Kathleen born 1925, is a nurse and married William Merricl . They live in Alberta and have three children. James, born 1927, lives on the homestead with John anl family. Charles Louis , born 1928, died when 5 months old. Noreen, born 1930, is a nurse and lives in New York . She married Arthur Gibson and they have four children. Louis' wife Ella died in 1930. In 1946, he re-married Delia Callaghan, 1908-1969. She was a school teacher from Ebbsfleet . In 1950 Louis moved the house that his father had built whe ti Louis was married, down to the south corner of the Heaney Roa 1. In 1971 he sold this house and lot to Kenneth Mumma , and is nov residing with Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Ramsay , Indian River . S < e Cow-. Kenneth Mumma Kenneth Mumma and his wife, the former Brenda Gochnauc c, moved to Clinton in 1971 from Pennsylvania and settled on the property formerly owned by Louis O'Connor . They have a daugi- ter Wendy, born 1960 and a son Keith, born 1963. REMEMBER WHEN? Let us think about the typical farm house of Prince Edward Island in the latter part of the nineteenth century. We rememt'Bi" the parlor, with a door leading to it from the hall, a bedroi m downstairs, sitting room, kitchen which was quite large with its couch at one side and which also served as a dining room, aid pantry with a barrel of flour in the corner covered with a bakiag board. There is still a place for a large kitchen on the farm, tut many have been remodelled and made more suitable for today's life on the farm. Double door spaces were opened up from the parlor to the sitting room and, instead of the parlor being used only for special occasions, it is called a living room, which it really is and is used for all entertaining. The downstairs bed¬ room was a great convenience if there was illness in the hone. Now, when any serious illness takes place in the home, the patient is taken to the hospital. Remember when the jam cupboards or shelves were well- stocked with many quarts or half gallon bottles of preserves, in¬ cluding wild strawberries, raspberries, home-grown plums and damsons, cherries, gooseberries, rhubarb, crabapples, blueberries and pears as well as pickles and relishes. Now there is a freezer in almost every home where fruits may be stored and we are able to have fresh strawberries and other berries as well as rhubarb the year round. —90—