to turn over and respond to her touch. This effort seemed to cause me to leave the bed and room, and return over the same route to New York at the same speed, and thereupon I reoccupied my bunk on board ship and awoke. ''At once it occurred to me that this must be an experience, so I reached out and switched on the electric light and noted the exact time. The next day I wrote to my wife and, without telling her anything about my experience, I asked her if she had noticed anything during the night in question. "Her reply was that she had strongly felt that I was in bed, and had reached out and touched me on the shoulder! So real did it seem to her that she sat up to investigate, and finding nothing thought, nevertheless, that she would make a note of the time, which she did, and the two times, hers and mine, were identical." Both Sylvan Muldoon and Oliver Fox describe how, yielding to the irresistible temptation (irresistible, at least to their etheric forms) to attract the attention of a charming lady, had sent them hurtling back to their physical moorings. Here is a case with unusual corroboration cited by Dr. Britton in Man and his Relations. The episode occurred in Canada to a Mr. Wilson, who was living at the time in Toronto. Mr. Wilson, on falling asleep in his arm-chair, dreamt that he was at Hamilton, a town forty miles to the west. In his dream he went to call on a lady friend, and rang the door-bell of her house. A maid answered, and said that her mistress was not at home. Knowing the family well, however, he walked in and asked for a glass of water. He then left, instructing the servant to give his kind regards to her mistress. When Mr. Wilson awoke he made a note that he had been asleep for forty