Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Message In A Bottle: Romantic N.S. Mystery No Longer Romantic Or Mysterious

The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2018 12:52 PM
    HALIFAX — A wedding-day "message in a bottle" mystery has been solved — but it's not the happy ending many would have hoped.
     
     
    Danita Sawler of Martin's Point, N.S., opened up a bottle her late father had found on a beach off Oak Island and found a tantalizing note inside.
     
     
    Written on a paper doily and dated April 15, 2000, it read: "Frank and Judy were wed in the sight of God. If this is ever found please know that these two people are extremely happy in their faith and in each other."
     
     
    Sawler said her father, Robert Hirtle, found the bottle sometime before he passed away in December 2001 at the age of 77, and she didn't open up the bottle until recently.
     
     
    When she found the note, she became entranced by the romance and embarked on a mission to find the "newlyweds."
     
     
    After her story was told by Global News and Frank was found, the unromantic truth was revealed: Frank and Judy are no longer together.
     
     
    "That's long in the past and I'd rather not dig that up," said Frank, a Nova Scotian who asked that his last name not be used.
     
     
    Frank says the couple was indeed married on April 15, 2000, and stayed at the Oak Island hotel now known as the Atlantica Oak Island Resort and Conference Centre. They wrote the note that evening and sent the bottle out into the water.
     
     
    "I guess the bottle didn't go very far," he said.
     
     
    The couple went their separate ways in 2010 and Frank says he'd rather not have the bottle returned or rehash the past.
     
     
    He did, however, say the sentiments of that note were very real.
     
     
    "It was true at the time," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Punjab Kids Can Forget Books To School But Not Bowls And Spoons: Bhagwant Mann

    Punjab Kids Can Forget Books To School But Not Bowls And Spoons: Bhagwant Mann
    hagwant Mann on Friday flagged serious quality concerns plaguing government schools in the state saying parents have told him that their wards can forget books and pencils to school but not bowls and spoons.

    Punjab Kids Can Forget Books To School But Not Bowls And Spoons: Bhagwant Mann

    Mounties Help Livestock Displaced By B.C. Wildfires As Drivers Urged To Look Out

    Mounties Help Livestock Displaced By B.C. Wildfires As Drivers Urged To Look Out
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Thousands of people have been displaced by wildfires in British Columbia, but the flames have also forced livestock left behind to flee beyond their enclosures.

    Mounties Help Livestock Displaced By B.C. Wildfires As Drivers Urged To Look Out

    B.C. State Of Emergency Over Wildfires Hits Two-Week Mark, No End In Sight

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Today marks two weeks since raging wildfires that have displaced thousands of people British Columbia forced the province to call a state of emergency.

    B.C. State Of Emergency Over Wildfires Hits Two-Week Mark, No End In Sight

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Urges Opposition To Leave 'Domestic Squabbles' At Home

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Urges Opposition To Leave 'Domestic Squabbles' At Home
    Speaking at a summer camp in southwestern Nova Scotia today, Trudeau said domestic politics should stay within Canada's borders.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Urges Opposition To Leave 'Domestic Squabbles' At Home

    Young Child's Leg Severed After Being Struck By Farming Equipment: Police

    Young Child's Leg Severed After Being Struck By Farming Equipment: Police
    CLEMENTSVALE, N.S. — RCMP say a seven-year-old girl has died of injuries she suffered when her leg was severed by a farm tractor that struck her as she played in a hay field in rural Nova Scotia.

    Young Child's Leg Severed After Being Struck By Farming Equipment: Police

    Canadian Researchers Develop Technology For Self-Driving Wheelchairs

    Canadian Researchers Develop Technology For Self-Driving Wheelchairs
    TORONTO — A team of Canadian researchers and robotics experts say they've developed cost-effective technology that would allow power wheelchairs to drive themselves.

    Canadian Researchers Develop Technology For Self-Driving Wheelchairs