HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-12-20, Page 7•
TEE WINOJWI TEV.ES, DEC E BER 20 1906
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NAL S
Nag a True Record and Explanation of the Sevea
Mysteries Now Associated With His Name to
the t utak Mind, and of an Eighth,
iliich in the Key of the Seven
N, JR.
I Copyr181ieharies W. Rooke By HOWARD fIE1U1N6
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3
Clad the misfortune to become involved
in the trouble there about three years
ago. You may remember it."
"Not definitely," said I.
"Somebody got away with $150,000,"
said Whiting. "Of course I need not
say that henry Donaldson was entire-
ly innocent, but circumstances, and
men, too, conspired against him. Ile
,was arrested and almost immediately
released, but only that he might be
•dogged by detectives.
"He was abnormally senstttve re•
:garding anything that affected his good
name, and he was always easily dis-
couraged. He was convinced that the
combination against him was too strong,
and that he must eventually be dire
graced and ruined, He could not bear
the prospect, and so be took a false
step to avoid it. Ile fled, and nobody
had the least idea where he had gone.
"Donaldson was ill in bed in some
rooms of aline up town. We supposed
that Henry knew where he was, but
the poor fellow had been so hounded
up and down and was so oppressed by
the disgrace that he had kept out of
everybody's way. My communication
to him about Donald was stolen by the
detectives. Ile received no word at
all, and, as we discovered long after-
ward, be was led into the distressing
error of supposing that Donald was
disloyal to him in this trouble. Noth-
ing Could have been further from the
truth.
"When henry did not come to see
him, ea we had expected, Donald got
rY -
1
."The devWW" he muttered. "This is odd!"
out of bed, though he could hardly
-stand upon his feet, and went out to
And his brother. But Henry was far
.away by that time, and not even the
detectives themselves were more 1g-
norant than we were as to his where-
abouts.
"For a week or more the newspapers
located him In fifty different pinres.
and Donald himself got wind of tuuuy
idle rumors. That sort of thing is
Agonizing. I don't like to think of
what Donald suffered. Finally we
learned that the detectives in the case
had reached the conviction that Henry
had committed suicide by leaping from
au ocean steamer. Some poor fellow
Made that pitiful ending, and for my
own part I Iib oily believed that it was
Henry Donaldson.
"Almost a year later, however, we
.got word that Henry had been seen in
a lumber camp in the northwest. I
heard of it first and secretly attempted
an luvestigation, sending a. detective
out into that region, His first commu-
nication to me seemed favorable, and I
decided that it would be worth while
for Donald to go out there, I took two
Or three fellows whom I coulit trust
into my confidence, and we agreed to
put up the necessary money. We all
resented Henry Donaldson to tome
back and face his accusers, and we be-
lieved that we could clear him.
"We made a pian to lunch together
Never So Well
and have Donald with us and then dis-
close the whole subject to elm. So we
met about noon one day and went to a
private room in Hobart's restaurant up
town. Donald did not know what was
in the wind, but for some days his
mind had been running upon his broth-
er, and he looked all broken up with it.
As he and I were going to Hobart's
that day be said to me;
"'I am sick with anxiety about Har-
ry.'
"'You don't believe that he is dead?
said I,
"'I never bave,' lie replied. 'I can't'
"Nothing more was said upon the
subject just then, and it was not men,
toned while we were eating luncheon.
This was by agreement. Donald wan
very silent during the meal. He ate
scarcely anything. He was pale and in
a peculiar state of nervous tension. I
observed bine with considerable anxi-
ety, for he looked like a man who is
going to break down.
"We bad reached the cigars, and the
waiter was well out of the way. One
of the fellows made a sign to me to
open the subject that was on our
minds. I turned toward Donald. He
started as if from a dream and said in
a hurried, strange voice:
"'Harry is all right'
"Then the color rusbed into his face.
which had been very pale. He reeled
in his chair. and I put up my band to
catch him.
"'What do you mean?' I asked.
"'I saw him; he said, '1 saw him,
Re's all right. He's coming home.'
"That was all that we could get out
of him at first, and we did not know
wbat to make of it. Finaily I told him
frankly just why we were there and
what we bad learned.
"'No,' be said; 'it's all a mistake. He's
not in any lumber camp. 1 don't know
where he Is, I never saw any such
place before. 1 think it's in China from
the look of it'
"Of course we tormented him with
;was l's t accomplices, for and the usual in -
CURED HER BOY
Vin^seas kept quiet through the in•
ter
faiencea, except that a card was pub-
Ile
seemed
exonerating praaldy brother. OE PNEUMONIA
Ile seemed to be perfectly satisticd
with tats, though it was not very de13-
site. Really the poor fellow was done ' • • • ••
with earth. He flied as many men and Newmarket Mother Is toad In her
woolen die who might live, but bave : Praises of the Great Con,
not the will.
"In conclusion I have only this td sampti
say: So far as ave can learn Donald's
•
atdson to return at once to his office,
and so we could not tisk hint the ques-
tions which were pressing for utter-
(wooI stay say, however, that when
we bad abundant opportunity there-
after we obtained scant 'ufarmation.
Donaldson either could not or would
not tell bow he obtained ills psychic
messages. "It is like suddenly retnem•
boring something that you have always
fin Preventative
known," was the usual way in which
be dodged the question, and he would
vision was perfectly accurate. It show- "" • never sneak upon the . subject at an
ed Vinal laying bio written confession "My son Lauti enee was taken down when he could avoid doing so.
before Henry Donaldson. But the vi- with Pneumonia, says Mrs. A. 0. Fisher, Upon the hatter of Denaldson s ree-
slon occurred about eight hours before of Newmarket, Ont. • "Two doctors at- ognitton of his friend \Vbtttng's pres-
the event. I leave the explanation of tended bins. He lay for three months enee we made one discovery before
•
t almost like a dead child, His lungs leaving the restaurant Hackett sat •
this phenomenon to any ouo who became so swollen, his heart was pressed . down in the chair which our young
thioles himself competent, I am not. over to the right side. Altogether I think friend iled occupied and immediately
perceived that owing to the position
of a hat tree upon which our coats
were hung the mirror In the wall could
not explain the phenomenon. I could
see around one side of this obstruc-
tion and Hackett around the other side,
but it was precisely in the necessary
line of Donaldson's vision.
About two weeks after this remark-
able luncheon Deacon Donaldson was
added to our' working foice at Tun-
bridge and became a member of my
household, and there a singular and
amusing complication presently came
about. Mrs. Jane Harrington, whose
busband is a cousin of mine and has
charge of a branch of our business in
the west, came to visit me, bringing
her daughter, a very charming young
woman of twenty, In some mysterious
manner Donaldson got the notion that
Millie Harrington was the beautiful
psychic whose union with himself was
secretly plotted by the wily Stephen
Hackett and me. He had never been
able to rid himself of the idea that
something of the sort was in the wind,
but be was entirely ignorant of the
facts In the case of Dorothy Vaughn.
In fact, nobody in Tunbridge except
Hackett and me knew that Dorothy's
coming to teach our seltool bad any
connection with our quest of mysteries.
It was far more likely that Donaldson
should suspect Millie, wbo was there
upon my direct invitation and seem-
ingly thrown into his way with malice
aforethought, then Dorothy, who lived
an the other side of the town and was
merely the schoolteacher.
Millie was a flirt, I'm afraid, and as
the deacon was the most attractive
young man in her vicinity sbe pro-
ceeded to practice her innocent arts
upon him. I think he was not natu-
rally timid in such matters. He had a
very easy and graceful manner in the
company of ladies, and not even so
simple an old fellow as thyself could
fail to see that be had learned his les-
son in the school of experience. Mil-
lie found him au admirable cavalier,
and she kept him busy in her service.
It may have been five weeks that
Millie and her mother were at my
house, and the place was so gay that
I did not feel at home. In the even-
ings there would be music and danc-
ing, and I would sit in a corner alone
except when Hackett strayed into thid
scene of unaccustomed revelry or when
Dorothy could be persuaded to come
over after the school. She was in
mourning for her aunt, of course, and
could not join in the sport, but she
held it no harm to sit in sober black
and watch the others. We had some
great talks in this way, but it seemed
to me that she was not in so good spir-
its after this brief season of festivity
got well under way. Indeed it must
have been a trial for a young and pret-
ty sales. We girl, as I thought more than once. It
all right and my brief and inconsequential never occurred to me that there could
"'I know by the look of him,' he re• introducing a system of disposing of i talks with Hackett summed up the ,
plied, 'and I heard him say that he was'
our goo ds which was entirely unique in
whole of it. Neither of us had ever l she ud�atteed the topinion cute evening
coming home.' this country, and we required a young anggested that Donaldson and Miss { that she was not doing very well with
"Donald pledged us all to secrecy in . man of good appearance, of cultivated
Vaughn might make a match of it, yet the school and perhaps it might be
this matter, and I think the promise : mind and manner and especially of the idea had flitted through my mind
that quick, intuitive perception which 'better for her to go away 1 totally fail -
has been Fairly well kept. That after- h now and then, and I found out after- ed to comprehend
"You may be disposed to suggest
that Henry I)oualdson had communi-
cated with his brother unknown to
me. In regard to this I have not only
Donald's word, but Henry's, and you
will bear in mind that I attended Henn
ry in itis last illness, so that, aside
from the lack of motive for his telling
me a falsehood, we must consider also
the respect that is usually accorded to
the statement of a dying man.
"Moreover, henry could not have
communicated the fact of the confes-
sion, because he knew nothing about
it himself until some hours after it
was known to us. It must be remem-
bered also that Donald was entirely
ignorant of his brother's whereabouts
even after he had had the vision.. $e
had the sensation of being in that
room and of looking across the table
toward the window, and from the as-
pect of the country he supposed that
the scene was in China."
CHAPTER IV.
.AN EXCEPTIONAL MATC12.
5 Whitiug ceased Hackett drew
a long breath and looked at
me.
"A little ahead of anything
we've found yet, John," said he. "Have
you ever tried to figure the thing out
in your own mind, Dia Donaldson?"
The young man shook his head. "Therefore," he continued, lookingfirst
"I know what I sow," he said, "but to Hackett and then to me, "I am more
I don't know what was back of it, and than ready to accept your offer, but
I am inclined to think," he added, with there is one difficulty—I perceive that
a smile, "that it is much the same you have another motive in making it"
with utl we see, however simple. There "Another motive?" said 1, looking
across at my partner.
Young Mr. Donaldson Iaid his clinch-
ed right hand upon the table.
"Fran this day forth," said he, "it I
have any power or means of knowl-
edge that is different from the aver-
age I will make no display of it and
no use of it. That is my irrevocable
decision. You will never learn pnore
of that subject from me than you will
know tonight when the sun goes down.
But, since I have east away restraint
today, let me continue in that folly.
"I know perfectly well that you have
another object in making this propos-
al to me; that it is a part of a fantas-
tic dream. You hope to mate me with
a youug woman whom you believe to
possess the same powers that are in
me. You think tbat you are acting in
the interests of the advance of human
knowledge and that posterity, with
the probable exception of my posterity,
will rise up and eali you blessed."
I was motionless. dumfounded. I
could not have cried "Fire!" if the
blaze had broken out in my own pock-
et. Ten thousand messages from Ja-
pan were not to be thought of in com-
parison with this phenomenon.
For the secret that he had touched
upon was absolutely ours. My own
private speculations upon the subject
we paid Soso to the doctors, and all the
time he was getting worse. 'Then we
commenced the Dr. Slocum treatment.
The effect was wonderful. We saw a
difference in two days. Ourboy was soon
strong and well."
Here is a positive proof that Psychine
will cure Pneumonia. But why wait till
Pneumonia comes. It always starts with
a Cold. Cure the Cold and the Cold will
never develop into Pneumonia, nor the
Pneumonia into Consumption. The one
sure way to clear out Cold, root and branch,
and to build up the body so that the Cold
wont corse back is to use
PSYCHINE
(Pronounced Sk cn)
50c Per Bottle
Lamer sizes 51 sinal tit—al, druggists.
1311. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited„ Toronto.
is a mystery behind that teacup which
no man alive can solve."
"We know that it will hold our tea,"
said Hackett, "but this psychic busi-
ness doesn't seem to have any bottom."
I asked whether any one knew why
Vinal had not made his confession in
this country.
"Ile went to beg my brotber's par-
don and to die forgiven," said Donald -
questions, and at last we got an ac- son. "Ile put his confession into the
curate description of what he had seen. hands of the man who had been
Why, he even described the furniture wronged."
in the room and the view from the general Conversation followed in
window. which Donaldson appeared to far
"'There was a man sitting ata table
whom I think I should have known if greater advantage than before. The
he hadn't been back to me,' said he. 'My telling of the story seemed to have tak-
brother was sitting opposite, and there en a weight off his mind. Both Hack -
was some sort of document on the table ' ett and myself were pleased with him,
between them. My brother baa grown and we resolved to carry out our orig-
a beard. By heavens!' he cried sud- haat intention of taking him into our
denly. 'The other man was Joe Vinal!' employ. We did not speak of the mat
"Vinal was receiving teller of the • ter until after Whiting had Left us.
Dey Street bank. He had been slight- 1 He had said in the beginning that he
ly implicated in the robbery and had! could be with us riot more than half an
lost his place in the bank on account I hour. When he bad gone, 1 explained
of it, but had not been arrested. That to Donaldson that we had been con -
he should have joined Henry Donald- sidering him with reference to a posi-
son in a far corner of the world was tion of importance in our business, and
not altogether a favorable circum-
stance,
I named the duties, the salary and the
stance, and I asked Donald why he had prospects.
said so confidently that his brother was He was to be Mr. Hackett's assistant
W rethen
The Thud You Have Always Bought, and which, has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature oe'
e and has been made under ids per.,
sonul supervision since its infancy,
o•CGf'c r4,;i d Allow no one to -deceive you in this,
Ali Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -good" are but
Experiments that, trifle with and endanger the health et
Infants and Child en--xperionce against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor 011, Pare.
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, 111orpiline nor other Nareotie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Wor
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and W
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constip on.
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and nattu• sleep,
The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CAST
Boars the Signature of
• ,'y .
e
ALWAYS
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
OATA
RH
ISRAPEO A OAMEROUS SURGICAL OPE51TIO!
276 Brunswick Ars., Toronto, Can.
:BE OXYOBNATOR CO„
Toronto, Canada.
Oentlemen,—I am most pleased to certify to
f
the carattre properties oOxygenator.' I dun
began using it for Catarrh in the head. Havens
subdued this loathsome disease I then turned my
attention to a large Polypus that existed in my
right nostril, which was successfully removed by
tt, local application of " Oxygenator" thereby
taring ranch pain, danger and expense had it been
removed by surgical process.
I bare used your remedy in rayfamily (of Si for
s number of years, and can highy recommend it
ter fevers, colds and throat troubles—as a gargle,
Then warmed, 1111 invaluable.
I remain, yours truly,
O. H. ROBINSON.
noon Donald and I made an Incvstiga- is so valuable in dealing with the nig - ward that it had been in Hackett's.
estgrade of merchants. The right , „ „ That night after the house had be- ,
o Vinal and learned I don't mean to ss. Continued Don-ba
fore into the case f. ly comequiet I was sitting b -fore the
en .g
that he had left New York and that man, coming to us with the properaldson, "that you would use any iudufire-
bis whereabouts were unknown. His ergy and ability, might hope for any-, ecu in the library alone when Donald -
thing, up to an interest in our business, enee or hold out any inducements to son dropped in to keep me company.
wife, who was a beautiful woman of that would malts him more than well bring such a marriage about, but you At my invitation he took a cigar, se- •
fine descent, was living to this City; but to do. It all depended upon himsell, will look for it, and you will be dim- lecting one that was black and strong,
she had bad no word of her husband Donaldson received this proposal pointed. Why, Mr. Harrington, if I and when he had lighted it I perceived
in six weeks. She told me that he had Donaldson that a girl was what is called a that there was something on hismind.
left the city suddenly upon some mat- , with a solemnity whicjustified his psychic I could no more love her than
ter of business which she did not un college nickname of "deacon,"by Aman who wishes.; to conceal his men-
derstand. Be had been in very bad which we had heard Dr. Whiting ad- I could love a girl with two noses. Na, tat state should not smoke i* the pies•
dress him.sir; I am opposed to superfluity. The ence of a smoker.
health, and she was extremelyoanxious prdinary mental and physical endow- „
about him. "It is useless for me • to deny,"said lir. Harrington," said he at Inst,
menta are enough for me. If you at- , "you
"That was all the information that he, "that what you suggest is a great tempt to make any such match for me ' have been very good to me. You
h t f II fbusiness
we could get. About a week later ' advance for me. In my present place have pu me n a fine way o ,
I shall tits."
Donald got a cable message from his I am like a diver Walking with leaden so that mg future is assured—if I be -
brother. It came from Hongkong and soled shoes in a medium of high resist-
" i u
• I can. But, by jingo,"be cried, sudden -
'But have you µ.y reason
w cul,- have myself. I am very grateful ;loner;
was addressed to my apartments, It ance and having everything pumped p°se that such n girl exists?" I de- :cry way, and I'm going to please
marded '1\ ho is she?
said: 'Am coming home; westward, down tome from above. Ica "I have no intimation as to who she
Everything all right' ; the top, and nobody is going to pull is," he repiied, Addressing :es directly.
"By subsequent messages we traced me uta. I make a few signals by pull- „I ercelo no more than •:.:tt she is
him to the Mediterranean and Gibral• ing on a string, but nobody answers p
them. rut sunk; that's the truth about some one for whom you :sem a high
tar and learned what steamer was regard, and it is doubtless :} :Tent hon•
't get to
bringing him to this country. He was
nil of acute gastritis when he atrived,
and I thought that we should hardly
get him off the steamer alive. But he
rallied and seemed on the road to
mend,
"It appeared that ho had gone from
Since Girlhood this of the smaller
Japan and had lived in
Girlhood one of smaller cities. He brought
photographs of his abode there and of l
a view from it certain window. I have
never been able to be a skeptic upon
things occult since seeing that photo-
graph. lie told us that he had lived
almost in secret; that he had never i
dared Communicate with Donald for
fear that the message would fall into
wrong bands and reveal his hiding
place.
"One day ho was amazed to see Joe
Vinal at his floor. plow this man
traced him be never learned. Vino!
was dying. Only his purpose had sup-
ported him through the latter part of
the journey. He made u complete rev-
elation of the inner fiets of the bank
robbery, in which he himself was the
principal criminal. This statement was
sworn to before the American consul,
and a few days later Vinal died. hen-
ry Donaldson went to Hongkong and
thence home, bringing the statement
Which was put into the hands of the
bank's omcials, who used it to extort
as complete restitution as possible from
Mrs. E. J'. Vanderburgh, of Eastern
Welland avenue, St. Catharines, Ont.,
writes: "For twenty-one years I was
badly afflicted with heart trouble, nerv-
Dueness and Cramps in the limbs, also
twitching of the muscles and nervous
headaches. I became weak, debili-
tated and emaciated. My condition
was distressing, and I was inade worse
through worry and loss of sleep.
"I tried a hundred remedies in vain,
and, reading about Dr. Chase's Nerve
rood, I decided to try it. After having
used half a. dozen boxes of this prepara-
tion my old trouble had entirely van-
ished and I was enjoying better health
than I had since girlhood. I am now
past middle life and am in perfect health.
I would not take worlds to -day and go
back to my former state."
1/r. Chase's Nerve Food is especially
popule of its
gentle s action r with anwomen c
d remarkable rest re-
tivo influence; 50 cents a box, 0- boxes
for $2.50, at all dealers, or Edmainaort,
Bates & Co., Toronto.
me.
or for me to be coupled n tit her in
^--a" your thoughts. But I ask yc•u to think
Of it no more."
• "You have rend from a closed bcotc."
>..,p A 11• How many women said I, "and it is a marvelous thio;; to
IG. s@ there aro that get no re- do. slut you have read only a single
freshment from sleep. paragraph and have failed to grasp the
They wake in the morn- sense of the whole voltnne. We want
OMEN ing and fed tinder than your head in our business. Mr. Donalcl-
vt whop they went to bedson. and at'e wiling to pay for it. but
• your heart is your own, and 1 should be
They have a dizzy sensation in the head,
the heart palpitates; they are irritable the first to dissuade you from a mar -
And vervous, weak and worn out, and range. however nnivautageous it might
the li ,htest hou:,chold duties during the seem to be, that was based upon any
day scent to be a drag and a burden. other !tutmise than the love of a good
KILBURN'S HEART notnrt"
"7 am a mclaneholy fellow," said
Donaldson, with evident feeling, "and
iCf people
for tnntrinwny. .4. r cheerful
AND NERVE PILL
t..i pealtit xltouill marry. A. rich man's
money may bless or curse his ehildteu.
are the very reedy that wen., nervous, At the lest, it is not so good its a happy
tired out,areki women treed to restoresomebody else. I've got no business to
them the blessings of god health. disposition; at the worst, it leads to
fi g d be in love but I am On the chance
They give sound, restful sleep, tone
ly springing up, "I can't!"
"Why not?" I asked as gently as pos-
sible.
He dried the palms of his hands upon
his handkerchief.
"It's a great honor," he said, trying
to be taloa. "1 told you so long ago at
Bertram's. Of course I didn't then
know that the young lady would 3m
related to you. I couldn't foresee hot,
beautiful she would be, how admire -
bre in every way. She doesn't care a
penny for me, to be sure, but I'm not
speaking of that. I'm speaking of my
own sentiments. She's got the most
wonderful eyes-- dors, mysterious, mar-
velous eyes. By Jove, I can well be.
sieve that she's the true psychic! And
perhaps that's what's the matter."
"Are you speaking of Miss Harring-
ton?" I inquired as he paused. And he
replied with a quick nod of affirmation.
"I'll tell you the truth!" he cried,
wheeling toward inc suddenly. "The
psychic matter hasn't anything to do
with it. It's because I'm in love with
up nothing that is half ^ so bad as here • that the woman I love may love me I
the nerves, strengthen the heart, and itary sourness of heart. You, will for -
ought to go and drown myself—in her
make rids blood. Mrs. C. McDonald, giro me for mentioning this subject.
Portage la Prairie, Man., writes: "I was Really, I was afraid that 1 might be interest—but I won't. I will stay right
troubled with shortness of b.eath, palet- beguiled into some sort of an a tperh. here and win her if I can. I'tn lin elfish
tation of the heart and we::k spells. 1 meat. It may have been te cranky no, enough to do it, vain enough to think I
got four boxes of Mflburn's 'heart and tion, but this whole conversation has may toee ten 17 And it seemed M to r my
Terve Pills, and after taking them 1 was been such a weird mixture of business duty o you about very It, ape, peculiar considering, tate peculiar cir-
pp and ghosts!" eumstanees of the ease."
f $12'' 11 dealers or the The T. Mile The big clock in the eortler struck 2 r' Who is the young lady?" I inquired.
Completely cured.
Price 50 Centsper box or three bones.
rprlaed us all with tate lateness
burnCo.,Limited,Toronto,Ont. and sn beer same strange reason a flood of
of the hour. It wA
t
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This Country.
In the early days of saengerfests in
this country they were beld annually.
The third saengerfest was held in New
York in 1852, and many Newark Ger-
mans attended, Below are given ex-
tracts from the Newark Daily Adver-
tiser, printed at the time:
June 10, 1852.— The German glee
clubs of New York will celebrate the
third annual festival in New York
this year on the lith to 22d of June.
The New York Journal of Commerce
states that the glee clubs from abroad
will be received by the New York
clubs and honored with a torchlight
procession. The principal performance
will take place at the Academy of
Music, Fourteenth street, when the
choruses will be sung by over 1,200
male voices, accompanied by an or-
chestra of 100 pieces. On the 22d will
he. held a .picnic on the Bloomingdale
road; opposite at1sker's tray. • •
June 22.—Third musical jubilee at
German singers, Saturday to Tuesday,
19th to 22d. The execution of the
"Magic Flute" overture by 1,200 voices
was very uncommon and surprising by
the New York clubs' and was received
with great applause. The Eintrachts
of Newark sang "Watlisisclier Schif
fergesang" in a distinguished manner.
But the most marked performance was
Martin Luther's "Eta Feste Burg 1st
Unser Gott," arranged by Fluke. We
felt immediately what religious music
really is—how grand, solemn and sub-,
lime such a bymn is when performed
by a large orchestra and hundreds of
voices. It was something to be re-
membered long. Kossuth was present
during au intermission and was eheer-
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