David's first wife, Elizabeth, and his second wife, Selina (Inman) Mackay both died in Covehead and are buried in the family plot in the West Covehead Church Cem. In the early 1920s David went to to visit members of his family, and died at the home of his daughter, Dorothy, in Saskatoon, Oct. 1923. His body was brought back to P.E.I , and he was bur. in the family plot in West Covehead . The children of David H. and Elizabeth (Cairns) Auld are listed below. 2a Frederick Moore Auld . b. in Covehead 18 Oct. 1879. Graduated from Prince of Wales College, taught one year in Lower Freetown and in Sask. Graduated from McGill Medical School, , in 1910 and went immediately to Weihwei, , China as a Medical Missionary. Returned to Canada in 1928, and set up a medical practice in Nelson , B.C. until his retirement. He m. May Smith of and they had four children, two of whom died in China. He d. 26 Nov. 1955 and is bur. in Nelson , B.C. 2b Francis Hedley Auld b. in Covehead 14 June 1881. Graduated from Prince of Wales College, and in 1902 went to Sask. where for a few years he carried on a retail business north of Indian Head. From 1906 he worked in agriculture first in organizing the provincial bureau of agriculture statistics, then as director of at the University of Sask. and from 1916 until his retirement in 1946 as Deputy Minister of Agriculture. He also served for more than a decade as Chancellor of the University of Sask. He m. Elizabeth Smith of and they had three sons. He d. 15 Feb. 1967, and is buried in Riverside , Regina, Sask. + 2c Robert Cairns Auld b. in Covehead 10 Nov. 1882. Moved to Freetown in 1906 and became proprietor of Auld & Co. General Store . In 1912 he received the appointment of Postmaster for Freetown , and for the next 47 years held this position. On 6 Nov. 1912 he m. Margaret Louise Cameron of Freetown and to them were born three children. He d. 12 Feb. 1963 and is bur. in the People's Cem. in Freetown . 2d David Stirling Auld b. in Covehead 13 Nov. 1888. Went to Sask. when a young man and worked in a bank until the 1914-1918 War interrupted this career. Upon his return from serving overseas, he lived in Freetown for a short time, but soon returned to Sask. where he farmed for a decade. He then moved to Regina to become Superintendent of Grounds of the Regina Exhibition Association. In 1922, he m. Patience Pratt and they had one son. He d. 27 Jan. 1962 and is bur. in Regina. 2e Dorothy Isabella Auld b. in Covehead 25 Aug. 1890. Graduated from Prince of Wales College and taught school on the Island for a few years. In 1906 she moved to Freetown with other members of her family. In 1912 she went to Sask. settling in Saskatoon, and continued to teach until her marriage to Rev. D.S. Dix , Professor at, and later Principal of, Theological College in Saskatoon. They had three daughters. She d. 30 Mar. 1980 and is bur. in Saskatoon. 2f Dwight Lyman Moody Auld b. in Covehead 22 Feb. 1893; n.m.; d. 15 Oct. 1899, and is bur. in the family plot in West Covehead . + 2c Robert Cairns Auld Robert Cairns Auld was born in Covehead 10 Nov. 1882. He attended the rural school, but did not continue his education at Prince of Wales College - possibly because his two older brothers had already left the farm to prepare themselves for work other than farming, and there was a great need for him to stay at home to help on the farm and in the store. Covehead was not on the railway and all supplies for the store had to be hauled by horse-drawn vehicle from Little York , a distance of 11 km. This may have been the reason for selling the property in 1906 and moving to Freetown which was on the railway. On 6 Nov. 1912 Robert Auld married Margaret Louise Cameron of Freetown , daughter of Duncan Cameron (1840-1894) and his wife Margaret Jane Cameron (1852-1938). In 1913 a deed from Joseph R. Lewis to Robert C. Auld , for 1/3 acre of land, was signed. On this land a house had been remodelled, and this was their home until their deaths. Later another small adjoining lot was bought by Robert Auld from Colby Lewis. Besides running a store and being postmaster, Robert Auld was for many years secretary of the Freetown School, secretary of the People's Cemetery Committee and Justice of the Peace. This latter was not a very arduous task, and maybe the most important request that was made to him while he filled the office, was the request of a couple to marry them! This he did not do. In the church both Margaret and Robert Auld worked faithfully and willingly - first in the Presbyterian Church, and after 1925 in the United Church of the North Bedeque - Congregation. Mr. Auld was 194