Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 13 Oct 1911, p. 1

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is the man who Walthamâ€"but UCKY owns a. only the man who has car- ried a Waltham Watch 'ior thirty or forty years knows what a fine investment 3 good Waltham is. a "It": Time You Owned 0 Walthom.” _ We carry the best quality of goods that can be purchased iirom the best manufacturers. John Slater Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. Fenelon Falls. L’ rotessiouul Cards LEGAL MCLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON rt STINSON. ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, 'NOTAR- B ies. Money to loan. Spec1al atten- tion given to investments. Branch oihce at ls‘enelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay ollice over Dominion Bank. R. J. llolmcsutm, K. G. A. lll’. FULTON, B. A. Jns. A. Post. T. II. STINSON. hernias, WEEKS .t HOPKINS. ‘ ARRISI‘ERS, SOLICITORS, AND B Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Olllces 1’0. 0 “1910111 St. south, Lindsay, Ont. and. at \\ ood- ville, Ontario. . ‘ _ G. ll. Hopkins, K. 0., C. E. Warns, F. [lemurs HOPKINS, B. A moons a JAUKSON AitltlS'l‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, 8w. OF B lice,Willinm street,[.1udsa.y. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON . M STEWART & O’CONNOR, BARRISTERS, NO'I‘ARIES, 8:0. MONEY â€"-â€"-â€" .__....._....___.... _._4 to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. . and York streets, Lindsay. ’i‘ STEWART. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A WTKNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY B Public. Successor to McDiarmid a Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon halls by appointment. Money to loan anp Rea. Estate bought and sold. Olhce Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. bEurAL. "6.. s. .3. earns, DENTIST, Fenelou .Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY med according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street / Drs. Neelands (it lrvlne. DEXTIS’I‘S - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid (its m artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons With great SUCCESS. p e r to r DR. H. II. GRAHAM. -â€"M. n.,c. u., n. n. 0.5. Eng.,n. c. r. s 5., Own, 1?. 'r. n. s.â€" )ilYSlClAN, SURGEON ‘8; ACCOUCH- i eur. Ollice. Francis Street, Iienelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, successor: ’I‘O DR. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ollice,Colborne street,Fen- elon Falls. AUCTIONEER. T HO MAS OAS BORE. nucrioussa - nusston FALLS. Sales of all kinds conductul in a first- class manner. Secure dates before ad-v vertising. Jflrfluflk.fli nil: M26: W W zn‘lhzfinJ-filr W351 flaw medium-z firsrifliull‘hufln: :Il‘lL-t Olliee on corner of Kent ’ ’ ' .mnfim nauseous. mfimwmmmewm was; flé LIVE POULTRY. ‘ Our poultry house at Fenelon Falls -will open on Monday, Oct. 16th, when ”we will be prepared to purchase any 2 quantity of Chickens, Fowl and Turkeys, . for which the highest market prices will be paid, up to and including Friday, Dec. 15th. Bring along your poultry. J. L. ARNOLD. : Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Wall Paper, Crockery. firm. Worth: manners-nu infirm 'WW MW ”at“ 3Will" W‘W‘MW‘W W‘IWW. 2"“ WJW’EW'W WWTWW‘W’QK’W’E‘WW WW “HWWTWWWW “W Man i... g "and organisms ilfigrrgprawrigyr'wrnm Wt :tnfllrrnmr‘nmr any: ”WWWWW WW , upgghhhwvg, 3.”. 1,1...“- . [5'2" 2.111., __. . "313:3,“ - a“ , , ' , 4‘7. . consuu us About the repair oi your watch, or anything in the n‘cpair of Jewelry. We are prepared to give you our best efforts, no matter how. small your order. EilGhAVlNd FREE On goods bought from us. life are showing a. complete line of Jeivelry in Watches, Silverware, etc,, everything that you would find 111 an up-to-date jeivelry store. NORTHEY FENELON FALLS. ,-.,.,..,,,g,_,,:.;, ”13“. Jeweler Watchmaker WHEN BAD WEATHER g COMES You‘ll want good shoes. If they‘re not made right better not have them. The Shoes we sell are the best that money and skill can produce. Another strong point about our shoes is that they acerim- modatc the feet comfortably and their outward appearance presents graceful and harmon- ious lines. l l lstill further increasing a growing Bank balance is one of the strongth 2 s Fenelon Falls. | HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - $14,400,000.00. ' ‘ ‘11“! "V-"L'<>“‘-“.‘+.:"5~1:2".7\~1" A. - Axg.n.~.-.a~~s\-.-1~vuv:n:~»r . » entrant, * ii DIONTRJCA In. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT REST - $2,000,000.00 ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. ZDeposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch W ulnar l was Peggy Qulte Unconecloualy Proved Herself Competent as a Mlnle~ . tor’s Wlfe . l 117 MARION oLrvm GREGG ! ..â€"-â€" Two Proposals i . "I' not at all the kind of a girl you ought to marry,” said the girl decided- ly, looking at the man in front of her with serious eyes. . "The consideration as to whether you are the kind of girl I ought to marry has never entered my mind. The fact that you are the girl I want to marry is never out of it," rejoined the man, gazing back at the girl with eyes as serious as her own. .' “Do I look like a clergyman's wifeâ€"â€" do I, John? Did you ever see one With hair like mine? Nothing on'this earth will keep it tidy. Ah, it’s all very well to laugh”â€"â€"â€"as a smile hovered round the man’s cleanâ€"cut mouthâ€"“but I'm not cut out for a clergyman’s wife. Even my name is against it. Peggy! It ought to bc Mary or Jane, or some- thing solid.” “And all this means,” said the man quietly, “that you don’t care.” 1 “I suppose it is that I don’t care enough,” said the girl gently. “I do care; you know that, John. I want to be your wife, but I don’t want to be a clergyman’s wife. Oh, I’m getting mixed! What am I saying?” g “Simply that you don’t care enough,” said the man, leaning for- ward and taking both the girl’s hands in his. “I was mistaken, that’s all; I imagined you did. What idiots men are! I thought I could make you hap- py, and I could, too!” he added hotly, holding the small hands so tightly that the girl almost screamed. , “That's not the point altogether. Could I make you happy? And the people, and the parish, and the bishop, and all of them? Oh, John, I couldn't; don’t ask me!" _ “But I’m not asking you to marry the people, and the parish, and the bishop, and all of them! Only me, Peggy!” “Yes; but a clergyman’s wife af- fects them all, and I couldn‘t be prim, and set a good example, and look after mothers’ meetings and things. Don’t say any more about it, John; I just couldn’t do it! You don't mind very much, do you?” the added quick- ly, as the man‘s face suddenly Sci hard. “Only so much that I shall never marry anybody else,” he replied gravely. And the look in his steady brown eyes haunted the girl for days. “And I’ve spoiled your life?" “No, not spoiled it; only left it in- complete. I'm just the half of a whole, Peggy, and you are the other. You don’t feel it, so you will probab‘y marry somebody else, and fit in quite well; but I couldn't. Ah, my dear, I feel like fighting for you, and making you mine! But it would he altering your whole life, and it wouldn’t be fair, unless you cared for me in the same way." “But we can go on being friends, John?" _ 75 Years in Business. life What Capital and Reserve Over $7,500,000 ' "nu, near; you can never be friends with your other half. I must have the! whole of you or none of you, so it's‘ just good-bye!” "And what if I change my mind?” "Then I’m always there, waiting to be made whole. Good-bye!" [ S l Six months later the girl sat in the”, same room, wondering how she Was? going to answer this altogether dif- ferent young man gazing at her with excited eyes. i “Do you feel that I am your otherC half?" she said suddenly; and there' was a serious note in the musical tones. “Half? Heavens, 1101 'You're my whole, my everything! Peggy, you mustâ€"you shall say ‘Yes'; I can’t go 021 like this! I’m mad when I'm with you, and worse when I'm away from you! Say ‘Yes‘ now!" . “But it would be silly to say ‘Yes’ it I don’t mean it,” said the girl, very. gently. “What would be the good of’ that?" . "Ah, but you would in time." i “No; I never should!" And there was a note of finality in the girl’s: voice. “Tony, you will think I’m a. perfect idiot; but some time agoâ€"oh, monthslâ€"a man told me that he was: one half of a. whole and I was the other, and that I belonged to him. Wasn’t it a weird idea? I laughed at the time, butâ€"butâ€"butâ€"oh, I don't know! Anyhow, I can’t marry any-- one else; it would seem like bigamy,- or something!” ‘ “Contounded impudence!" ; “Oh, no; it wasn’t impudence!" said the girl sharply, as a vision of the other man's strong, serious face flashed across her mind. “It was just. the greatest compliment he could pay" me!" 2 , “Peggy, I believe you're with the beggar!” “No, I don’t think I am; but it's the idea of the thing somehow, to belong, to someone so absolutely as to be their other half. Not a toy, or a play- thing, or a treasure, or an idol; but just a halt, without which they can neverbe a whole!” added the girl softly, with a far-away look in her eyes. “Then there is no hope for me?” “No hope? You silly old boy;- there’s every hope! You must find your other half. You’ve got one some- where, you know, and a much nicer one than I am, I expect!" “Rot!” ejaculated the young man lnelegantiy, as he 'i‘lung himself Out of the room. The Completed Whole In the quiet weeks that followed the girl Slowly realized how much she had missed the other man in the last six months. And then an energetic fe- male of advanced years, and still' more advanced ideas, came upon the scene, and enfolded the girl in a scheme for “brightening the lives of children in the slums." , "But I don’t know anything about children or slums,” said Peggy help- lessly, as the other rapidly sketched out a plan of campaign. “You soon will"â€"with something be. tween 2. snort and a sniff. , "But what do I do?” persisted Peg. in love gy, feeling rather like a timid fly caught in the toils of a. particularly energetic spider. ' i "011, talk to them!” I “The children?” Continued on page 8. C: ‘1 3’ 2‘. T4: ‘ -;. You Save rather than what you earn that decides your financial condition at fifty. The greatest help in saving is a Savings Account in such a. strong, reliable Bank as the Bank [of British North America. The satisfaction of incentives to systematic-saving. The result is independence. Start now. $1.00 opens an account. Mi Fenelon Falls Branch M. W. Reive, Manager I “NM. ~ ~ .

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