and had built a siding for loading and unloading things from the railway. My father used to unload mussel mud from that siding. The Doyle land lay on both sides of the railway twenty acres or so being on the far side.

cnw moms BLACK 'rwnr TB! am CHEW

Hickey & Nicholson Tobacco Co. Ltd.

Phone 345 Charlottetown

I remember Millwood, Emmett, and a Cheverie girl (Margaret). One time my mother and father were following the road to Kelly's Cross and they found Mrs. Doyle's purse with her buds, money and all. She sure was glad to get it back. The Doyles had been travelling to Kelly's Cross that day to church. The purse must have fallen out of the wagon. There were two houses and some barns there at the mill site. These were hauled up to the road. The big house is now used as a barn. Millwood and probably Emmett lived in this house. Decoursi [an Italian name], now owns the property and the house and barns nw the road. The smaller house is now a few miles from Bradalbane. This was Jim Doyle's house, Cheverie lived there too. It is the first house on the left as you go towards Brmdalbane from Highway Two. One of the boys worked for the railroad..had some trouble with his foreman, and left for the States.

William died on Thursday July 11, 1895 at his home—which the Doyles called 'Millstream Cottage'—in Brmdalbane at the age of forty-eight. His wife Margaret (Evans) Doyle died on August 11, 1919. She had been born August 12, 1848 and was baptized 'Susan' by the parish priest Rev. Malachy Reynolds. (It is not uncommon to find this sort of name problem among early records. The child was baptized Susan but was alled by her unregistered second name. It is one of the many difficulties encountered by researchers.)

William’s daughter Mary Adelaide, known as Ada, married William A. Cheverie, on October 17, 1905 at St. Joseph's Church in Kelly's Cross. Witnessing this ceremony were Arthur Doyle and Katie Doyle.

The following February, William Cheverie’s sister Melvina, married Millwood Doyle. This rmrriage took place at the Basilica in Charlottetown. William Cheverie was station agent at Royalty Junction at the time. He later took a similar job at Mt. Stewart, then at Breadalbane. The attendants at this wedding were Della Walker, chughter of Angus and Linie and Wilfred Bradley of Kelly’s Cross.

The two couples lived in the same home together first in Brmdalbane, and then in Maplewood, nw Kelly's Cross. At Maplewood they had a small farm of fifty acres and Millwood had a carpenter shop where he continued to make tobacco boxes for Hickey and Nicholson. The furniture used in this home was built by William Doyle, the father of Millwood and Ada. Millwood farmed for a time at Maplewood but he and Mclvina moved to Boston in 1923.

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