Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 November 1888 — CUPID HAS NO NATION. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

CUPID HAS NO NATION.

Marriage of Miss Emlicott and Mr. Chamberlain—How tlie Grille and Mrs. Cleveland Were Dressed. [Washington (D. C.) telegram.] The marriage of Miss Mary Ehdicott to the Hon. Jossph Chamberlain, about which so much has been read and talked, has been consummated. The ceremony was performed at St. John's Church and was witnessed by a large crowd of peoplo, the unbidden guests, as might have been expected, far outnumbering those to whom invitations had been extended. President and Mrs. Cleveland were in attendance, the latter wearing a handsome walking-dress of stone-gray velvet with steel passemeuterlss and a vest of white silk. Three large La France roses were worn on the left of the corsage. A white bonnet with aigrette of ostrich tips completed the costume

Mrs. Endicott and son occupied the front pew, and near them Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland and the Cabinet. No foreign notables were present. Miss Endicott looked very handsome in a traveling dress of French grav Henrietta cloth, fashioned with an elegant simplicity, the color of the gown showing off to perfection her stylish figure and heightened color. irom the church the wedding party drove to the residence of the Secretary of War, where a wedding breakfast was served. This was attended by the Pres dent and Mrs. Cleveland, members of the Cabinet, and relatives of the family. Shortly thereafter the bridal party left on the north-bound train. They will return to Washington, and then, after a few days, sail for Europe. Mr. Chamberlain has been twice a widower. In 1861, at 2o years of • age. when still with his father, whom he had joinel in 1854 in the wood screw manufacturing business at Birmingham, and before he had ac ieved a name as even a local celebrity, he married Harriet Kenrick, a daughter of Archibald Kenrick, of Borrow Court, Edgbaston. His first wife died in 1863. Five years after he married Florence, a daughter of Timothy Henne, of Maple Bank, Edgbaston, who died in 1875. Mr. Chamberlain is a native of London, where he was bom 52 years ago. Miss Endicott has not crossed the meridian of the second decade of her life. Miss Endicott, who is a young lady of distinguished leature and foim, on her father's side comes down through more than two centuries and a half of Puritan descent from the Gubernatorial settler of Salem, in Massachusetts Bay, and on her mother’s side has the blood of the ancient and distinguished Salem -Peabodys. Miss Endicott has had all the advantages of Bos on culture. She is skilled in the feminine social arts, and will grace the surroundings of her husband, whether at No. 40 Princess Garden, in the. aristocratic section of the British metropolis, or at Highbury Moor Green the Birmingham home of the distinguished British Radical.

MR. AND MRS. CHAMBERLAIN.