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THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP

Vincent N. Turvey

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158 THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP.
Of this I can only say that two or three others have given me the same description. With many thanks, E, W. OATEN.
I insert a postcard from Mr. Hiscock, from whose premises the above writer spoke to me, showing that he rang me up and introduced Mr. Oaten. I do this in order to prove that I was not “in a house overlooking that of the person seen” as has been suggested by very acute critics. It proves that I must have been at home, and that Mr. Oaten was (at least three miles away) in Mr. Hiscock’s shop.
(No. 47.) April 4, 1908,
DEAR SIR, I rang you up last Monday, March 30, and introduced Mr. Oaten to you who was in my shop. I understand you then gave hima descrip-
tion over the telephone. Yours, H. Hiscock.
In the next case it is necessary to state that I know both the young ladies. Their father’s letter merely vouches for what I saw, or said that I saw, through the telephone, 2z.e. what one was doing in the room above, and what the other's dress, etc., was like,
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