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THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP

Vincent N. Turvey

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160 THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP.
with you.” (This the reader will note is a “description” in itself, for I was not told that a lady was there at all.) The lady there- upon came to the telephone and I gave her a description of the “spirit” form of a young man who was killed in the South African War.
Her letter is brief, but testifies as to the correctness of the vision sufficiently to justify the reader in believing my statement.
(No. 49.) Bournemouth, June 4, 1907. DEAR SIR,
I was in a room with some mutual friends on May 22, 1907. Mr. Pontifex rang you up on the telephone and asked if you could “see” any- thing. You said “ Yes, for a lady who is there,” and he called me to the ‘phone. I was and am a-stranger to you. You described to me a young man I knew who was killed in the South African War, and gave details such as “he went to Eton” and “ had a sister,” etc,
Yours truly, A— I— M—.
In order to understand the next incident the reader must be told that Mr. Hiscock has two places of business. I rang up the wrong one, and Mr. Hiscock was not there. When,
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