Fenelon Falls CitizensSaw Falling Meteorsj Fenelon Falls, Feb. 11.—Miss Mabel Sharpe is the guest of Lindsay relatives.| Mr. and Mrs. Jack Robertson and Miss Emily were in Cameron last week attending the I.O.F. oyster sup-i per-I Mrs. W. Campbell and her niece. Miss McCall, left on Monday lor a | visit to relatives in Quebec.Mrs. R. E. Wogar was called to Cannington on Tuesday, owing to the serious illness of her father, Mr. W. Boadway.Mr. Arch. MacKendry, of the G.T. R. office, Lindsay, visited his parents over Sunday, leaving on Monday morning for Belleville, where he has the position as accountant for the' Bridge Building and Road department.Mr. A. J. Campbell, of Lindsay, was in the village on Friday afternoon.r| Messrs. Jordan, Sutherland, Percy I Sharpe and T. Littleton, students of the L.B.C., were in town over Sunday,.Mr. W. McArthur spent Friday in ', Peterboro.Mrs. S. J. Sims, of Liodsay, called ! on town friends on Thursday.1 Mrs. M. H. Chambers, of Toronto, to, spent Sunday in town.Mis6 Margaret Lee is in Lindsay this week, the guest of her sister, j Mrs. W. J. MacKendry.The Knox College student who re-j presents the Home Mission work in ' the West, and to which work the St. J Andrew’s Church adult Bible class contribute their funds, will occupy 1 the pulpit at both services on Sun- j day. In the evening an address will • be given on the work, illustrated j with limelight views, to which every-i One ,s cordiallv invited.son for several weeks, left on Monday for his home in Vancouver. B.C.Mrs. M. Hayes, of Toronto, visited friends last week.Miss Gladys French left on Tuesday to. resume her duties in the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal.The Misses Lou and Nellie Heard returned to Toronto on Tuesday evening.Mrs. Perrin and Miss Moore, of Cameron, were in town on Monday.Mr. Alf. Miller left on Monday for Peterboro.Mr. Geo. A. Jordan, 0f Lindsay, spent Monday in town.The many friends of Mr. Thomas Scott will be glad to learn that he is once again on the road to recovery.Last Monday Mr. Scott, while backing his horse out of tho yards in the rear of the Twomey Houso, slipped and fell, the sleigh passing over the leg, and breaking it between the knee and ankle. Medical aid was in attendance, and until Saturday the patient was progressing favorably, when it was thought that gangrene had set in, and it was feared that the patient would have lost his leg if not his life. However, owing to the unsparing skill of our local doctors, he is now considered out of danger, although as yet is suffering a great deal of pain.Several of our Fenelon church members who were driving home from church Sunday evening witnessed what they call a shower of meteors ; one eye-witness claims that there were in all about 18 or 20 and they passed very slowly one after the other acrqss the sky. From the appearance of the first meteor until the last he claims it would be from five to seven minutes in passing.rinn iarcn*t t.r hpur t.hn TnrnntoI,I (