Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 December 1896 — A Divorced Pair Meet. [ARTICLE]

A Divorced Pair Meet.

Walter L. Sinn, son of Colonel Sinn, the well-known theatrical manager, was buried from Plymouth Church yesterday. At the conclusion of the services the lid was removed from the casket and the large audience filed past the remains, taking a last look at the face which had been so familiar to them for many years. Then a pretty, pathetic incident occurred. Colonel Sinn took the arm of his wife, from whom he has been divorced for a number of years, and leaned over the casket She looked at the face of her dead son and then up to that of her husband. There seemed to be an understanding In the look. He placed his arm In hers and led her down the aisle, following the casket. There was scarcely a dry eye In the large church. Every one noticed the incident, and with a common impulse it occurred to all alike that It meant a reconciliation, an act that would lie hailed with Joy by, the many friends of both.—Pittsburg Dispatch.