into con-!_ sideration, show the selection of 142 Socialists, 24 Independent Sociallsts,aM| 87 Christian Peoples party, 41 ,6er-j|||f man Nationalists, 18 German FeopWs |||g 61 Democrats. Guelphs and Democrat-Peasant.. .'^ \3 3* t? -..alt .•"li M|