Footsteps Across The Bridge 243

been home alone with three small children at the time. After the fire, Ned moved the home of his father, Charles, up to this site. A section was added which is now the living-room section of the Elmer Waugh home. Elsie died in Kelvin Grove, at the home of her daughter, Helen. Ned and Elsie had eight children:

Sarah Ada (Nov. 25, 1878-June 1, 1956) married John W. Hogg. (See Hogs).

Lemuel Artemas (May 2, l880-April 12, 1968) remained single. He moved to Saskatchewan and died in Regina.

George Montague (April, 1882-Jan. 3, 1966) married Isabella Hood of Guelph, Ontario. They moved to Saskatchewan and had two children, Alice and Harvey.

John Alfred (Jan. 7, 1884-Nov., 1977) married Isabella Gray (Mar. 28, 1890-July 19, 1970). They moved to Saskatchewan in 1917. Their

children were: Thomas Irving, Annabel, John Scott and Edward Alfred.

Helen Margaret (July, 1885) married John Cotton on November 20, 1917. John was the son of William and Catherine (MacKenzie) Cotton. They lived in Springfield and then settled in Kelvin Grove. Their children were Irving and John Elmer.

Mary Alice (June 5, 1888) married Henry Falconer of Scotland, on November 11, 1925, in Saskatchewan. Mary Alice had gone to Saskat- chewan in 1906 with her brothers. Scotty (Henry) and Mary Alice are buried in Kelliher, Saskatchewan. Their daughter was Margaret Alice (1927-1979).

Edward Irving (April 20, 1890-1935) married Helen Cairns, and farmed at home.

Stephen Schurman (Oct. 20, 1893~June 30, 1954) married Martha Pearl Thompson of Ontario on December 23, 1926. Stephen had farmed with his father until 1921, when he moved to Saskatchewan. He first lived in Vaun and then settled in Kelliher. Stephen and Martha had three children: Calvin Edward, Illa Maxine and Stephen Grant.

Irving, and Helen, daughter of Benjamin Darby and Winnifred (Yeo) Cairns, farmed at Irving’s childhood home. Irving moved the kitchen section, which had been his grandfather's house, to the area near the barns. This house is believed to have been William Schurman’s, and stands in the Waugh yard today, where it is used as a machine—shed. Irving added to the living-room part, which his father had constructed, by building a new kitchen section. The Waugh home of today consists of these two sections.