LONG-DISTANCE CLAIRVOYANCE, 133 In the above letter there is at least one thing which can hardly be explained by Telepathy ; that is, the statement—‘“ Your mother is suffering from one disease and being treated for another.” I did not like to say dying, although “I” felt that such was the case. Consultation showed that the poor lady was dying from cancer, and had been treated for sciatica. It is this point that, in my opinion, completely puts Telepathy, as an explanation, out of court. Here, in Bournemouth, am I, an uagualzfed layman; and yet in some way or other I was able to obtain medical information about a woman right up in Glasgow. Evidently, 0 one on earth knew of the error in diagnosis. Certainly the son did not, and therefore I could not have read dés thoughts; certainly the poor patient could not have known; and even if she had, she could not telepath to a man of whose very existence she was ignorant. Obviously the doctor in attendance did not know of his error; and, if his “subconscious mind” knew, he could not telepath to me, for he, too, did not know of me. One should bear in mind that the son of the patient was a perfect stranger to me; and that he had merely called as the representative of a business firm.