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Rev. Henry Van Dyke, D.D., of Princeton, preached last night in Appleton Chapel. His text was: "For he endured as seeing Him who is invisible." This statement, said Dr. Van Dyke, is a record of the victory of the seventh sense. Besides the ordinary five senses, and common sense, which should be added to these, there is another, the possession of which distinguishes man from beast--the power to look ahead and comprehend the invisible. This keen perception of the unseen, or, as it sometimes is, merely the power of putting two and two together, has been a characteristic of the most eminent men of history. Without it such leaders as Moses. Washington, and Lincoln, or scientists like Newton and Franklin would have been impotent. Friendship and love, which necessitate a belief and trust in discos qualities, and even religion itself, without this seventh sense would be impossible
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