Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 October 1888 — Page 8
FOR LOVE’S SAKE.
It was more for her mother’s sake than her own that Meta Crossdale consented-to be Leon Parker’s wife, He was old jnoueli to be her father, but owned considerable property, and as she respected him, she thought in time she might learn to love him. Mrs. Crossdale’s death gave Meta a chance to postpone the wedding, for she was not satisried that she loved her elderly admirer enough yet to become his wife. In the meantime she weut to live with a maiden aunt in the city, who was the leader of au interesting literary and artistic circle. Here, for the first time in her life. Meta had an opportunity of mingling with some of the brightest minds of the metropolis, and she made many congenial acquantances during the winter. The year of mourning was nearly over, and Miss Crossdale was thinking or Meta’s trousseau, when disastrous news came from some property in which Leo Parker had invested heavily. I have not space to enter into all of the details, but the result was given in his own words to Miss Cross-* dale: “When my just liabilities are all paid I shall be a poor man, and must commence the world over anew. You know me well enough to be sure I will not hold Miss Meta to her engagement, hue I can not see her yet. You must tell her. ” And Mis- Crossduic, not unwillingly, understood the commission. “It was all very well,” she said, after telling Meta all the facts, “for you to marry Leon Parker at the time you were first engaged to him. You had no prospect of making any better match, and you were very poor, Put since he releases you I think you had better accept his offer. I will tell you now, Meta, that when I die you will he wealthy. If you are wise you will remain single, as I have done. But if you marry you can let your heart choose, for you need not marry for money. You do not love Leon Parker?” But Meta made no answer. She crept away to her own room, pale and shivering, wondering why the world was so cold and empty. All winter she had been com paring Leon Parker with the younger men who had assembled at her aunt’s, many of them drawn there more frequently than ever before by her own fair face. She had met literary men whose brilliant intellect won her hearty admiration; artists who had seemed to her above common humanity in their heaven-born gift; musicians who had made her heart glad with their wondrous harmonies. Some there were who had let her see that were she free she might claim their life’s devotion; some who might have touched her heart had not Leon Parker held her promise, But now that he had given back that promise, and must fight fortune again, she felt her heart crying out against tne sacrifice. He had offered her luxury and made her mother’s illness a bed of flowers, had sought her happiness in ever hour of their long friendship. She thought of him in some humble home, working to conquer fortune alone! She pictured him turning from the day's toil, and returning to his small room, his coarse dinner, alone! BAlone! always alone, for she knew no other love was possible to him. In his prosperity she had carelessly put her hand in his, to share the life of ease and luxury. In his adversity site- stood thinking of takingbaek her promise! With streaming eyes and trembling fingers she wrote to him. “Dear Leon: You will let me call you Leon now? I wronged you once, not so very long ago, for I promised to be your wife, only because you offered me wealth and a devotion I scarcely understood. I was very young, very inexperienced, Leon, and I did not understand how solemn and sacred a trust I was so carelessly taking. I ask you now to forgive me that I would have repaid your love so poorly. But if you do forgive me Leon, do not leave me, for I love you! Do not think I am bold or unmaidenly, for I would be in your eyes only what you can love. I did not know until Aunt Maria told me you had given me back my promise that I had learned to love you. Perhaps if there had not been this fear of losing you I should never have known how desolate the loss would make my life. Do not fear that you will find me fretful, if we are poor. I know how to economize, and have never been rich, so I dare hope I can help you, Leon, not to be a burden to you. But if you can still love me let our marriage be upon the day we had named—for I can not give you up. Meta." She took the letter down-stairs and put it silently in Miss Crossdale’s hand, and that prim maiden, after reading it, kissed her whispering: “May you be very happy, dear child. He is worthy of your love.” So there was a wedding in April, and the bride went contentedly to a small house, with a maid-of-all-work, instead of to the grand home Leon Parker had lost. But there was happiness there the grand house might have missed, for Meta had learned the seeret of her own heart and Leon Parker knew that his wife came to him for love's sake, and not for money.
The Abab and Hi» Hobbs.— I Th§ Arabians never beat their horses; they never cut their tails; they treat the® gently; they speak to them and seem to hold a discourse; they nee them as friends; they never attempt to increase their speed by the whip, or spur the®, but in cases of great necessity. They never fix them to a stake in the fields, but suffer them to pasture at large' around their habitations; and they oeijkt running the moment they hear the found of their master’s voice. In conse-1 Ctce of such treatment these animafo ! me docile and tractable in thf highest degree. They resort at nigM to their tente, and fie down fa The midst of the ohildren, without area j hurting them in the slightest manner. The little boys and girls are often sesa upon the body or neck of the mare, while the beasts continue inoffensive and harmless, permitting them to nlag 1 With aajjpareas them without injury, j
Possesses many Important Advantages over all other prepared Fooda. BABIES CRY FOR IT. INVALIDS RELISH IT. Makes Plump, Laughing, Healthy Babies. Regulates the Stomach and Bowels. Sold by Druggists. «5e., 50c., 81.00. WELLS, RICHARDSOW & 00., mumps, vt. Baby Portraits. A. Portfolio of beautiful baby portraits, printed on fine plate paper by patent photo process, sent free to Mother of any Baby born within a year. Every Mother wants these pictures; send at once. Qlve Baby's name and age. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Propi., Burlington, Vt.
¥. WILLIAMS,^ —DEALER • , - FURM T O 3R El WILLIAMS-STOCK TON BLOCK, Third Door West of Makeevtd ; ” c; e, Rensselae, Indt
Rensselaer Marble House, HENRY MACKEY. Proprie • Dealer In — American and Italian Marble, MONUMENTS, TABLETS. nB>*SVOHS3, S&ABS4 aNJD MARBLE I V IRA'S .I.YU VASES, Front Street. Rensselaer' Indiana. PAINT YOUR BUGGY FOR ONE DOLLAR Bj aslag COIT * CO’S On>«OAT BCOfIT PAIXT. Faint Friday, ran It to Church Sunday. light Fashionable Shades: Bt£t Olive Lake, Brewster and Wagon Greens. No Varnishing necessary. Dries bard with a *Udaa. One Coat and Job is done. Tip top for Lawn Seats, Flower Pots, Baby Carriage*, Curtain Poles, Front Doom. Juft the thing 7 for thefadies to use about the house/ .coirs HONEST HOUSE PAINT. P°— —Z* c - a<>^‘i?feJ rat “£Lh. n ?Sg-^g > “«Smt me I T e, Z. ou **“ P rocur « COIT * CO’S pire paint that *° „•« ■O«MT, flisps* LINSEBD-OIL pffi and free from water and benzine. Demand this brand and are qMgmifc*nd authorized by us. In writing, to warrant tt to wear t TEARS with COIT’B FLOOR PAINT WON’T DRV STICKY. ?ft.T^“?tlnon r H2T, dried beyond Die sticky point, waste a week, spoil the Jobs then sweat I Next time tray shades, warranted to dry hard aa.a rock tw night. No trouble. No swearing. CAUTION
It’s Easy to Dye WITH Di^mohdDyTs Superior /W[pl Stren 6 ul * Fastness, Beauty, V) Simplicity. Warranted to color more goods than any other dyes ever mode, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for the l}tunumd , and take no other. 36 colors; xo cents each. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt. For Gilding or Broniing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronte, Copper. Only 10 Cents.
Don’t Experiment. You cannot afford to waste time in experimenting wLen your longs are in danger. Consumption always seems at first, only a cold. Do not permit any dealer impose upon you with some cheap imitation of Di. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, but be sure you get the genuine. Be«ausehe cen mbo more profit hp may tell von he has something just -*s good, or just the same. Don’t be deceived, but insist upon getting Dr. King’s New Discover , which is guarantee! to give lelief in all Throat, Lung and Chest affections. Trial bottle free a* F. B. Meyer’s Drug store. Large Bottles $1 6
MU REWARDED are those who read this V and then aetr they will find honorable | employment that will not take them from their hemes and families. The profits are large and sure for every Industrious perso.-, m >ny have made °nd are now making several hundred dollars a month. It Is easy for any one to make £5 and upwards per day, whois willing to v. Ei ber ec:.; young O' old: rapital not ec:le<i; we-tart you. No special ability require : you cr. .a.i .<> ii ■ well as any one \ ito to us .it . for fu’l particulars, which W<; m- il free, v fees S:iuson & Co., Fort Raid. Maine. [T> p 5; ’ •f, ft h Lin & i | w CELEBIi a T E D Organs Pianos. For Catalogues, address, DANIFT, F. BKATTY, Was tr ;.on. New Jersey <t* •'> fjfl POO —J, *'} •': Crra-s at rsains ipOOdt'Jo'j* ■i : .rticuiuts, catalog address 1)*: id. F. 1.-,./, v, V. ;>Uin, ton. New Jersey. BPAWV’vJ f i? "j . .Are the Best. Write DDilill u il f.»t catalogue, address Daniel F Beatty, V,: *ngtou. New Jersey. BEATTY’S PIANOS. AV'-'l E, 5.5: Add:os Dnuei ’ B atty, Washington, New J er-ey Ba'.tfFiSßSß . • ■ '•<*-’ •* .h.*- - LADIES! Do Vot O’.v*, Bi'EiNU; j>t Home, with T 1 ¥l. r \ . j.. 33 They wil! dve >• -• r* ■ ■ Tne • -old every "ho c. ii, ,■ j , colors. They 1 av ,i ness, Amount :u Faekiu:. or for Fas: ness of Color, or nonlading qih ! i c.-s They do tu lci ack or smut.— for 1 e by 'U ; 11. JIEYEa, Rt i-twlaer, Ind. March fed. InkS -ly. • I (If lias tevolutionized the world duM U j-'lil j'ii jili ring the last half century. Not !ili I dkl I*g|* ,ea ' !t among the wonders of ini' dive progress is a meth d and system of work that can be erformed a.l over the country without separating the workers lrom their homes Pay liberal; any one can do the work; e:liter s.- x, young or old ; no speciai abilityrequ Capita! not needed; you are started tree. ( ttt this out and return to ns avd we will send you free something of great value and im pot: > :'> y■■ tl will start you inbusiuess :! " ,r ' : ■ •.i si> won, rc.’K-v right away, tin.. m the world. Grand out A fiee Andress .. iu i: A u., Avgusta, Maine.
1[ f AlitlWll 5 E|( | IspgMjga wT fl •* MRS. JAL. W. McE WEN,'Agent, Rensselaer, Ind. UIDEETAIumi ESTABLISHMENT. W WRI6HT, inoiitu! ..
SUM BkA WONDERS exist in thousands «f PUP forms, but are surpassed by the marvels UJi of invention. Those who are in need of profftabblc work that can be done while Jiving at home should at once send their address to Halle t & Co., Portland, Maine, and receive frea, full information how either sex. of all agee, can earn from $* Lj 826 per day and upwards wh: re ver they live You are started free. Cspt ta! not-reqpired. Some have made over SSO ..n a single dav at thi work Alienee ed. Stack l* Not the wholesale dealer. Horse * store. Not the retail dealer. Horse Blankets '• either. 1 The farmer who works hard for his money got stuck. You need not get stuck if you will ask your dealer for one of the following $4 Horse Blankets: 5/A Five Mile. Em Flva Miles of Waxp Threada. f* 5/A-Boss Stable. m Btrongest Hone Blanket Made. 71/A 5/A Electric. t Juet the thing for Ont-Door TTsa. /MJk 5/A Extra Test. M K Something Hew, Very Strong. 30 other styles At prises to enlt everybody. [Copyrighted 1888, by Wm. Ayres St Sous.]
