Spiritualists' Emblem

From The Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia
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Spiritualists' Emblem is an article published in the Belfast Evening Telegraph on 10 september 1925.


Spiritualists' Emblem

Belfast Evening Telegraph (10 september 1925)

GOLDEN SUNFLOWER ADOPTED.

(By arrangement with London "Express")

PARIS. September 9. — A sub-committee of the Congress of International Spiritualists has decided to recommend to the Congress the adoption of a golden sunflower as the international Spiritualists' emblem, and has selected a white banner with a sunflower in its centre as the flag of the International Spiritualists' Federation.

The flower has been chosen because it turns always to the sun just as Spiritualists always seek the light.

A suggestion at a meeting of the Congress to-day was that attempts should be made to communicate with the "other side" by means of wireless telegraphy and the telephone

A sub-committee of the Congress is studying the possibility of establishing in Paris a "house of mediums," where persons with clairvoyant powers will be enabled to live without earthly cares and to enter into communication with the "other side" without any disturbances.

Sir A. Conan Doyle attended last evening the final performance of a dramatised version of one of his detective stories, "The Speckled Band," given by the English players at the Theatre Albert Premier.