Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 March 1890 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

“Quite ready,” Priscilla answered, drooping her head ana blushing a little: '•No, she isn't?" sturdy Caleb Trenton. the yocng minister’s farmer brother, made reply. “She isn’t going back at ail, Herbert. She is going to stay- with me for good and aIL" “If—if you don’t mind!" whispered Priscilla. - Caleb says he loves me, and I am quite sure that I love him!” Herbert Trenton glanced keenly from one to the other oF th >se young people. “lam glad of it,” be said kindly. And Priscilla never knew how near she had been to the heart of the young man with the spectacles and the magnetic voice. She had been married over a year, when, going up to the city to buy some lace for her first baby’s christening robe, she saw Kitty Chaffer behind the counter.

“So it is you, is it?” said Kitty. And Priscilla saw that she was pale and haggard, and had a reckless light in her eyes, a hard, inharmonious jangle in her voice. “Happily married, eh? and all that sort of thing! Well, some folks have all the luck. I almost wish, Priscilla, that I had stayed at home from Rockaway Beach myself that Sunday, and gone to church with you! Did you ever hear how it turned out? We had a regular frolic, we young folks. We went bathing in the surf, and we rode on the merry-go-rounds. And Jane Ellis’ young man and me we played get married, just for a joke; and, will you believe it, the lawyers said it was a real marriage, and Jane hasn’t spoken to him since, nor to me. just as if I was to blame. And he’s took to drink, and keeps bothering me for money and threatening to take me away with him—he a man whom T perfectly hated. And Harry Sanderson has got engaged to another girl, after giving me a ring and all, because he said he didn’t approve of the way I acted. And, altogether, ” added poor Kitty, bursting into tears, “I wish I was dead and put out of my troubles, And it all came from that Sunday pleasuring. Here comes the shop-walker. Don’t take any notioe, Priscilla. Yes’m," Kitty added smartly, “we sell a great deal of Oriental lace for babies’ clothes; it washes and wears beautiful. Ten yards, did you say?” And Priscilla Trenton, riding homo from the station in the twilight with her baby on her lap and honeet Caleb at her side, thanked Heaven that she had chosen the right path on that summer Sunday morning, when good and bad angels strove together on her behalf.

No Swearing in the French Army. , General Negri er of the French army lias Issued a severe order against iwearing or blasphemy in connection with military commands tn his corps. Hl* Fate. Some people learn in early childhood what others are half a lifetime in discovering. Mr. T. A. Trollope tells a true story of a little boy, a relative of his own: The child, a fine little fellow of eight years, said something to which his mother disapproved, and she proceeded to reason with him. “I do not like to hear you speak in that manner. You mean to be funny, but you are simply rude.” The little fellow burst into tears, and said, amid his sobs: “There, mother, you have the secret of my life. lam always meaning to be funny, and I turn out rude.” Poor boy! He was not alone in his affliction. A IMreadful Voice from the Tomb, One of the treasures of the Edison phonograph works at Orange, N. J„ is a cylender that was impressed with the voice of the late John McCullough, the actor, who died in a madhouse. The impression was taken while he was in confinement. Rambling passages from the plays In which he acted were recited In a voice of wonderful power and pathos, but at the end of each passage the actor would stop and say in a voice to chill the l • od: “But now I’m mad— ha, ha, h , . ha, ha, ah-h-h-h.” The end o' h was all but indisoribable, drew in his breath with a s< at was partly a shriek and part.) a gasp. If there is ever a voice heard from the tomb it is when this cylinder is put in tiie phonograph.

notice to non-becident. State of Indiana, County of Jasper, as: Andre w H. Arnold Is hereby notified that Su. sanna Arnold haa filed her complaint in the Jasper Circuit Court for the Durpoae of obtaining a divoree from him. a id Andrew H. Arnold. That said cause will come up for trial "n Monday . March 81. 1890, the aame being the 18th judicial day of the March term, IWO, of the jasper Circuit Court, to ba held at the Cor rt House, in the Town of Rensselaer. Jasper county, Indiana, commencing Monday, March 17 1890. , . Witness my hand nnd the seal of < Sxal. 1 said Court tl Is 6th day of Febauary, *''* JAMEB F. IRWIN, Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court. Hammond A Austin, Att’ys for Pl,ff. February 7,1800 TO WEAK MEM esaasfsaasi-a aWsSssS h*. v.c, vowMayMsstt. c