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The largest, most complicated, exclusively private residence in the United States, the former home of only one tiny living lady, yet inhabited through the years by the ghosts of many disembodied souls --that was the unique setting last Hallo­ween for Peninsula Assembly No. 94, Soc­iety of American Magicians, when they celebrated National Magic Week and com­memorated the fiftieth anniversary of the death of their great compeer, Houdini.
Holding their "Houdini Spirit Seance" in the world-famous Winchester Mystery House was considered so rare a combin­ation of supernatural elements and magi­cal talents that it attracted the atten­tion of local and metropolitan newspapers, television and radio. It was a real coup for Bob Horton, program chairman, who planned the event.
Starting with a tour of the sprawling mansion, guests in groups of thirteen climbed several of the thirteen sets of stairs -- some with one-inch risers, opened doors against blank walls -- tall doors and short doors, counted thirteen panels on ceilings, and saw other oddi­ties that were said to have been de­signed by the spectral nightly visitors with whom the widow Winchester had communed.
They were told by guides that Mrs. Win­chester had been born Sarah Pardee in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1839. Dur­ing the Civil War she had married Will-
iam Wirt Winchester, son of the inventor of the Winchester rifle. Their only child had died in infancy and Winchester himself passed away in 1881. Deep in grief, Sarah consulted a seeress who said she had been cursed by the spirits of all those killed by the Winchester gun and that her own only escape from early death was to buy a house and build on it continuously. Advised by doctors to move to a milder climate, she pur­chased an eight-room farm house in San Jose, California, in 1884 and over the 38 years of her life there, the simple cottage grew to the present 160 rooms. Though never finished, it has been de­signated both by the state and federal government as a historic land-mark.
After eating a delectable buffet served that night in the 13-cupola'd greenhouse and enjoying the close-up magic of Jack Zenger and Patrick Martin, S.A.M. mem­bers and guests were directed to a near­by unfinished salon and seated around small tables. In the eerie half-light they could see the round seance table at one end of the room and a curtained stage at the other.
Jack Zenger, President of S.A.M. Assem­bly 94, introduced Bob Horton, who con­ducted the commemorative "Houdini Spirit Seance," exhorting the great magician to manifest his presence by using one of the traditional props on the table: book, bell, rope, tambourine or slate. Onlookers concentrated tensely on Hou-

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