SPIRITUALISM.
To the Editor of the Evening slar. Sib,—l am sure that- the reading public will be ■ much gratified to find Mr Meers’s excuse published,; which fully explains how lie is “ under a cloudas thus we find that his laudable endeavors—as an unit of the Dunedin Mutual Improvement Society are nipped in; the bud. So much the worse for the public j and snore’s the pity, as entertainments of the class established by the society are positively indispensable hi Dunedin through oar long winters. At home, literary and scientific institutes Were very popular and useful, and' were 'fostered alike by employer arid employd, if only to diacourage tastefor-the p«blio r h<M»e r -whieh'h} not generally considered the , proper field for mental ' culture. The popular fallacy (?) wrought out at home under years of toll secifts; hay, ' it is,;ignored ? hW, hh(T at the vety butset—thus a worthy 'wchjbw of dJa"i .. ’•> Aur ■- ■) . t ,l j/ j
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Evening Star, Volume VIII, Issue 2227, 27 June 1870, Page 2
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153SPIRITUALISM. Evening Star, Volume VIII, Issue 2227, 27 June 1870, Page 2
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