PHONE-VOYANCE, 151 telephone. This is the second occasion you have described some one through the telephone to my knowledge. “Yours, etc., “C,'V. PONTIFEX.” Thanks to the courtesy of Mr. Donkin, I am enabled to print a very explanatory letter, the value of which is enhanced by the fact that he allows me to use his name, which is one that is highly respected in Bournemouth. The particular value of his letter is due chiefly to the precise manner in which he makes his statements. He makes it clear that he and Mr. Pontifex were strangers, and had met at their host’s house; that Mr. Pontifex rang me up; that he (the writer) was ‘+e introduced to me; and that Mr. Pontifex gave me xo information, concerning their host’s appearance at the time; and that he could not have done so previously as he had not met him till then. Had I described Mr. Donkin himself, a critic might say that I knew him, as he is a well-known man in Bournemouth; but it was the Aosf whom I described; and up to the present time | have not seen him (in the ordinary way), and do not even know who he is or where he lives,