<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<document version="1.0" producer="FineReader 8.0" xmlns="http://www.abbyy.com/FineReader_xml/FineReader8-schema-v2.xml"
 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
 xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.abbyy.com/FineReader_xml/FineReader8-schema-v2.xml http://www.abbyy.com/FineReader_xml/FineReader8-schema-v2.xml" pagesCount="84" mainLanguage="EnglishUnitedStates" languages="EnglishUnitedStates">
<page width="1602" height="2676" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="0" t="0" r="1602" b="2676"><region><rect l="0" t="0" r="1602" b="2676"></rect></region>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1604" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="202" t="2178" r="298" b="2258"><region><rect l="202" t="2178" r="298" b="2258"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="242" t="2211" r="249" b="2219"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="632" t="1394" r="746" b="1486"><region><rect l="632" t="1394" r="746" b="1486"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="725" t="1469" r="731" b="1476"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1040" t="1244" r="1104" b="1308"><region><rect l="1040" t="1244" r="1104" b="1308"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1719" height="2723" resolution="300">
</page>
<page width="1673" height="2723" resolution="300">
</page>
<page width="1719" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="356" t="522" r="1268" b="1188"><region><rect l="356" t="522" r="1268" b="1188"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="180">
<line l="372" t="558" r="1252" b="702"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A History</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="52" rightIndent="48" startIndent="302" lineSpacing="250">
<line l="726" t="810" r="904" b="928"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of</formatting></line>
<line l="424" t="1064" r="1204" b="1182"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="534" t="1304" r="1088" b="1358"><region><rect l="534" t="1304" r="1088" b="1358"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="550" t="1313" r="1070" b="1353"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Prince Edward Island</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="428" t="2034" r="1202" b="2570"><region><rect l="428" t="2034" r="1202" b="2570"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="79">
<line l="452" t="2048" r="1166" b="2118"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P F.I. COLLECTION</formatting></line>
<line l="444" t="2130" r="1186" b="2200"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">L iHARY OF U.P.E.I.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="43" rightIndent="60" startIndent="78" lineSpacing="77">
<line l="565" t="2282" r="1062" b="2306"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">compiled and published by</formatting></line>
<line l="487" t="2354" r="1126" b="2384"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Carleton Women&apos;s Institute</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="6" lineSpacing="111">
<line l="450" t="2484" r="1126" b="2566"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LIBRARY USE ONLY</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1422" t="1556" r="1598" b="1862"><region><rect l="1422" t="1556" r="1598" b="1862"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="5">
<line l="1443" t="1684" r="1582" b="1729"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5~397</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1438" t="1756" r="1563" b="1808"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;C3J</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="8">
<line l="1446" t="1817" r="1518" b="1857"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">C3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1318" t="2526" r="1614" b="2620"><region><rect l="1318" t="2526" r="1614" b="2620"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="73">
<line l="1333" t="2543" r="1597" b="2616"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">023245</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1656" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="84" t="2598" r="142" b="2636"><region><rect l="84" t="2598" r="142" b="2636"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="120" t="2619" r="122" b="2621"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="3507" height="5519" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="48" t="0" r="1726" b="204"><region><rect l="48" t="0" r="1726" b="204"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="196">
<line l="64" t="4" r="1708" b="200"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Property of U.P.EJ.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="500" t="892" r="1624" b="2306"><region><rect l="500" t="892" r="1624" b="2306"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="1806" t="880" r="2934" b="2286"><region><rect l="1806" t="880" r="2934" b="2286"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="536" t="2318" r="3122" b="4498"><region><rect l="536" t="2318" r="3122" b="4498"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="566" lineSpacing="86">
<line l="1119" t="2327" r="2326" b="2397"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LORD  AND   LADY  TWEEDSMUIR</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="927" lineSpacing="97">
<line l="1480" t="2551" r="1941" b="2616"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">FORWORD</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="17" startIndent="185" lineSpacing="92">
<line l="753" t="2734" r="3088" b="2825"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I am so glad to hear that the Women&apos;s Institutes of</formatting></line>
<line l="568" t="2829" r="3091" b="2914"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Canada are compiling village history books. Events move</formatting></line>
<line l="553" t="2916" r="3083" b="3009"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">very fast nowadays; houses are pulled down, new roads are</formatting></line>
<line l="568" t="3005" r="3091" b="3099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">made, and the aspect of the countryside changes complete¬</formatting></line>
<line l="570" t="3110" r="1331" b="3191"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ly in a short time.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" startIndent="185" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="758" t="3236" r="3094" b="3321"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It is a most useful and satisfying task for Women&apos;s In¬</formatting></line>
<line l="573" t="3325" r="3094" b="3409"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stitute members to see that nothing valuable is lost or for¬</formatting></line>
<line l="573" t="3413" r="3093" b="3511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gotten^ and women should be on the alert always to guard</formatting></line>
<line l="558" t="3504" r="3093" b="3592"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the traditions of their homes, and to see that water colour</formatting></line>
<line l="574" t="3592" r="3096" b="3689"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sketches and prints, poems and prose legends should find</formatting></line>
<line l="574" t="3683" r="3097" b="3779"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their way into these books. The oldest people in the village</formatting></line>
<line l="574" t="3771" r="3096" b="3863"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">will tell us fascinating stories of what they remember,</formatting></line>
<line l="574" t="3860" r="3103" b="3956"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which the younger members can write down, thus making</formatting></line>
<line l="576" t="3951" r="3101" b="4046"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a bridge between them and events which happened before</formatting></line>
<line l="577" t="4041" r="3102" b="4138"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">they were born. After all, it is the history of humanity</formatting></line>
<line l="577" t="4130" r="3108" b="4222"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which is continually interesting to us, and your village his¬</formatting></line>
<line l="578" t="4218" r="3105" b="4308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tories will be the basis of accurate facts much valued by</formatting></line>
<line l="579" t="4311" r="3106" b="4396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">historians of the future. I am proud to think that you</formatting></line>
<line l="579" t="4397" r="2874" b="4491"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">have called them &quot;The Tweedsmuir Village Histories.&quot;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1844" t="4578" r="2668" b="4672"><region><rect l="1844" t="4578" r="2668" b="4672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="73">
<line l="1860" t="4595" r="2650" b="4668"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Susan Tweedsmuir.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="3413" height="5514" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1810" t="98" r="1946" b="228"><region><rect l="1810" t="98" r="1946" b="228"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1909" t="197" r="1912" b="204"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="2072" t="84" r="2196" b="154"><region><rect l="2072" t="84" r="2196" b="154"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="2502" t="128" r="2584" b="184"><region><rect l="2502" t="128" r="2584" b="184"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="2556" t="173" r="2559" b="175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="2754" t="66" r="3338" b="234"><region><rect l="2754" t="66" r="3338" b="234"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="3338" t="94" r="3394" b="124"><region><rect l="3338" t="94" r="3394" b="124"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="3352" t="109" r="3389" b="121"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">- *. ■</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="502" t="306" r="3032" b="3024"><region><rect l="502" t="306" r="3032" b="3024"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="370" t="3102" r="3104" b="4136"><region><rect l="370" t="3102" r="3104" b="4136"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1070" rightIndent="935" startIndent="-117" lineSpacing="121">
<line l="1338" t="3114" r="2168" b="3173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ADELAIDE  HOODLESS</formatting></line>
<line l="1455" t="3229" r="2040" b="3296"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">HISTORY OF</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="578" lineSpacing="103">
<line l="963" t="3369" r="2535" b="3438"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CARLETON  WOMEN&apos;S  INSTITUTE</formatting></line></par>
<par startIndent="180" lineSpacing="91">
<line l="565" t="3509" r="3103" b="3584"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The  Carleton Women&apos;s  Institute  was  organized  in  Novem¬</formatting></line>
<line l="385" t="3599" r="2469" b="3682"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ber, 1930 by Miss Hazard, the general organizer.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="180">
<line l="565" t="3708" r="1889" b="3787"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Following is our first Roll Call:</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="273" rightIndent="1038" lineSpacing="106">
<line l="663" t="3850" r="1850" b="3927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Pres. — Mrs. Harry Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="658" t="3955" r="2065" b="4032"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Vice-Pres. — Mrs. T. B. Gillespie</formatting></line>
<line l="663" t="4062" r="1816" b="4131"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sec.-Tres. — Mrs. Fred Bell</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="368" t="4194" r="732" b="5176"><region><rect l="368" t="4194" r="732" b="5176"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="428" t="4209" r="716" b="4273"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="426" t="4299" r="717" b="4362"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="424" t="4386" r="716" b="4452"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="423" t="4478" r="716" b="4541"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">4.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="427" t="4567" r="718" b="4631"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="428" t="4656" r="723" b="4721"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">6.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="427" t="4745" r="724" b="4812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">7.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="427" t="4836" r="721" b="4902"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">8.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="41" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="428" t="4926" r="720" b="4992"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">9.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="382" t="5015" r="721" b="5082"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">10.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="383" t="5105" r="720" b="5172"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">11.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="742" t="4186" r="1644" b="5174"><region><rect l="742" t="4186" r="1644" b="5174"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="90">
<line l="767" t="4203" r="1628" b="4283"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mountaque Campbell</formatting></line>
<line l="757" t="4297" r="1360" b="4372"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irving Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="764" t="4387" r="1201" b="4452"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">W. E. Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="770" t="4476" r="1384" b="4552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Harry Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="772" t="4565" r="1294" b="4642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Douglas Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="777" t="4655" r="1386" b="4719"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Laura Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="776" t="4745" r="1356" b="4821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="774" t="4834" r="1168" b="4899"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fred Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="777" t="4922" r="1285" b="4988"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Nathan Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="772" t="5012" r="1365" b="5091"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Boyd Lowther</formatting></line>
<line l="768" t="5102" r="1182" b="5169"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thos. Bell</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1744" t="4188" r="2114" b="5170"><region><rect l="1744" t="4188" r="2114" b="5170"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1760" t="4202" r="2091" b="4266"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">12.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1762" t="4291" r="2099" b="4355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">13.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1763" t="4380" r="2100" b="4444"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">14.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1766" t="4469" r="2103" b="4534"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">15.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1764" t="4559" r="2100" b="4624"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">16.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1765" t="4649" r="2098" b="4715"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">17.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1766" t="4739" r="2099" b="4804"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">18.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1766" t="4830" r="2099" b="4895"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">19.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1762" t="4919" r="2099" b="4985"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">20.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1762" t="5008" r="2101" b="5074"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">21.  Mrs.</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="89">
<line l="1761" t="5092" r="2104" b="5165"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">22.  Miss</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="2124" t="4182" r="2918" b="5168"><region><rect l="2124" t="4182" r="2918" b="5168"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="4" lineSpacing="90">
<line l="2140" t="4199" r="2774" b="4264"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Schaffer</formatting></line>
<line l="2147" t="4287" r="2863" b="4352"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Helen McCarvelle</formatting></line>
<line l="2156" t="4378" r="2712" b="4442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reta Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="2150" t="4468" r="2637" b="4542"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sue Munsey</formatting></line>
<line l="2155" t="4555" r="2708" b="4621"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Verna Weeks</formatting></line>
<line l="2149" t="4645" r="2902" b="4722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stanley Linkletter</formatting></line>
<line l="2148" t="4735" r="2757" b="4799"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="2159" t="4825" r="2756" b="4891"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Louis Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="2144" t="4914" r="2742" b="4992"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Quigley</formatting></line>
<line l="2146" t="5006" r="2677" b="5082"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Deegan</formatting></line>
<line l="2149" t="5096" r="2770" b="5163"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jennie Muttart</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1726" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="170" t="132" r="1568" b="1192"><region><rect l="170" t="132" r="1568" b="1192"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="283" t="138" r="1549" b="178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Of this original roll call several have been elected to a high¬</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="184" r="1549" b="223"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er service, others have gone to make new homes in other com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="227" r="1547" b="268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">munities or have moved to different spheres of work elsewhere,</formatting></line>
<line l="186" t="272" r="1545" b="313"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">making place for new members and workers in our organization.</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="316" r="1547" b="356"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Of those twenty-two Charter members only Mrs. Nathan Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="361" r="1546" b="401"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Mrs. Boyd Lowther have remained faithful to our Institute</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="405" r="1547" b="446"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">year after year and are still on our Roll Call. Mrs. Sue Munsey</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="449" r="1548" b="487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lowther and Mrs. Laura Muttart Haslam left us for a few years</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="495" r="738" b="528"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">but are back on Roll Call.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="283" t="562" r="1552" b="603"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">We honor and pay tribute to the memory of eleven (11) of</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="607" r="1551" b="647"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">our members namely: Mrs. Mountaque Campbell, Mrs. W. E.</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="651" r="1552" b="692"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell, Mrs. Townsend Munsey, Mrs. T. B. Gillespie, Mrs. Samuel</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="696" r="1550" b="736"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carruthers, Mrs. Frank Schaeffer, Mrs. Frank Quigley, Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="740" r="1552" b="782"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">David Murphy, Mrs. Robert Hardy, Mrs. Chas. Doull, Mrs. Laura</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="784" r="1551" b="825"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hogg, who have been called beyond to a higher service and we</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="828" r="1550" b="869"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">always will remember the many pleasant associations and happy</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="875" r="626" b="914"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">hours spent together.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98" lineSpacing="69">
<line l="284" t="944" r="988" b="984"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Following is our present Roll Call:</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="143" lineSpacing="69">
<line l="329" t="1014" r="883" b="1053"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Pres. — Mrs. John Myers.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="146" lineSpacing="69">
<line l="332" t="1084" r="1028" b="1117"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Vice-Pres. — Mrs. Wilbur Cairns.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="146" lineSpacing="69">
<line l="332" t="1154" r="965" b="1187"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sec.-Treas. — Mrs. Frank Bell.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="210" t="1208" r="758" b="1702"><region><rect l="266" t="1208" r="758" b="1428"></rect><rect l="210" t="1428" r="758" b="1562"></rect><rect l="270" t="1562" r="758" b="1702"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="55" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="272" t="1215" r="626" b="1254"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. John Myers</formatting></line>
<line l="269" t="1260" r="656" b="1292"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Wilbur Cairns</formatting></line>
<line l="272" t="1304" r="597" b="1336"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Frank Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="271" t="1347" r="684" b="1386"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. James Paynter</formatting></line>
<line l="272" t="1392" r="742" b="1425"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Grace MacCallum</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="216" t="1436" r="628" b="1469"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">6.  Mrs. Nathan Bell</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="214" t="1480" r="653" b="1520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">7.  Mrs. John Quigley</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="57" rightIndent="37" startIndent="-57" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="215" t="1526" r="696" b="1558"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">8.  Mrs. Harold Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="273" t="1571" r="614" b="1602"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Keith Lord</formatting></line>
<line l="273" t="1615" r="647" b="1647"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. John Haslam</formatting></line>
<line l="274" t="1659" r="705" b="1697"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs.  Leigh  Lowther</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="180" t="1566" r="240" b="1696"><region><rect l="180" t="1566" r="240" b="1696"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="22" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="217" t="1572" r="235" b="1601"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">9</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="1616" r="235" b="1646"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">10</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="1661" r="234" b="1691"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">11</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="860" t="1206" r="1466" b="1696"><region><rect l="860" t="1206" r="1466" b="1696"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="877" t="1214" r="1355" b="1253"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">12.  Mrs. Boyd Lowther</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="876" t="1260" r="1378" b="1298"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">13.  Mrs. Stanley Rogers</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="875" t="1304" r="1437" b="1342"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">14.  Mrs. Raymond  Harvey</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="876" t="1348" r="1329" b="1381"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">15.  Mrs. Eldon Burke</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="877" t="1393" r="1445" b="1425"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">16.  Mrs. Hazen McWilliams</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="878" t="1437" r="1303" b="1470"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">17.  Mrs. A. Chaisson</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="878" t="1482" r="1383" b="1514"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">18.  Mrs. Fenton Howatt</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="878" t="1526" r="1442" b="1559"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">19.  Mrs. Sheldon Nicholson</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="876" t="1571" r="1388" b="1609"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">20.  Mrs. Clifford Rogers</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="876" t="1616" r="1332" b="1654"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">21.  Mrs. Heber Myers</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="877" t="1660" r="1450" b="1692"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">22.  Mrs. Donald MacDonald</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="178" t="1722" r="1210" b="2578"><region><rect l="178" t="1722" r="1210" b="2578"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="194" t="1729" r="1055" b="1768"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">From Sir Guy Carleton we got our name</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="193" t="1774" r="949" b="1807"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A Governor of Canadian wide fame</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="194" t="1819" r="1194" b="1857"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">No. 80 School District by Northumberland Strait</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="194" t="1864" r="1040" b="1902"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Situated in lots twenty-seven and eight.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="195" t="1953" r="1017" b="1985"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Our forefathers came from over the sea</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="193" t="1998" r="729" b="2030"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">And were a stalwart race</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="193" t="2042" r="760" b="2080"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To begin life in a new land</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="193" t="2087" r="1009" b="2126"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">With many hardships they had to face.</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="134" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="195" t="2175" r="1060" b="2209"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Their tools were few with which to work</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2221" r="960" b="2254"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To clear the forest and fell the wood</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2266" r="991" b="2305"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To build log cabins and clear the land</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2310" r="1023" b="2350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To grow vegetables and grains for food.</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="87" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="193" t="2399" r="1039" b="2439"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">We honor their memory and tribute pay</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2445" r="1083" b="2484"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">As we study the history of a by gone day</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2489" r="1107" b="2529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Their neighborly kindness in another&apos;s need</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2534" r="1084" b="2573"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Christian faith and courage they did heed.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="848" t="2624" r="946" b="2668"><region><rect l="848" t="2624" r="946" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="849" t="2631" r="930" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-5—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1726" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="182" t="144" r="1590" b="2686"><region><rect l="182" t="144" r="1590" b="2686"></rect></region>
<text>
<par rightIndent="560" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="200" t="151" r="995" b="190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">We wish to thank both young and old</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="196" r="988" b="232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Who have entered into this with zest</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="239" r="1013" b="278"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">,For all the information they did unfold</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="286" r="953" b="323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To this committee on every request.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="5" rightIndent="450" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="202" t="372" r="1026" b="413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Our minds are open as we work at this</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="416" r="1123" b="459"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Trying if possible nothing important to miss</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="464" r="1010" b="503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">So it any ommissions or errors you see</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="506" r="882" b="549"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They are not done intentionally.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="5" rightIndent="434" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="202" t="593" r="1139" b="634"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The time and effort spent will be worthwhile</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="636" r="1106" b="676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">If this volume to readers will bring a smiie</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="682" r="989" b="720"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To former Carletonions who once trod</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="727" r="969" b="770"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">As youthful citizens on this red sod.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="296" t="836" r="1567" b="881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Members serving as President during the thirty (30) years</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="880" r="1568" b="927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">are: Mrs. Harry Muttart, Mrs. Stanley Linkletter, Mrs. John</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="924" r="1567" b="974"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Deegan, Mrs. Stewart MacMicken, Mrs. Nathan Bell, Mrs. Gor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="968" r="1569" b="1017"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">don Ross, Mrs. T. B. Gillespie, Mrs. Kenneth Muttart, Mrs. Frank</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1013" r="1568" b="1063"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Quigley, Mrs. David Murphy, Mrs. Robert Carruthers, Mrs. John</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1058" r="1570" b="1109"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Myers, Mrs. Heber Myers, Mrs. Albert Craswell, Mrs. John Quig¬</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1102" r="1569" b="1154"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ley, Mrs. Elmer Francis, Mrs. Elmer Stordy, Mrs. Grace Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1149" r="1268" b="1197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Callum, Mrs. Don Sutherland, Mrs. Ralph McCaull.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="296" t="1217" r="1571" b="1265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Down through the years (exclusive of the War years) our</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1260" r="1570" b="1308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">first interests have always been the school. The greater part of</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1304" r="1568" b="1356"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">our funds going to buying supplies for the classrooms, blinds,</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1351" r="1571" b="1403"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">maps, books, prizes, toilet supplies, dustbane and cleaning sup¬</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1394" r="1570" b="1449"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">plies. We redecorated the walls several times and supplied new</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1437" r="1571" b="1487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">teachers desks and chairs. We also helped with the sheathing</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1483" r="1569" b="1532"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the walls with Douglas Fir. We have sponsored Dental Clinics,</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1527" r="1571" b="1584"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">provided Vitamin Capsules, Safety Water Courses, Blood Donor</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="1571" r="1569" b="1625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Clinics, paid for a tonsil operation for a pupil and provided Xmas</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1616" r="1571" b="1666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">treats for the children and shut-ins. We have provided music</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1663" r="1569" b="1711"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in the school for several years and many promising young voices</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1717" r="645" b="1755"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">have been discovered.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="296" t="1774" r="1569" b="1825"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">We contributed to Red Cross, T.B. Fund, Salvation Army,</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1818" r="1569" b="1873"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cancer Fund, Hospitals, Orphanages, Chest and X-Ray Units,</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="1865" r="1567" b="1920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Emergency Fund, Children&apos;s Fund, Milk for Britain. In fact we</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1911" r="1570" b="1966"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">always tried to send a contribution to every appeal that came m</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1953" r="1570" b="2009"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">if we thought that it would help aid the suffering ones m the</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="2018" r="323" b="2050"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">world.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="294" t="2067" r="1571" b="2119"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A 4-H Garment Club was formed and has proved a wonder¬</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="2112" r="1570" b="2170"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ful thing for the girls of the community (and incidently at this</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2158" r="1570" b="2211"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">time we would like to thank the many ladies of the district who</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2201" r="1571" b="2255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">have acted as instructors). (We feel that we never could have</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2259" r="820" b="2300"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">carried on without their aid).</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="294" t="2315" r="1571" b="2369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">When War broke out we put the needs of the school in the</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2364" r="1572" b="2420"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">background and plunged into War Work. A Red Cross was or¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2407" r="1573" b="2467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ganized in connection with our Institute and we spent our time</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2455" r="1573" b="2509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">knitting sweaters and socks, making quilts and children s gar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2497" r="1571" b="2552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ments and baby layettes and packing boxes of warm clothing to</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="2544" r="1573" b="2595"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">send overseas.    We held farewell parties and gave each of our</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="628">
<line l="825" t="2650" r="940" b="2681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—6—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1635" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="92" t="102" r="1508" b="2638"><region><rect l="92" t="102" r="1508" b="2638"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="26" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="135" t="111" r="1491" b="157"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">boys who went overseas a signet ring and-a warm &quot;God-speed&quot;</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="156" r="1491" b="201"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and greeted them with a &quot;ringing welcome home presenting them</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="199" r="1491" b="243"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with a pen on their return. Some of them brought War brides</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="243" r="1490" b="290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home with them. We opened our hearts and homes to those girls</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="287" r="1357" b="329"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">striving to make them feel that they too had come home.&quot;</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="22" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="225" t="357" r="1490" b="402"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">We tried to contribute to every appeal for help in connection</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="401" r="1489" b="442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with the war possible, and to send boxes of food and comforts</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="445" r="1487" b="487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to all our boys in the services. When Peace was declared we</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="489" r="1490" b="535"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">still continued on with our Red Cross Work but we again turn¬</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="533" r="1012" b="572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed our thoughts to the needs of the school.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="224" t="604" r="1489" b="644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1954 the ratepayers decided that the old &quot;School House&quot;</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="647" r="1488" b="690"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had served its purpose and planned on a new one. The Institute</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="691" r="1488" b="739"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has always felt the need of some place to call our own. A place</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="736" r="1489" b="778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to hold suppers, concerts and meetings. So we met with the</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="781" r="1487" b="822"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trustees and made plans that if they would build a basement in</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="824" r="1487" b="870"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the school for a auditorum we would help with the expense and</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="867" r="1487" b="910"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">furnish it ourselves. The result was that we now have a kitchen</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="912" r="1486" b="958"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and a fine auditorum. We bought the seats, piano, curtain and</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="956" r="1486" b="1004"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">drapes and furnished the kitchen complete as well as giving the</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1001" r="1143" b="1044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trustees $100.00 each year on the building fund.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="217" t="1071" r="1485" b="1116"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">We help with the W.I. Institute scholarship fund and also</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1114" r="1354" b="1158"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">give $5.00 to each Grade 10 pupil who passes in our school.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="218" t="1184" r="1486" b="1227"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Now! Where did the funds come from for all those deeds of</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1229" r="1485" b="1271"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mercy? Well! We all put our shoulders to the wheel and heav¬</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1272" r="1483" b="1323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed with all our might. We had ice-cream socials, teas, plays,</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1317" r="1484" b="1365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">concerts, valentine socials, St. Patrick&apos;s socials, suppers, catered</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1360" r="1484" b="1405"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Lodge banquets, sold lunches, etc., and then went back and</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1404" r="1483" b="1453"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had them all over again year after year. And the public came</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1448" r="1483" b="1497"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">back each year to eat and see us perform so we judged that we</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1494" r="1483" b="1538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">must have given them their money&apos;s worth. We have entered</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1538" r="1481" b="1583"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">many of the projects and competitions carried on in the Institutes.</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1581" r="1482" b="1633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">One year we made a Scrapbook on Home re-decorating. We got</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1626" r="1481" b="1676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">first prize for this. We also won first prize for a crib quilt and</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="1674" r="1483" b="1721"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a nursery mat. Then when Lady Tweedmuir gave a prize for</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="1715" r="1481" b="1766"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the best essay &quot;A Country Women&apos;s Day&quot;, an international pro¬</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="1759" r="1478" b="1811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ject - we submitted an entry and while we failed to win the prize,</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="1807" r="1480" b="1854"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">our essay was chosen as one of the best three for the province</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="1848" r="1163" b="1890"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and we had it published in The Maritime Farmer.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="11" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="208" t="1927" r="1480" b="1978"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Now we are attempting to complete our District History and</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="1972" r="1479" b="2020"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">we would like to thank the many who are helping to make it a</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="2026" r="269" b="2049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">success.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="14" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="206" t="2096" r="1476" b="2144"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">At this time we are celebrating our Thirtieth (30) Anniver¬</formatting></line>
<line l="113" t="2142" r="1477" b="2186"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sary and we pause a moment to ask ourselves if we have done</formatting></line>
<line l="112" t="2187" r="1477" b="2234"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">much to produce a better way of life in our community, or if we</formatting></line>
<line l="111" t="2230" r="1477" b="2278"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">have put enough thought into the practice of our Creed, both in</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="2276" r="1476" b="2323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">our homes and in our group? But! looking back through the</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="2322" r="1477" b="2363"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years we wonder if our efforts have not stretched out further</formatting></line>
<line l="111" t="2365" r="1475" b="2408"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">beyond our pen into the future and if our work as Institute mem¬</formatting></line>
<line l="108" t="2409" r="1474" b="2459"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bers is not leaving &quot;footsteps on the sands of time&quot;? Footsteps</formatting></line>
<line l="109" t="2454" r="1474" b="2500"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">that perhaps another struggling or life&apos;s story main a forlove and</formatting></line>
<line l="108" t="2499" r="1158" b="2544"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">shipwrecked brother seeing may take heart again.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="622">
<line l="730" t="2602" r="846" b="2634"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—7—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1735" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="688" t="128" r="1054" b="174"><region><rect l="688" t="128" r="1054" b="174"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="702" t="136" r="1038" b="169"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">AGRICULTURE</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="540" t="234" r="1224" b="664"><region><rect l="540" t="234" r="1224" b="664"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="178" t="686" r="1606" b="2664"><region><rect l="178" t="686" r="1606" b="2664"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="583">
<line l="780" t="696" r="974" b="735"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">TOPSY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="27" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="290" t="785" r="1563" b="827"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">From the time of the introduction of potato growing on a</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="828" r="1564" b="878"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">large scale in P.E.I, some half century ago the Carleton district</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="873" r="1516" b="917"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has been in the forefront in the development of this industry.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="25" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="292" t="942" r="1564" b="990"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It was in Augustine Cove that the late John B., and Edward</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="988" r="1564" b="1037"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacFadyen pioneered in the early stages of the potato industry</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1032" r="1566" b="1077"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and much of our success as a potato growing province can be at¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="1080" r="1184" b="1124"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tributed to their early efforts in its promotion.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="19" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="292" t="1147" r="1567" b="1197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Transportation was one of the great problems of those ear¬</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1190" r="1567" b="1244"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ly days there being no trucks etc., to transport the products and</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1236" r="1569" b="1286"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">all hauling had to be done by horse drawn vehicles to the nearest</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1280" r="1570" b="1326"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">rail centres which at that time was Cape Traverse or Albany or</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1324" r="1571" b="1374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to the nearest port which was Victoria and both the rail and wat¬</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1368" r="1572" b="1417"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er outlets were very inadequate to handle large quantities. Un¬</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1412" r="1571" b="1461"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">der these conditions farmers were very much handicapped and</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1457" r="1572" b="1506"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it was not until the inauguration of the ferry service at Borden</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1502" r="1572" b="1551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1917 and the widening of the railway gauge that the industry</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1548" r="1482" b="1596"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in P.E.I, as a whole expanded to its present day proportions.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="16" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="300" t="1616" r="1574" b="1666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Due to the foresight of the early promotors, the initiative of</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1662" r="1575" b="1712"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the farmers and the suitability of the soil this area soon became</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1712" r="1197" b="1761"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a very important centre in the potato industry.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="11" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="300" t="1777" r="1576" b="1826"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">When the rail lines were laid to Borden and the terminal at</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="1820" r="1578" b="1878"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse removed it became evident to all concerned that</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="1865" r="1577" b="1921"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a siding or station should be established at Carleton as this would</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1911" r="1578" b="1965"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">serve a very large area much more conveniently than the existing</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1954" r="1580" b="2007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stations at Albany and Borden. The railway recognized this need</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1999" r="1579" b="2051"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and about 1920 Carleton Siding was built. The foresight of this</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="2045" r="1579" b="2095"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has been established as the business here has grown from the</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="2089" r="1580" b="2147"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">original five car spur to one of fifteen car capacity and a peak</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="2140" r="1282" b="2193"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">shipping season even this is sometimes inadequate.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="17" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="305" t="2210" r="1584" b="2260"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To handle potatoes efficiently potato warehouses are neces¬</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2250" r="1585" b="2308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sary and the late J. Herbert Lord was the first to erect a small</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="2294" r="1585" b="2349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">warehouse along the track. This in later years was enlarged</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2340" r="1584" b="2393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and has since been replaced by a much larger building which is</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2386" r="1583" b="2442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now occupied by his son A.K. Lord along with his son in law, Lloyd</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2432" r="1586" b="2488"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ramsay who carry on an extensive business under the firm name</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2475" r="1590" b="2529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Lord and Ramsay. The next warehouse to be built was erect¬</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2521" r="1591" b="2580"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed by the late Edward and John B. MacFadyen as a storage for</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="648">
<line l="845" t="2627" r="962" b="2659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—8—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1626" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="82" t="106" r="1506" b="2664"><region><rect l="82" t="106" r="1506" b="2664"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="25" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="134" t="124" r="1478" b="178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their crop which was the product of approximately 150 acres</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="168" r="1486" b="220"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This building is now owned by the two sons of Edward Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="212" r="1485" b="270"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fadyen, Wendall and Gerald who like their father are very large</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="257" r="1488" b="311"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and successful growers and each year find this seventy five car</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="302" r="1487" b="358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">storage barely adequate to store their crop. Louis and Hedley</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="345" r="1491" b="400"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart also found it necessary to have additional storage for</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="389" r="1488" b="447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their large growing activities and as a far storage and trading</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="433" r="1488" b="486"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">place of business they erected a sizeable warehouse here and</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="482" r="1485" b="530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">carry on extensive trading under the firm name of L. H and</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="522" r="420" b="558"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">H. L. Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" rightIndent="4" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="221" t="593" r="1487" b="644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leonard McCarville and his brother Mark also felt the need</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="637" r="1487" b="689"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of a storage warehouse and about this time, they built one on</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="681" r="1487" b="738"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the west side of Carleton Station. A railway spur line was put</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="726" r="1484" b="776"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in to facilitate the handling of car lots of potatoes fertilizer etc.</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="769" r="1484" b="819"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This building has served as a place of business for several con¬</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="816" r="1484" b="865"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cerns and very extensive business has been conducted here. First</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="858" r="1485" b="909"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by the original owners later by G. Clayton Green now of Emer¬</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="904" r="1481" b="959"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ald. The P.E.I. Potato Grower&apos;s Association, Douglas Bell, Nor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="949" r="1485" b="1003"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">man! Reeves and now owned and operated by Stanley Mayhew of</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="993" r="294" b="1027"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kinkora.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="8" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="215" t="1064" r="1483" b="1113"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Russel Hamill who for many years has grown and trade in</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1110" r="1482" b="1158"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">potatoes also followed in building a twenty car warehouse here</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1153" r="1483" b="1205"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and for the past twenty five years has carried on a very success¬</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1197" r="1482" b="1246"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ful seed and table stock trade under the first name of R. T. Ham-</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1241" r="1483" b="1291"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ill. Fred Bell who since 1922 has been engaged in the market¬</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1285" r="1482" b="1335"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing of potatoes also has a twenty five car warehouse here. Al¬</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1330" r="1482" b="1386"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">though now living in Summerside this business is extensively</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1375" r="1481" b="1424"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">carried on and in years of trading Mr. Bell can be considered one</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1418" r="1480" b="1474"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the oldest dealers here. Harold Muttart has just completed</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1463" r="1479" b="1517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a modern storage warehouse on his farm along the railway, this</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="1507" r="1478" b="1557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">will add an additional 20 cars to the storage total of the above</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="1553" r="356" b="1586"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">warehouses.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" rightIndent="11" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="40">
<line l="208" t="1623" r="1480" b="1676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Morley Muttart 20 car capacity, MacWilliam&apos;s Bros., 20 car</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="1669" r="1479" b="1716"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">capacity Vernal Webster 25 car capacity also added modern ware¬</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="1711" r="258" b="1744"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">houses.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="13" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="206" t="1783" r="1478" b="1832"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the early days of the potato industry the Dominion De¬</formatting></line>
<line l="112" t="1829" r="1477" b="1881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">partment of Agriculture felt it would be in the best interests, of</formatting></line>
<line l="111" t="1870" r="1475" b="1921"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">both the farmer and consumer that an inspection service be</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="1916" r="1475" b="1967"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">established and as soon as this service was set up resident in¬</formatting></line>
<line l="111" t="1963" r="1476" b="2015"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">spectors were appointed. The first full time resident inspector</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="2005" r="1474" b="2060"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for the Carleton area was J. McCurdy Bell who was succeeded by</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="2050" r="1471" b="2099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Late Harry Francis who was followed by J. Earle Thomson</formatting></line>
<line l="107" t="2097" r="1246" b="2140"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now retired.   The present incumbent is Austin Hamill.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="18" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="200" t="2176" r="1473" b="2222"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first resident seed inspector was J. Gordon Ross now</formatting></line>
<line l="106" t="2221" r="1470" b="2270"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one of the senior officers of the Department of Agriculture in</formatting></line>
<line l="106" t="2263" r="1470" b="2316"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charlottetown. Mr. Ross has been succeeded by John Myers the</formatting></line>
<line l="104" t="2311" r="737" b="2353"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">present holder of this position.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="21" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="197" t="2389" r="1470" b="2437"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A very fine spirit of co-operation has always existed between</formatting></line>
<line l="102" t="2432" r="1464" b="2479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the growers dealers and inspectors. As a result of this team</formatting></line>
<line l="101" t="2479" r="1469" b="2529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">work the industry has steadily progressed until to-day Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="102" t="2522" r="1469" b="2574"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Siding may truly lay claim to shipping approximately 8-10% of</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="623">
<line l="724" t="2627" r="840" b="2659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—9—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="3483" height="5508" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="2392" t="0" r="2786" b="24"><region><rect l="2392" t="0" r="2786" b="24"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="2393" t="0" r="2785" b="15"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mmmmamm in !»■ ib MBJHf—g</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="454" t="278" r="3218" b="2572"><region><rect l="454" t="278" r="3218" b="2572"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="7" lineSpacing="88">
<line l="470" t="296" r="3193" b="376"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">all potatoes shipped from P.E.I. This estimate is based on the</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="387" r="3191" b="465"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">total Island shipment as being from eight to ten thousand cars</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="475" r="3192" b="554"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">annually and for the past several years upwards of eight hundred</formatting></line>
<line l="473" t="563" r="2570" b="643"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cars has been shipped from this station each year.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="864" lineSpacing="102">
<line l="1333" t="805" r="2325" b="873"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LOBSTER FACTORIES</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="187" lineSpacing="102">
<line l="656" t="944" r="2969" b="1022"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first lobster factory was build in Carleton in 1886.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="187" lineSpacing="88">
<line l="657" t="1033" r="3195" b="1115"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the early nineteen hundreds the first Lobster Factory</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="1121" r="3194" b="1203"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was built by James Cook. He erected it on land now owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="469" t="1210" r="3198" b="1280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Town of Borden and later sold it to Frank Schaeffer. He</formatting></line>
<line l="476" t="1300" r="3197" b="1375"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">operated it for some time and in turn sold out to Freeman Hewett</formatting></line>
<line l="469" t="1389" r="3194" b="1469"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who also canned chicken as well as lobster. The factory was</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="1477" r="1788" b="1544"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">then sold to William E. Howatt.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="1" startIndent="185" lineSpacing="87">
<line l="655" t="1617" r="3199" b="1697"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alexander Howatt built another factory on land now own¬</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="1706" r="1431" b="1783"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed by Herbert Stewart.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="187" lineSpacing="88">
<line l="656" t="1848" r="3200" b="1930"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. Theodore Trenholm owned a factory, now owned by the</formatting></line>
<line l="469" t="1936" r="3198" b="2018"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Town of Borden. Johnny Crockett owned land, now owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="2025" r="2450" b="2103"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Noonan, sold it to Cornelius MacMillan.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" startIndent="188" lineSpacing="87">
<line l="658" t="2166" r="3200" b="2244"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Others who operated factories were Colin MacMillan and</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="2255" r="1269" b="2333"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Brace and MacKay.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="548" lineSpacing="86">
<line l="1017" t="2498" r="2653" b="2567"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">GARAGES AND FILLING STATIONS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="452" t="2620" r="3236" b="5354"><region><rect l="452" t="2620" r="3236" b="5354"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="12" startIndent="186" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="657" t="2640" r="3205" b="2720"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first garage in Carleton was operated by Stanley Link-</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="2731" r="3200" b="2809"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">letter who married Myrtle Murray. They built a new home and</formatting></line>
<line l="472" t="2820" r="3201" b="2901"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">remained here for a number of years. They had one son, Gordon.</formatting></line>
<line l="468" t="2909" r="3205" b="2988"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Linkletters sold their property to George Doull and moved</formatting></line>
<line l="469" t="2998" r="3204" b="3079"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Summerside. This property was later purchased by Avalah</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="3088" r="3207" b="3168"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacCallum and his wife Grace Thompson MacCallum. They had</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="3178" r="3208" b="3258"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two children, Lloyd and Pauline. Mr. MacCallum passed away</formatting></line>
<line l="474" t="3267" r="2218" b="3344"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">but his widow and family still reside here.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="6" startIndent="187" lineSpacing="89">
<line l="661" t="3406" r="3211" b="3485"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Norman MacWilliams built his garage and filling station at</formatting></line>
<line l="474" t="3497" r="3209" b="3577"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton corner in 1931. He married Dorilda Howatt of Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="3585" r="3211" b="3665"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Traverse. Mrs. MacWilliams operated a restaurant for a num¬</formatting></line>
<line l="472" t="3676" r="3208" b="3755"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ber of years in part of the same building where Norman had his</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="3765" r="3210" b="3844"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">garage. In 1946 they sold out and moved to Borden. Mr. and</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="3855" r="3213" b="3934"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Keith Stordy bought this property. They had two daught¬</formatting></line>
<line l="472" t="3944" r="3214" b="4024"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ers, Arlene and Dianne. Mr. Stordy was employed on the car-</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="4033" r="3214" b="4123"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ferry. After residing here about fifteen years they sold their</formatting></line>
<line l="472" t="4122" r="2763" b="4192"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home to Mrs. A. A. MacCallum and moved to Victoria.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="188" lineSpacing="90">
<line l="660" t="4281" r="3215" b="4361"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This large lot of land was first owned by Donald Morrison</formatting></line>
<line l="472" t="4370" r="3212" b="4452"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who had one son, Norman. They moved to Western Canada.</formatting></line>
<line l="474" t="4459" r="3218" b="4538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Others who lived here were William Dunn (he married Mattie</formatting></line>
<line l="472" t="4548" r="3216" b="4632"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wright, Cape Traverse and had one daughter, Bessie). John</formatting></line>
<line l="476" t="4638" r="3212" b="4722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Campbell who resided here for a short time. Cornelius MacMil¬</formatting></line>
<line l="473" t="4729" r="3220" b="4813"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lan (who married Annie Hennacy, to them were born four child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="471" t="4818" r="3219" b="4905"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren, Lome, Lena, Alban and Daniel). Peter Ranahan (who had</formatting></line>
<line l="470" t="4907" r="3220" b="4989"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two sons Emmett and Thomas). Robert Carmichael (whose</formatting></line>
<line l="473" t="4997" r="3217" b="5085"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family attended Carleton School, namely, Margaret, Dorothy,</formatting></line>
<line l="473" t="5088" r="2805" b="5180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Duncan, Gertrude^ Anna, Benjamin, Mary and Robert).</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1227" lineSpacing="78">
<line l="1695" t="5287" r="1976" b="5350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—10—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1626" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="84" t="128" r="1506" b="2654"><region><rect l="84" t="128" r="1506" b="2654"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="30" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="227" t="144" r="1491" b="197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Also on the south corner of this large lot resided Mrs Scot-</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="189" r="1489" b="244"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tie Robertson whose husband had been lost at sea. (This family</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="234" r="1149" b="284"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is mentioned in the Thomas Carruthers history).</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="28" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="40">
<line l="225" t="311" r="1488" b="363"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Harry Doull built his filling station at Carleton Corner in 1932</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="355" r="1488" b="408"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and continued to operate it until his death in 1958. At this time</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="398" r="543" b="440"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it ceased to operate.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="24" rightIndent="2" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="222" t="477" r="1488" b="534"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">When the new Trans-Canada Highway was built through</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="522" r="1489" b="574"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton, Ralph MacCaull and Wendell MacWilliams erected a</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="565" r="1487" b="623"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">filling station at Muncey&apos;s Corner on land purchased from Morley</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="609" r="1488" b="663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart. This building was completed in the spring of 1954 and</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="653" r="1476" b="707"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jack Campbell became lessee. He married Shirley MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="699" r="1487" b="754"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse and had four children, namely, Peter, Nancy, Paul</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="742" r="1488" b="794"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Lee. In 1958 the Coughlin Brothers became lessees. &apos; Ken¬</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="787" r="1486" b="841"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">neth is married to Jennie Smallman, O&apos;Leary. They have one</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="830" r="1474" b="884"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Glenda. Bannerman married Freda Myers Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="874" r="1095" b="923"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To them were born two sons, Ralph and David.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="219" t="954" r="1486" b="1005"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Calvin Howatt moved to Carleton after World War II and</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="996" r="1486" b="1049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bought a home which had been built by Fred Bell. For a num¬</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1041" r="1483" b="1098"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ber of years he fished lobsters then became inspector of potatoes</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1086" r="1485" b="1137"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at Borden. He married Marion Craig. They have one son Rus¬</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1131" r="197" b="1163"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sell.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="17" rightIndent="9" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="216" t="1210" r="1472" b="1260"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Raymond Harvey moved to Carleton and became Postmaster</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1253" r="1482" b="1311"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He built a new home and Post Office. Later he bought Ralph</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1297" r="1482" b="1349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacCaull&apos;s store and now operates both post office and store He</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1343" r="1471" b="1399"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Thelma Henderson. They have three children Lloyd</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1385" r="1481" b="1438"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Henderson and Rowena. Lloyd married Grace Howatt and lives</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1430" r="1480" b="1482"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Cape Traverse. Henderson married Cleona Arsenault and is</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1475" r="1481" b="1530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Germany with the R.C.A.F. Rowena married Harvey Costain</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1519" r="761" b="1562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and has one daughter, Barbara.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" rightIndent="12" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="209" t="1598" r="1479" b="1649"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Minnie (Bell) Kennedy came to Carleton from British</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1643" r="1477" b="1694"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Columbia after the death of her husband. She built a new home</formatting></line>
<line l="116" t="1687" r="1477" b="1739"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and resided here for a time then moved to Charlottetown. She</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="1731" r="1477" b="1782"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sold her property to William Cohoon who is married to Helen</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="1775" r="1476" b="1827"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">McCarron. They have two daughters, Sheila and Reta. He is</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="1820" r="673" b="1866"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">employed on the car ferry.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="15" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="204" t="1899" r="1476" b="1953"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. and Mrs. John Peak and family came from England and</formatting></line>
<line l="113" t="1944" r="1476" b="1995"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">settled at Carleton on the lot south of Vernal Webster&apos;s Ware¬</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="1987" r="1473" b="2046"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house. They had five children, namely, Sarah, Ruth, Annie,</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="2033" r="1475" b="2090"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Louis and Victor. Annie married James Dawson. North Tryon</formatting></line>
<line l="112" t="2078" r="1345" b="2127"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and had one son T. Arthur who married Winnifred Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="517">
<line l="620" t="2224" r="953" b="2261"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">BLACKSMITHS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="19" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="199" t="2290" r="1472" b="2339"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first blacksmith was William Wood who married Melissa</formatting></line>
<line l="104" t="2332" r="1472" b="2384"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacWilliams. They had two daughters, Ada and Pearl. After</formatting></line>
<line l="105" t="2379" r="1466" b="2429"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a few years the family moved to Mass., U.S.A. M.B. Connick was</formatting></line>
<line l="103" t="2424" r="1468" b="2476"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the next blacksmith followed by John A. MacKay, William A.</formatting></line>
<line l="103" t="2468" r="1465" b="2525"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Howatt, John O&apos;Connor, Jarvis MacGaughey, Eugene McCabe,</formatting></line>
<line l="104" t="2514" r="737" b="2555"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Michael Moon and Paul Lavoie.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="607">
<line l="710" t="2620" r="849" b="2651"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—11—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1751" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="208" t="372" r="1586" b="2420"><region><rect l="208" t="372" r="1586" b="2420"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="888" t="2632" r="1010" b="2672"><region><rect l="888" t="2632" r="1010" b="2672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="889" t="2637" r="993" b="2669"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-12—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1623" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="102" t="96" r="1502" b="1490"><region><rect l="102" t="96" r="1502" b="1490"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="223" t="105" r="1483" b="143"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It is a well known fact that the Indians lived on P.E.I, before</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="150" r="1485" b="192"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the French English settlers came here. In library searching for</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="193" r="1480" b="233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their history, nothing definite could be found of this settlement</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="239" r="1483" b="281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">except memories of five older residents that during summer</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="284" r="1484" b="322"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">months they had camps not far from where the saw mill was on</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="328" r="1484" b="370"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">King Maclnnis land. This was a very convenient place beside a</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="373" r="1483" b="416"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">good water spring, near railroad track and surrounded by acres</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="416" r="1482" b="453"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of woodland where material could be found to make their handi¬</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="462" r="1485" b="503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">crafts, which they sold to this community and surrounding dis¬</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="506" r="1486" b="548"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tricts. This district has constant reminders of the Indian peo¬</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="551" r="1484" b="592"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ple as from day to day the M.V. Abegweit can be seen going to</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="595" r="1480" b="636"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and from Borden, a part of this school district in by gone days.</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="640" r="1483" b="681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Abegweit (resting on the wave) being the descriptive name give</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="685" r="1280" b="725"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to P.E.I, by the Indians before European settlers came.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="441" lineSpacing="52">
<line l="559" t="746" r="1042" b="779"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ICE BOAT CROSSING</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="3" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="52">
<line l="218" t="798" r="1483" b="840"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">So far as I can ascertain the earliest regular crossing began</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="851" r="1483" b="892"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1828, the couriers getting $16. per trip. At the outset the</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="904" r="1483" b="946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trips were only monthly, then weekly and for many years daily</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="957" r="670" b="991"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">when the weather allowed.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="3" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="214" t="1019" r="1482" b="1060"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The contract had been in many hands since the enterprise</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1063" r="1482" b="1104"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">started, but the names of Lewis Muttart and Philip Irving will</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1107" r="1482" b="1148"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">always be associated with the work owing to their long, faithful</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1152" r="1482" b="1193"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">service. It is stated that while these men were in charge, no</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1197" r="1483" b="1235"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">passenger had been injured by frost or othewise and no letter or</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1240" r="1481" b="1281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">package was mislaid. Muttart made his last trip in the ice boats</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1284" r="993" b="1324"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1897 when considerably past four-score.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="6" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="214" t="1354" r="1480" b="1396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A passenger had not only to walk but also to assist in hauling</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="1397" r="1479" b="1440"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the boat with its load, an arbitrary arrangement against which</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1443" r="1343" b="1485"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">some are disposed to kick     but the rules were unbending.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="114" t="1550" r="1480" b="2050"><region><rect l="114" t="1550" r="1480" b="2050"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="112" t="2282" r="244" b="2410"><region><rect l="112" t="2282" r="244" b="2410"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="96" t="2418" r="234" b="2454"><region><rect l="96" t="2418" r="234" b="2454"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="111" t="2425" r="231" b="2454"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wmm</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1090" t="2406" r="1492" b="2478"><region><rect l="1090" t="2406" r="1492" b="2478"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1113" t="2451" r="1428" b="2472"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■ ■■■     :■■■■■&apos;   ....</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="376" t="2490" r="1196" b="2650"><region><rect l="376" t="2490" r="1196" b="2650"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="321" startIndent="-321" lineSpacing="115">
<line l="393" t="2502" r="1182" b="2541"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Crossing at the Cape from Prince Edward Island</formatting></line>
<line l="714" t="2616" r="853" b="2648"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—13—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1755" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="194" t="110" r="1636" b="2670"><region><rect l="194" t="110" r="1636" b="2670"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="46" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="305" t="126" r="1571" b="173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The rates were two dollars per trip for each passenger with</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="172" r="1576" b="222"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">40 lbs. baggage; anything beyond that weight is charged three</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="217" r="1574" b="268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cents per pound at which rate a commercial traveller had some¬</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="265" r="1331" b="313"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">times to pay thirty dollars for conveying his samples.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="42" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="309" t="336" r="1579" b="379"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ladies and male passengers who prefer ease to money are</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="377" r="1579" b="421"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">hauled in the boats for double fare being at the rate of over a</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="420" r="1579" b="470"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">half dollar per mile. When walking passengers are attached to</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="465" r="1580" b="514"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the boats by leather straps, which answer as traces and also are</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="514" r="1114" b="561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">helpful should one break suddenly through.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="34" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="311" t="577" r="1579" b="625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The ice-boats belonged to the federal government, each was 17</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="622" r="1584" b="674"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ft. long 4 ft. wide and shaped like a Norwegian skiff, the bow</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="667" r="1582" b="718"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">slanting upwards. A metal runner on each side of the keel en¬</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="710" r="1583" b="759"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ables the craft to be used as a sled; outside the boats are all</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="757" r="1588" b="803"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sheathed with stout tin. Since 1885 each boat carried a com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="799" r="1586" b="854"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pass, two paddles, some food and the means of making a fire.</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="844" r="1587" b="893"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On smooth water or glib ice a sail can be used. There must not</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="900" r="1023" b="937"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">be fewer than three boats in company.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="29" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="319" t="957" r="1589" b="1006"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Each boat had a crew of six men, one of them denominated</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1003" r="1589" b="1058"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the captain; next in rank are two bow-men so named from their</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1048" r="1593" b="1102"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">forward position. Besides the boat captain there is a head man</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="1092" r="1592" b="1149"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">or pilot whose word is law and who has charge of the fleet. Every</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1136" r="1593" b="1193"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">day before starting, each of the crew is bound to obedience by</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1197" r="574" b="1234"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his manual sign.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" rightIndent="24" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="322" t="1250" r="1596" b="1301"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The entire force consists of 48 men, all picked for strength</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1295" r="1598" b="1347"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and endurance. The head captain or pilot receives $75. a month;</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="1342" r="1596" b="1393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">each subordinate captain gets $55.; the bow-men, each receive</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1394" r="1031" b="1443"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">$50, and the rest $45. each per month.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" rightIndent="19" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="326" t="1452" r="1600" b="1501"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Intoxicating drinks are not allowed while the men are on</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="1493" r="1602" b="1550"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">duty Along each shore in winter there usually extends an im¬</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="1536" r="1601" b="1589"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">movable border called the board-ice; on arrival here the boats</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1582" r="1603" b="1633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">are hauled to a building where before a good fire all the equip¬</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1626" r="1603" b="1679"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ments are made perfectly dry. When not in service the boats are</formatting></line>
<line l="237" t="1685" r="668" b="1729"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">kept in this building.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="25" rightIndent="9" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="332" t="1730" r="1603" b="1783"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The ice boat service at the Cape was begun by the late Louis</formatting></line>
<line l="237" t="1775" r="1607" b="1830"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart and Arthur Irving and in those days there was no boat</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="1824" r="1605" b="1877"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house or any accomodations for the housing of the boats. A small</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="1867" r="1608" b="1922"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">field know as the gully and being a part of the farm of the late</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="1913" r="1609" b="1965"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas Bell was used for many years or until such time as the</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="1955" r="1609" b="2011"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">boat house was built at Cape Traverse wharf This field was</formatting></line>
<line l="240" t="2001" r="1611" b="2058"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bought in 1878 by Mr. Muttart and it is on the land that the</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="2044" r="1613" b="2099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">first cable house was erected this being the starting point for</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="2091" r="1612" b="2144"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Northumberland Strait cable from Cape Traverse to Cape lor-</formatting></line>
<line l="243" t="2137" r="1390" b="2190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mentine 1878 Thos. Bell deeded land to Louis Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="530">
<line l="742" t="2238" r="1115" b="2277"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE RAILROAD</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="33" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="339" t="2300" r="1619" b="2354"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">About 1884 the branch railway was built from Emerald run¬</formatting></line>
<line l="245" t="2344" r="1619" b="2407"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ning through Carleton to Cape Traverse. The tanks were the</formatting></line>
<line l="245" t="2394" r="1621" b="2449"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">railroad engines got water supply were in Carleton. I his pro¬</formatting></line>
<line l="246" t="2435" r="1622" b="2495"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">vided a great convenience for people in the district so they had</formatting></line>
<line l="249" t="2480" r="1622" b="2540"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">time to get off or aboard the train in those days when the train</formatting></line>
<line l="251" t="2525" r="1622" b="2582"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was used so much for travel.   There was also a switch where rail-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="654">
<line l="866" t="2633" r="1006" b="2665"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—14—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1628" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="112" t="122" r="1510" b="1258"><region><rect l="112" t="122" r="1510" b="1258"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="136" t="132" r="1492" b="175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">road cars could be loaded and unloaded. Many cars of Mussel</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="176" r="1493" b="218"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mud were unloaded there which saved a lot of time for the farm-</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="221" r="1081" b="261"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mers when all hauling was done with horses.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="1" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="228" t="290" r="1492" b="336"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">During- the summer of 1913 engineers H. M. Downing of Hali¬</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="335" r="1489" b="382"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fax and Sidney Willet of Moncton with the assistance of Hugh</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="379" r="1492" b="426"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacLure and Charles MacKenzie of Breadalbane surveyed for</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="424" r="1401" b="465"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the railroad spur to Carleton Point now the Town of Borden.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="227" t="494" r="1490" b="541"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On Dec. 3rd, 1913 the work of building began with Hugh</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="538" r="1490" b="580"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacLeod of Breadalbane as foreman. Horses and carts were used</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="583" r="1271" b="628"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to haul the clay till the winter frost set in, in January.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="226" t="654" r="1491" b="700"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the spring of 1914 the work began in earnest by building</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="698" r="1490" b="745"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a log trestle frame to fill in the twenty-seven (27) foot dump</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="742" r="1488" b="788"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">over brook. Rails were laid on trestle framework to fit dump cars</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="786" r="1489" b="833"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which were filled by men with shovels and hauled on the rails by</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="830" r="1234" b="872"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">horses.    Engineer Lawrence superintended the work.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="224" t="901" r="1488" b="946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the summer of 1918 a number of railroad cars were placed</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="945" r="1488" b="991"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Carleton on the vacated line running to Cape Traverse. Fifty</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="989" r="1486" b="1032"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(50) German prisoners and twenty-eight (28) guards under Lieut.</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1033" r="1487" b="1079"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Abbott lived in the cars. The prisoners worked at taking up the</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="1077" r="1486" b="1124"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse Branch not in use and removing the narrow gauge</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1123" r="1484" b="1168"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">rail to Emerald Junction.    They also worked in the Borden yard.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="541">
<line l="668" t="1221" r="940" b="1254"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE ROADS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="96" t="1288" r="1504" b="2646"><region><rect l="96" t="1288" r="1504" b="2646"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="219" t="1297" r="1487" b="1341"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This district is privileged to be situated along part of the</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1340" r="1486" b="1381"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">road which is the shortest route from Summerside to Borden.</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1384" r="1486" b="1426"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">As a result the part north of Doull&apos;s corner was one of the first</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1429" r="1486" b="1472"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">paved roads in the province being completed in 1935. The first</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1474" r="1484" b="1515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cement road on the Island was laid from Doull&apos;s corner to Borden.</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1518" r="1485" b="1562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Now it is all paved through Carleton to Cape Traverse. The</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1562" r="1484" b="1605"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Trans-Canada Highway also runs through the district from east</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1608" r="1483" b="1654"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to west. The only clay roads are from Noonan&apos;s shore to Albany</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1652" r="1457" b="1695"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and a short branch road leading to Cape Traverse and Bradford.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="560">
<line l="671" t="1759" r="925" b="1794"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CHURCHES</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="6" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="211" t="1836" r="1481" b="1879"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">There are no churches in Carleton, our affiliations are with</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="1879" r="1031" b="1924"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Borden, Cape Traverse and Seven Mile Bay.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="333">
<line l="444" t="1986" r="1145" b="2024"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="8" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="210" t="2065" r="1478" b="2108"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">There are no fraternal headquarters or lodge rooms in Carle¬</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="2110" r="1479" b="2155"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton but many of our citizens belong to Borden and Cape Traverse</formatting></line>
<line l="116" t="2154" r="268" b="2193"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lodges.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="516">
<line l="627" t="2253" r="959" b="2288"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE SCHOOLS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="8" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="206" t="2330" r="1479" b="2371"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Like most early settlements the first school was built of</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="2375" r="1478" b="2416"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">logs. In 1857 the first frame school was erected almost surround¬</formatting></line>
<line l="113" t="2420" r="1477" b="2467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed by woods on land donated by John Muttart near where the pre¬</formatting></line>
<line l="112" t="2466" r="1473" b="2512"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sent one is standing. Now it is on the farm of George Muttart,</formatting></line>
<line l="111" t="2509" r="748" b="2549"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Albany situated near the road.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="609">
<line l="720" t="2611" r="858" b="2642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—15—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1732" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="102" t="382" r="1382" b="2420"><region><rect l="102" t="382" r="1368" b="926"></rect><rect l="102" t="926" r="1336" b="980"></rect><rect l="102" t="980" r="1382" b="1474"></rect><rect l="102" t="1474" r="1336" b="1566"></rect><rect l="102" t="1566" r="1344" b="1580"></rect><rect l="102" t="1580" r="1380" b="1586"></rect><rect l="102" t="1586" r="1382" b="1614"></rect><rect l="102" t="1614" r="1356" b="1616"></rect><rect l="102" t="1616" r="1336" b="1662"></rect><rect l="102" t="1662" r="1382" b="1712"></rect><rect l="102" t="1712" r="1336" b="2420"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1408" t="382" r="1604" b="576"><region><rect l="1408" t="382" r="1604" b="576"></rect></region>
<text>
<par rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="1430" t="385" r="1586" b="415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a     2 c</formatting></line>
<line l="1422" t="449" r="1588" b="487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.22 o &lt;u 8</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1423" t="514" r="1590" b="571"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">6 J^3^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1408" t="604" r="1506" b="688"><region><rect l="1408" t="604" r="1506" b="688"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1564" t="606" r="1612" b="634"><region><rect l="1564" t="606" r="1612" b="634"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1569" t="608" r="1596" b="629"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&gt;-.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1336" t="934" r="1464" b="974"><region><rect l="1336" t="934" r="1464" b="974"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1339" t="935" r="1460" b="971"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£?      fa</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1422" t="676" r="1608" b="758"><region><rect l="1422" t="676" r="1608" b="758"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1426" t="676" r="1591" b="703"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1=3  o.SS   &lt;D</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1422" t="782" r="1610" b="1022"><region><rect l="1422" t="782" r="1610" b="920"></rect><rect l="1436" t="920" r="1610" b="940"></rect><rect l="1482" t="940" r="1610" b="974"></rect><rect l="1570" t="974" r="1610" b="998"></rect><rect l="1572" t="998" r="1600" b="1022"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1574" t="977" r="1596" b="994"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1482" t="986" r="1614" b="1084"><region><rect l="1482" t="986" r="1566" b="1018"></rect><rect l="1482" t="1018" r="1614" b="1084"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1483" t="988" r="1550" b="1007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">h o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1416" t="1090" r="1616" b="1332"><region><rect l="1416" t="1090" r="1616" b="1306"></rect><rect l="1416" t="1306" r="1478" b="1332"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="47">
<line l="1478" t="1092" r="1598" b="1124"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">w   -3</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1431" t="1147" r="1599" b="1179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">* aJoO</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12">
<line l="1443" t="1181" r="1606" b="1242"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S % % rf</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1433" t="1226" r="1601" b="1291"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">«^fa§</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="14">
<line l="1445" t="1309" r="1467" b="1328"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">0)</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1484" t="1312" r="1562" b="1340"><region><rect l="1484" t="1312" r="1562" b="1340"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1490" t="1315" r="1556" b="1337"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">C   «U</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1398" t="1340" r="1618" b="1522"><region><rect l="1398" t="1340" r="1618" b="1496"></rect><rect l="1548" t="1496" r="1618" b="1522"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1482" t="1361" r="1602" b="1377"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■P    BH</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1344" t="1476" r="1476" b="1580"><region><rect l="1344" t="1476" r="1428" b="1500"></rect><rect l="1344" t="1500" r="1474" b="1532"></rect><rect l="1344" t="1532" r="1476" b="1580"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1388" t="1532" r="1528" b="1608"><region><rect l="1490" t="1532" r="1528" b="1574"></rect><rect l="1388" t="1574" r="1528" b="1584"></rect><rect l="1388" t="1584" r="1520" b="1608"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="100">
<line l="1494" t="1534" r="1515" b="1554"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1394" t="1568" r="1516" b="1608"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">p-rs a</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1348" t="1568" r="1616" b="2014"><region><rect l="1536" t="1568" r="1616" b="1594"></rect><rect l="1446" t="1594" r="1616" b="1614"></rect><rect l="1356" t="1614" r="1616" b="1662"></rect><rect l="1402" t="1662" r="1616" b="1716"></rect><rect l="1348" t="1716" r="1616" b="2000"></rect><rect l="1488" t="2000" r="1616" b="2004"></rect><rect l="1488" t="2004" r="1526" b="2014"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="6" startIndent="178" lineSpacing="199">
<line l="1539" t="1568" r="1611" b="1599"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to 5&apos;</formatting></line>
<line l="1361" t="1762" r="1608" b="1788"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o     Ed C +* °3</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1355" t="1950" r="1611" b="1988"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fa1^   o  « Ph   y</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1642" t="382" r="1696" b="432"><region><rect l="1642" t="382" r="1696" b="432"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1632" t="504" r="1698" b="640"><region><rect l="1632" t="504" r="1698" b="640"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1649" t="507" r="1680" b="530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">T3</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1660" t="565" r="1680" b="585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">u</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1650" t="608" r="1682" b="636"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1618" t="694" r="1732" b="1594"><region><rect l="1618" t="694" r="1732" b="1594"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="34" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="1658" t="698" r="1728" b="738"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5 £</formatting></line>
<line l="1662" t="752" r="1732" b="782"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£ &gt;.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="26">
<line l="1654" t="783" r="1729" b="821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£§</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="37">
<line l="1665" t="942" r="1731" b="961"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CO   0)</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="31">
<line l="1659" t="1123" r="1732" b="1157"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■a «</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="42" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1669" t="1212" r="1732" b="1242"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">«3  «</formatting></line>
<line l="1670" t="1244" r="1732" b="1265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">c3   S-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="34">
<line l="1662" t="1331" r="1732" b="1373"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.2 1</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="35">
<line l="1663" t="1401" r="1732" b="1444"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-2 g</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right">
<line l="1663" t="1438" r="1732" b="1469"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ox</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right">
<line l="1689" t="1471" r="1732" b="1497"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">„ c</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right">
<line l="1674" t="1492" r="1732" b="1523"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&gt;^</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1628" t="1546" r="1732" b="1576"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5n ^ a</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1628" t="1566" r="1732" b="1594"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">K o f</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1622" t="1604" r="1706" b="1656"><region><rect l="1622" t="1604" r="1706" b="1638"></rect><rect l="1622" t="1638" r="1668" b="1656"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1629" t="1606" r="1697" b="1633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S CO</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1666" t="1650" r="1732" b="1768"><region><rect l="1666" t="1650" r="1732" b="1768"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" lineSpacing="23">
<line l="1676" t="1654" r="1732" b="1673"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5-1 ?■</formatting></line>
<line l="1676" t="1675" r="1731" b="1694"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O o</formatting></line>
<line l="1676" t="1697" r="1732" b="1720"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">St</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1677" t="1745" r="1698" b="1763"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">0)</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1360" t="2000" r="1448" b="2050"><region><rect l="1360" t="2000" r="1448" b="2050"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="14">
<line l="1364" t="2002" r="1432" b="2030"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o  fi</formatting></line>
<line l="1361" t="2024" r="1432" b="2048"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">+3 a&gt;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1542" t="1994" r="1670" b="2054"><region><rect l="1542" t="1994" r="1670" b="2054"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1543" t="2002" r="1659" b="2048"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S^^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1620" t="1724" r="1732" b="2032"><region><rect l="1620" t="1724" r="1666" b="1770"></rect><rect l="1620" t="1770" r="1732" b="1984"></rect><rect l="1672" t="1984" r="1732" b="2008"></rect><rect l="1708" t="2008" r="1732" b="2032"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1632" t="1746" r="1654" b="1767"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right">
<line l="1632" t="1769" r="1732" b="1815"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£fa c</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1">
<line l="1622" t="1814" r="1731" b="1839"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■&quot;■a .. ■+</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right">
<line l="1649" t="1839" r="1732" b="1871"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">--^ 5</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3">
<line l="1625" t="1927" r="1702" b="1962"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.3 fa</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="17">
<line l="1639" t="1964" r="1732" b="2007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2 o;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="95">
<line l="1717" t="2011" r="1731" b="2027"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">4</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1352" t="2052" r="1620" b="2404"><region><rect l="1352" t="2052" r="1618" b="2208"></rect><rect l="1352" t="2208" r="1620" b="2266"></rect><rect l="1352" t="2266" r="1488" b="2404"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="7">
<line l="1365" t="2099" r="1613" b="2129"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cu     i—I _ a&gt; ai</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" startIndent="45" lineSpacing="27">
<line l="1412" t="2155" r="1614" b="2181"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ti s-p a</formatting></line>
<line l="1367" t="2177" r="1614" b="2210"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£ 3 o « £ .2</formatting></line>
<line l="1367" t="2199" r="1615" b="2232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o &lt;» a3 3 o —</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="27">
<line l="1358" t="2213" r="1615" b="2274"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fafa^fafa</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1369" t="2290" r="1483" b="2341"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">s   §</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1369" t="2328" r="1483" b="2350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O            O</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1369" t="2350" r="1483" b="2371"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh            CD</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1360" t="2370" r="1484" b="2398"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fa       CO</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1524" t="2280" r="1590" b="2400"><region><rect l="1524" t="2280" r="1590" b="2400"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1541" t="2284" r="1571" b="2305"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">T3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1618" t="2030" r="1732" b="2402"><region><rect l="1668" t="2030" r="1720" b="2040"></rect><rect l="1630" t="2040" r="1732" b="2058"></rect><rect l="1618" t="2058" r="1732" b="2266"></rect><rect l="1656" t="2266" r="1732" b="2402"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="7">
<line l="1637" t="2064" r="1732" b="2097"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OS    &lt;j)H</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="9">
<line l="1639" t="2167" r="1732" b="2200"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">H ol</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1630" t="2198" r="1732" b="2233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">J3fa    &apos;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="47">
<line l="1677" t="2278" r="1707" b="2295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">4J</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="56">
<line l="1686" t="2297" r="1707" b="2314"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5-1</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="57">
<line l="1687" t="2317" r="1708" b="2340"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">s</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="57">
<line l="1687" t="2343" r="1708" b="2362"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="47">
<line l="1677" t="2365" r="1708" b="2393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fa</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1634" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="6" t="396" r="1290" b="2418"><region><rect l="6" t="396" r="1290" b="2392"></rect><rect l="112" t="2392" r="1290" b="2394"></rect><rect l="552" t="2394" r="1290" b="2418"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1308" t="394" r="1374" b="526"><region><rect l="1308" t="394" r="1374" b="526"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1334" t="397" r="1356" b="422"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1334" t="434" r="1356" b="455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1324" t="501" r="1357" b="522"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1-3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1320" t="574" r="1374" b="620"><region><rect l="1320" t="574" r="1374" b="620"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="22">
<line l="1336" t="577" r="1357" b="596"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1336" t="596" r="1357" b="618"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">03</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1310" t="778" r="1382" b="862"><region><rect l="1310" t="778" r="1382" b="862"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1312" t="918" r="1376" b="1098"><region><rect l="1312" t="918" r="1376" b="1098"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1337" t="921" r="1359" b="939"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1327" t="943" r="1359" b="970"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">m</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="9" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1337" t="1021" r="1359" b="1043"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line>
<line l="1336" t="1046" r="1359" b="1064"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&lt;v</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1312" t="1130" r="1378" b="1490"><region><rect l="1312" t="1130" r="1378" b="1490"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10" rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="20">
<line l="1337" t="1133" r="1360" b="1149"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CO</formatting></line>
<line l="1337" t="1151" r="1359" b="1170"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1337" t="1172" r="1360" b="1190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cd</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="19">
<line l="1337" t="1261" r="1360" b="1280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1338" t="1281" r="1360" b="1299"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1327" t="1325" r="1362" b="1351"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1328" t="1409" r="1361" b="1440"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.53</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1398" t="436" r="1462" b="576"><region><rect l="1398" t="436" r="1462" b="576"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1424" t="485" r="1445" b="501"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="9">
<line l="1423" t="505" r="1444" b="525"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1414" t="547" r="1446" b="573"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1400" t="610" r="1462" b="672"><region><rect l="1400" t="610" r="1462" b="672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1425" t="614" r="1446" b="637"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">13</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1400" t="742" r="1470" b="904"><region><rect l="1400" t="742" r="1470" b="904"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10" startIndent="-10" lineSpacing="25">
<line l="1416" t="766" r="1447" b="787"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S</formatting></line>
<line l="1426" t="790" r="1454" b="812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ft</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" rightIndent="5" lineSpacing="52">
<line l="1427" t="814" r="1447" b="849"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S</formatting></line>
<line l="1417" t="875" r="1449" b="901"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1402" t="986" r="1466" b="1086"><region><rect l="1402" t="986" r="1466" b="1086"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1427" t="990" r="1449" b="1008"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1427" t="1011" r="1449" b="1030"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line>
<line l="1427" t="1032" r="1448" b="1050"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1418" t="1053" r="1449" b="1083"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1488" t="422" r="1552" b="648"><region><rect l="1488" t="422" r="1552" b="648"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="9">
<line l="1512" t="425" r="1534" b="442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="1503" t="445" r="1534" b="474"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pq</formatting></line>
<line l="1514" t="496" r="1535" b="521"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12">
<line l="1515" t="589" r="1536" b="609"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S3</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1505" t="613" r="1536" b="644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">25</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1490" t="702" r="1562" b="1018"><region><rect l="1490" t="702" r="1562" b="1018"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="9">
<line l="1515" t="706" r="1537" b="723"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1506" t="727" r="1537" b="755"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pq</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="26">
<line l="1517" t="779" r="1537" b="812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£</formatting></line>
<line l="1517" t="815" r="1538" b="837"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line>
<line l="1507" t="837" r="1538" b="866"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">H</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" lineSpacing="19">
<line l="1517" t="926" r="1539" b="944"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o&gt;</formatting></line>
<line l="1517" t="946" r="1540" b="963"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" lineSpacing="24">
<line l="1518" t="966" r="1538" b="990"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">C</formatting></line>
<line l="1518" t="992" r="1540" b="1013"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1404" t="1140" r="1466" b="1536"><region><rect l="1404" t="1140" r="1466" b="1276"></rect><rect l="1404" t="1276" r="1458" b="1536"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1427" t="1143" r="1449" b="1161"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1428" t="1163" r="1449" b="1182"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line>
<line l="1418" t="1185" r="1449" b="1208"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Si</formatting></line>
<line l="1419" t="1210" r="1450" b="1226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">•+J</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1428" t="1229" r="1450" b="1250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3</formatting></line>
<line l="1428" t="1252" r="1450" b="1271"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1428" t="1273" r="1450" b="1291"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1429" t="1293" r="1449" b="1313"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ci</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1419" t="1315" r="1450" b="1343"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12">
<line l="1430" t="1371" r="1450" b="1395"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">c</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12">
<line l="1430" t="1406" r="1451" b="1425"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1460" t="1074" r="1560" b="1396"><region><rect l="1492" t="1074" r="1560" b="1230"></rect><rect l="1460" t="1230" r="1560" b="1396"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="44">
<line l="1518" t="1103" r="1540" b="1122"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S3</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="45">
<line l="1519" t="1124" r="1540" b="1149"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="45" rightIndent="7" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1519" t="1151" r="1540" b="1168"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU</formatting></line>
<line l="1519" t="1172" r="1540" b="1189"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="35">
<line l="1509" t="1191" r="1541" b="1225"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">55</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="15" startIndent="30" lineSpacing="20">
<line l="1519" t="1250" r="1547" b="1278"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh*</formatting></line>
<line l="1489" t="1280" r="1541" b="1298"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">•   CD</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="5" lineSpacing="20">
<line l="1474" t="1326" r="1541" b="1350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh &apos;Si</formatting></line>
<line l="1474" t="1350" r="1542" b="1368"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh •**</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1310" t="1544" r="1456" b="1764"><region><rect l="1310" t="1544" r="1456" b="1672"></rect><rect l="1310" t="1672" r="1412" b="1764"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1340" t="1618" r="1451" b="1637"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o      o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1460" t="1442" r="1552" b="1548"><region><rect l="1460" t="1442" r="1552" b="1548"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1558" t="1520" r="1604" b="1548"><region><rect l="1558" t="1520" r="1604" b="1548"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1564" t="1525" r="1586" b="1542"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1470" t="1554" r="1610" b="1680"><region><rect l="1470" t="1554" r="1610" b="1670"></rect><rect l="1516" t="1670" r="1610" b="1680"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1474" t="1600" r="1587" b="1626"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bo cu g</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1474" t="1622" r="1587" b="1644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh   O   3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1424" t="1688" r="1456" b="1714"><region><rect l="1424" t="1688" r="1456" b="1714"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1431" t="1694" r="1452" b="1711"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1466" t="1666" r="1500" b="1692"><region><rect l="1466" t="1666" r="1500" b="1692"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1474" t="1669" r="1495" b="1686"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1318" t="1724" r="1462" b="2298"><region><rect l="1426" t="1724" r="1462" b="1768"></rect><rect l="1318" t="1768" r="1462" b="2270"></rect><rect l="1318" t="2270" r="1460" b="2292"></rect><rect l="1318" t="2292" r="1372" b="2298"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="100">
<line l="1431" t="1727" r="1451" b="1752"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">c</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="4" startIndent="99" lineSpacing="29">
<line l="1430" t="1753" r="1452" b="1777"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S</formatting></line>
<line l="1331" t="1775" r="1452" b="1806"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1-8 &gt;&gt;«&lt;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="26">
<line l="1357" t="1808" r="1408" b="1826"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">- Sh</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1331" t="1838" r="1453" b="1878"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh   3 £</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1341" t="1872" r="1452" b="1898"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh ffi   CD</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1341" t="1898" r="1452" b="1930"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2    •*</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1331" t="1938" r="1453" b="1969"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cqS o</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" rightIndent="3" startIndent="45" lineSpacing="68">
<line l="1387" t="1968" r="1453" b="1990"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU   Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1342" t="2037" r="1453" b="2060"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O   O   Sh</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1342" t="2107" r="1454" b="2134"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">..   .   05</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1333" t="2184" r="1417" b="2218"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.bc,_r</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="13">
<line l="1344" t="2269" r="1456" b="2293"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O       O</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1462" t="1668" r="1548" b="1738"><region><rect l="1516" t="1668" r="1548" b="1686"></rect><rect l="1462" t="1686" r="1548" b="1738"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1464" t="1689" r="1542" b="1734"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Og</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1552" t="1676" r="1604" b="1764"><region><rect l="1562" t="1676" r="1604" b="1696"></rect><rect l="1552" t="1696" r="1604" b="1764"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1565" t="1679" r="1587" b="1696"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1564" t="1699" r="1586" b="1719"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">03</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1552" t="1812" r="1606" b="1904"><region><rect l="1562" t="1812" r="1606" b="1864"></rect><rect l="1552" t="1864" r="1606" b="1904"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="0" t="2394" r="552" b="2422"><region><rect l="0" t="2394" r="552" b="2422"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="116" t="2395" r="544" b="2417"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;  .. ■■  .-•■-&apos;.  ^::-... :  : &apos;\&apos;.v:&apos;^:&quot;Vk</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1318" t="2326" r="1384" b="2420"><region><rect l="1318" t="2326" r="1384" b="2420"></rect></region>
<text>
<par startIndent="9" lineSpacing="30">
<line l="1344" t="2367" r="1367" b="2386"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line>
<line l="1335" t="2379" r="1366" b="2415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">k3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1410" t="2288" r="1474" b="2418"><region><rect l="1422" t="2288" r="1474" b="2326"></rect><rect l="1410" t="2326" r="1474" b="2418"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1425" t="2294" r="1456" b="2321"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ph</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1462" t="1880" r="1608" b="2414"><region><rect l="1462" t="1880" r="1560" b="1904"></rect><rect l="1462" t="1904" r="1608" b="2326"></rect><rect l="1500" t="2326" r="1608" b="2414"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1476" t="1881" r="1559" b="1904"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">c3 •+-&gt; &apos;</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="19">
<line l="1465" t="1905" r="1596" b="1932"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o »   «</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="45" lineSpacing="19">
<line l="1510" t="1927" r="1589" b="1952"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">,«   H-&gt;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" lineSpacing="19">
<line l="1476" t="1952" r="1590" b="1974"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(H     O   -P</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1467" t="1986" r="1590" b="2015"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S     H^</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1476" t="2015" r="1590" b="2034"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on o</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1466" t="2035" r="1590" b="2076"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">M  .2</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="4">
<line l="1469" t="2235" r="1592" b="2275"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ph ^&lt;^</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="51">
<line l="1516" t="2295" r="1547" b="2322"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ph</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="52" rightIndent="48" startIndent="-10" lineSpacing="21">
<line l="1516" t="2345" r="1548" b="2366"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">T5</formatting></line>
<line l="1526" t="2369" r="1548" b="2386"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1517" t="2390" r="1548" b="2409"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CO</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1749" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="174" t="396" r="1286" b="2430"><region><rect l="174" t="396" r="1286" b="1954"></rect><rect l="174" t="1954" r="1254" b="1960"></rect><rect l="174" t="1960" r="1246" b="2108"></rect><rect l="174" t="2108" r="1212" b="2430"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1318" t="388" r="1520" b="1380"><region><rect l="1318" t="388" r="1520" b="578"></rect><rect l="1402" t="578" r="1520" b="1104"></rect><rect l="1374" t="1104" r="1520" b="1142"></rect><rect l="1320" t="1142" r="1520" b="1200"></rect><rect l="1320" t="1200" r="1462" b="1380"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="9" rightIndent="14" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="1335" t="419" r="1492" b="451"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2     ss</formatting></line>
<line l="1335" t="447" r="1492" b="494"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">£3     §^</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="117" rightIndent="6" startIndent="-117" lineSpacing="25">
<line l="1326" t="496" r="1500" b="534"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S    ^ ►,</formatting></line>
<line l="1443" t="531" r="1492" b="560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">»js</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="100" lineSpacing="37">
<line l="1426" t="579" r="1493" b="605"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S  O</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="102" lineSpacing="37">
<line l="1428" t="617" r="1493" b="641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&gt;&gt; o</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="92" lineSpacing="37">
<line l="1418" t="641" r="1494" b="678"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">go</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="102">
<line l="1428" t="703" r="1501" b="735"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">eg  af</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="93">
<line l="1419" t="733" r="1495" b="778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a&apos;3</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="102">
<line l="1428" t="772" r="1495" b="798"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">oi B</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="94" rightIndent="10" startIndent="9" lineSpacing="25">
<line l="1429" t="838" r="1496" b="878"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o5 ^</formatting></line>
<line l="1420" t="874" r="1451" b="903"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">id</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="106">
<line l="1432" t="1038" r="1506" b="1071"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P -</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="63">
<line l="1389" t="1056" r="1499" b="1107"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.5 S.S</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="7">
<line l="1333" t="1123" r="1500" b="1162"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fh 3   .a</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="18">
<line l="1344" t="1301" r="1413" b="1321"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CO    (D</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1320" t="590" r="1374" b="642"><region><rect l="1320" t="590" r="1374" b="642"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1337" t="591" r="1358" b="616"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">b</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1335" t="619" r="1359" b="638"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">03</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1322" t="714" r="1376" b="762"><region><rect l="1322" t="714" r="1376" b="762"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1338" t="737" r="1359" b="757"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1314" t="838" r="1378" b="942"><region><rect l="1314" t="838" r="1378" b="942"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1339" t="842" r="1360" b="862"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S3</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1339" t="865" r="1361" b="889"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1326" t="1030" r="1382" b="1122"><region><rect l="1326" t="1030" r="1380" b="1096"></rect><rect l="1326" t="1096" r="1382" b="1122"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1342" t="1032" r="1363" b="1057"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">B</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1342" t="1057" r="1363" b="1081"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1342" t="1099" r="1382" b="1117"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O &apos;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1534" t="386" r="1598" b="564"><region><rect l="1534" t="386" r="1598" b="564"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1560" t="429" r="1580" b="466"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">s</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11">
<line l="1560" t="470" r="1581" b="488"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o3</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" startIndent="-11" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="1549" t="491" r="1582" b="511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1-5</formatting></line>
<line l="1560" t="530" r="1588" b="559"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ClT</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1536" t="598" r="1634" b="756"><region><rect l="1536" t="598" r="1634" b="756"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1562" t="600" r="1583" b="621"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&gt;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="9">
<line l="1561" t="644" r="1629" b="668"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cS   C</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1552" t="667" r="1630" b="692"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O  cS</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="1553" t="716" r="1630" b="756"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">SIS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1538" t="768" r="1650" b="1006"><region><rect l="1538" t="768" r="1650" b="1006"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="8">
<line l="1563" t="792" r="1631" b="813"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CU   03</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="25">
<line l="1580" t="871" r="1632" b="899"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.. B</formatting></line></par>
<par startIndent="9" lineSpacing="85">
<line l="1564" t="899" r="1632" b="920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">0)   03</formatting></line>
<line l="1555" t="943" r="1633" b="1003"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1542" t="1002" r="1600" b="1080"><region><rect l="1552" t="1002" r="1598" b="1026"></rect><rect l="1542" t="1026" r="1600" b="1080"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1567" t="1006" r="1587" b="1026"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">*3</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1557" t="1028" r="1589" b="1055"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="10">
<line l="1567" t="1057" r="1588" b="1075"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1544" t="1128" r="1596" b="1248"><region><rect l="1544" t="1128" r="1596" b="1248"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="23">
<line l="1569" t="1133" r="1589" b="1148"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to</formatting></line>
<line l="1569" t="1152" r="1590" b="1171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1569" t="1175" r="1589" b="1207"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1330" t="1400" r="1512" b="1584"><region><rect l="1330" t="1400" r="1512" b="1488"></rect><rect l="1330" t="1488" r="1510" b="1540"></rect><rect l="1330" t="1540" r="1466" b="1550"></rect><rect l="1330" t="1550" r="1376" b="1584"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="121">
<line l="1346" t="1440" r="1505" b="1463"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">03 -ij &lt;£ ,S</formatting></line>
<line l="1349" t="1560" r="1370" b="1580"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">03</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1606" t="1020" r="1658" b="1110"><region><rect l="1606" t="1020" r="1658" b="1110"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="39">
<line l="1611" t="1022" r="1633" b="1044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">50</formatting></line>
<line l="1612" t="1063" r="1634" b="1080"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1546" t="1164" r="1656" b="1498"><region><rect l="1600" t="1164" r="1656" b="1250"></rect><rect l="1546" t="1250" r="1656" b="1450"></rect><rect l="1556" t="1450" r="1656" b="1468"></rect><rect l="1614" t="1468" r="1656" b="1498"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="69" rightIndent="3" lineSpacing="66">
<line l="1614" t="1167" r="1636" b="1184"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1615" t="1232" r="1637" b="1250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CD</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="15">
<line l="1561" t="1316" r="1639" b="1366"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1 §</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1546" t="1401" r="1639" b="1460"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">; s§</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="71" startIndent="-45" lineSpacing="31">
<line l="1572" t="1446" r="1640" b="1470"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a; ^</formatting></line>
<line l="1617" t="1471" r="1640" b="1494"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1326" t="1640" r="1380" b="1764"><region><rect l="1326" t="1640" r="1380" b="1764"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="8" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="28">
<line l="1351" t="1644" r="1372" b="1662"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">en</formatting></line>
<line l="1350" t="1664" r="1371" b="1687"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fi</formatting></line></par>
<par startIndent="9" lineSpacing="32">
<line l="1351" t="1711" r="1372" b="1729"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O</formatting></line>
<line l="1342" t="1721" r="1373" b="1761"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">h3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1390" t="1534" r="1520" b="1682"><region><rect l="1480" t="1534" r="1512" b="1538"></rect><rect l="1436" t="1538" r="1512" b="1556"></rect><rect l="1390" t="1556" r="1512" b="1630"></rect><rect l="1390" t="1630" r="1520" b="1660"></rect><rect l="1390" t="1660" r="1512" b="1682"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="44">
<line l="1439" t="1538" r="1506" b="1561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">B &lt;u</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1395" t="1554" r="1507" b="1590"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a   3 r5&quot;1</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1384" t="1678" r="1430" b="1714"><region><rect l="1384" t="1678" r="1430" b="1714"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1387" t="1681" r="1419" b="1711"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">H</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1474" t="1466" r="1660" b="1736"><region><rect l="1516" t="1466" r="1554" b="1494"></rect><rect l="1516" t="1494" r="1646" b="1538"></rect><rect l="1516" t="1538" r="1658" b="1618"></rect><rect l="1518" t="1618" r="1658" b="1646"></rect><rect l="1528" t="1646" r="1658" b="1666"></rect><rect l="1474" t="1666" r="1660" b="1716"></rect><rect l="1518" t="1716" r="1568" b="1736"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1516" t="1768" r="1570" b="1814"><region><rect l="1516" t="1768" r="1570" b="1792"></rect><rect l="1518" t="1792" r="1570" b="1814"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1304" t="1696" r="1664" b="1960"><region><rect l="1618" t="1696" r="1664" b="1716"></rect><rect l="1574" t="1716" r="1664" b="1776"></rect><rect l="1564" t="1776" r="1664" b="1794"></rect><rect l="1340" t="1794" r="1664" b="1820"></rect><rect l="1304" t="1820" r="1664" b="1898"></rect><rect l="1306" t="1898" r="1618" b="1926"></rect><rect l="1442" t="1926" r="1618" b="1948"></rect><rect l="1576" t="1948" r="1618" b="1960"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1308" t="1824" r="1646" b="1857"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5 53 i± c&amp; -5, rfl     &quot;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1310" t="1884" r="1618" b="1957"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■•&apos;s -isii&apos;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1294" t="1922" r="1382" b="1976"><region><rect l="1294" t="1922" r="1382" b="1958"></rect><rect l="1350" t="1958" r="1382" b="1976"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1300" t="1925" r="1377" b="1953"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mo</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1392" t="1928" r="1484" b="1964"><region><rect l="1392" t="1928" r="1484" b="1964"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1400" t="1928" r="1484" b="1960"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">03  B1</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1520" t="1938" r="1574" b="1966"><region><rect l="1520" t="1938" r="1574" b="1966"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1536" t="1942" r="1574" b="1963"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o3 .</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1254" t="1954" r="1608" b="2166"><region><rect l="1254" t="1954" r="1608" b="2024"></rect><rect l="1254" t="2024" r="1564" b="2116"></rect><rect l="1310" t="2116" r="1564" b="2140"></rect><rect l="1446" t="2140" r="1564" b="2160"></rect><rect l="1446" t="2160" r="1476" b="2166"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1267" t="1972" r="1558" b="2011"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CS    gS    fiH    ^^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1612" t="1910" r="1666" b="2042"><region><rect l="1620" t="1910" r="1666" b="1982"></rect><rect l="1612" t="1982" r="1666" b="2042"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="25">
<line l="1625" t="1913" r="1647" b="1931"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&lt;D</formatting></line>
<line l="1627" t="1935" r="1648" b="1956"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">E</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="1627" t="1951" r="1648" b="1984"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1492" t="2148" r="1528" b="2176"><region><rect l="1492" t="2148" r="1528" b="2176"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1495" t="2152" r="1517" b="2172"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">c3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1212" t="2134" r="1524" b="2326"><region><rect l="1212" t="2134" r="1384" b="2148"></rect><rect l="1212" t="2148" r="1478" b="2208"></rect><rect l="1212" t="2208" r="1524" b="2326"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1215" t="2205" r="1518" b="2232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3 r S&apos;&apos;&quot; 8 •• fl</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1214" t="2344" r="1266" b="2422"><region><rect l="1214" t="2344" r="1266" b="2422"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1338" t="2340" r="1402" b="2418"><region><rect l="1338" t="2340" r="1402" b="2418"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10" startIndent="-10" lineSpacing="25">
<line l="1353" t="2344" r="1385" b="2366"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">T3</formatting></line>
<line l="1363" t="2368" r="1386" b="2391"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">B</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1428" t="2344" r="1494" b="2416"><region><rect l="1428" t="2344" r="1494" b="2416"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="-2" lineSpacing="22">
<line l="1444" t="2346" r="1476" b="2368"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">^3</formatting></line>
<line l="1455" t="2370" r="1477" b="2389"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sh</formatting></line>
<line l="1446" t="2392" r="1478" b="2412"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CO</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1538" t="2126" r="1672" b="2330"><region><rect l="1572" t="2126" r="1672" b="2186"></rect><rect l="1538" t="2186" r="1672" b="2330"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="44">
<line l="1583" t="2130" r="1652" b="2152"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&lt;X&gt;   O</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1539" t="2216" r="1656" b="2274"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">B*£</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="48">
<line l="1587" t="2274" r="1610" b="2293"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">o</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1566" t="2388" r="1628" b="2416"><region><rect l="1566" t="2388" r="1628" b="2416"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1581" t="2389" r="1612" b="2413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1616" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="84" t="146" r="1504" b="2688"><region><rect l="84" t="146" r="1504" b="2688"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="31" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="226" t="164" r="1491" b="208"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A larger school was thought necessary and in 1888 another</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="208" r="1490" b="252"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school was built by John Perkins of Albany. This served the dis¬</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="253" r="1484" b="295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trict till 1916 when the school became overcrowded and an exten-</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="297" r="1054" b="337"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tion was made   making it a two room school.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="26" rightIndent="7" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="222" t="367" r="1483" b="414"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton Point, now the Town of Borden was a part of this</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="411" r="1484" b="460"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school district till 1920 when a two room school was opened</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="455" r="244" b="487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">there.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="28" rightIndent="4" startIndent="87" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="219" t="525" r="1481" b="570"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Since the building of the railroad spur to Borden homes</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="571" r="1487" b="619"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nave been built in the district till in 1953 it became necessary to</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="614" r="1484" b="659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">build a three room school measuring 25 x 90 ft-, located near the</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="659" r="1202" b="700"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">former school on land purchased from John Haslam.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="24" rightIndent="6" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="218" t="730" r="1484" b="773"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The head carpenters were Harry Muttart and Nathan Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="774" r="1485" b="822"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with an additional committee of Ralph MacCaull, Hedley Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="819" r="1485" b="866"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and school trustees, Avalah MacCallum, Harold Muttart, Elmer</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="863" r="883" b="906"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stordy, secretary, Raymond Harvey.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="23" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="217" t="935" r="1484" b="977"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the basement is a community auditorium and kitchen</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="978" r="1485" b="1023"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which have been equipped and furnished by the Women&apos;s In¬</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="1023" r="267" b="1055"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stitute.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" rightIndent="8" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="216" t="1093" r="1483" b="1141"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The former school was bought by the Co-Op Company for a</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1138" r="1482" b="1181"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">general store and moved to the familiar site where the Chas.</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="1181" r="1483" b="1227"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doull &amp; Sons store stood for over half a century. Now it is a</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1227" r="1006" b="1268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">produce warehouse owned by Paul LaVoie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="214" t="1296" r="1481" b="1341"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Through the years there have been many faithful trustees</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="1340" r="1482" b="1383"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and secretaries who attended to the needs of the school. In look¬</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="1384" r="1479" b="1434"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing over the records the secretary for 1895 was John G. Sheriff,</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="1428" r="1480" b="1477"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">then school teacher who lived in Carleton for some years. The</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="1473" r="1477" b="1521"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">running expenses voted for schoo.l at this time was $20. and the</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1518" r="1479" b="1562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">teacher&apos;s supplement $25.00 for the year. John Crockett acted</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1564" r="1479" b="1611"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">as secretary from 1896-1904, W. S. Muttart to 1909, Stephen Mut¬</formatting></line>
<line l="116" t="1608" r="1478" b="1655"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tart 1910, J. C. Gillispie 1916, Hermas Myers 1918, Burpee Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="116" t="1650" r="1476" b="1695"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Micken 1953, Raymond.Harvey to 1959 and Sheldon Nicholson is</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="1695" r="811" b="1739"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the efficient secretary at present.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="12" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="207" t="1766" r="1478" b="1816"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Special mention is made to Burpee MacMicken&apos;s long time</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="1810" r="1479" b="1855"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">faithful service when in the autumn he walked to the homes de¬</formatting></line>
<line l="113" t="1854" r="690" b="1893"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">livering the tax assessment.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="373">
<line l="474" t="1953" r="1085" b="1992"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">TEACHERS OF CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="16" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="203" t="2021" r="1475" b="2068"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">David Leard — First teacher in frame school and was one</formatting></line>
<line l="109" t="2065" r="1473" b="2112"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of two to represent Queens&apos; County in the House of Commons</formatting></line>
<line l="109" t="2110" r="1086" b="2153"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">after the province joined the Dominion in 1873.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="17" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="200" t="2182" r="1474" b="2234"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. Fitzgerald; Mr. Duncan Cameron; Mr. George Muttart;</formatting></line>
<line l="107" t="2226" r="1111" b="2271"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss MacPhail; Miss MacRae; Miss MacQuarrie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="20" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="199" t="2298" r="1471" b="2344"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1876 — Miss Eva Burns of Freetown - Married Charles</formatting></line>
<line l="105" t="2341" r="1471" b="2392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Read ; Miss Annie MacKinnon of DeSable; Miss Currie; Miss Eliza</formatting></line>
<line l="105" t="2386" r="1469" b="2438"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jane MacFarlane - who became the first lady attorney of North</formatting></line>
<line l="103" t="2430" r="803" b="2471"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">America; Miss Emma MacCallum.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="21" startIndent="97" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="198" t="2504" r="1470" b="2555"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1887 — Miss Sadie Ross; Mr. Elias Schurman of Bedeque;</formatting></line>
<line l="101" t="2546" r="1469" b="2601"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Margaret Haslam of Springfield Lot 65; Mr. John Sheriff;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="604">
<line l="705" t="2652" r="843" b="2684"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—19—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1747" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="190" t="88" r="1606" b="2620"><region><rect l="190" t="88" r="1606" b="2620"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="12" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="208" t="94" r="1571" b="128"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Sadie Eobertson - Married Dr. John Lowther and lived in</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="139" r="1571" b="177"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Edmonton; Miss Rebecca Gillispie - Went to Western Canada and</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="184" r="1572" b="222"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">taught school, till her retirement. Died in 1960; Miss Adele Brem-</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="228" r="1565" b="266"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ner from Ch&apos;town; Mr. Wyman Yeo - Married Neenah Muncey</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="273" r="1572" b="310"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and went to Western Canada; Mr. Edwin Tanton - afterwards</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="317" r="1571" b="355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dr. E. T. Tanton of Summerside and married Nancy Muncey; Mr.</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="361" r="1573" b="400"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ernest Strong - Col. E. H. Strong and Barrister living in Sum¬</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="405" r="1573" b="444"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">merside. Deceased in 1961; Miss Louise Durant - Married Lea</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="449" r="1571" b="489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Seaman; Miss Mary MacConnell - Taught part of a term; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="494" r="1573" b="531"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lucretia MacDonald - Went to Western Canada to teach; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="538" r="1576" b="576"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sadie Gorman of South Melville; Miss Katherine MacAusland -</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="582" r="1576" b="620"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Went West to teach and married a Mr. Scott, supervisor of</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="625" r="1576" b="668"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">schools; Miss Patricia Hughes - Married Thomas Noonan of Al¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="670" r="1575" b="713"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bany ; Miss Jennie Gillespie - Married Ernest MacLaren and lives</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="714" r="1575" b="757"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Toronto; Mr. Fred Bell - School Inspector, Merchant and Potato</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="758" r="1575" b="802"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dealer; Mr. Charles Buxton - Killed in First World War; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="802" r="1575" b="844"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Martha Brown of Mayfield - Passed away in 1960; Miss Elsie</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="846" r="1575" b="888"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Brown - Married Herbert Ross, Strathcona, P.E.I.; Miss Bessie</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="891" r="1576" b="933"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell - Now Mrs. H. M. Downing of Summerside; Miss Georgie</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="935" r="1576" b="976"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lord - Went west and married Harold Tanner, a school Principal</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="980" r="1579" b="1024"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Edmonton; Miss Celia Noonan - Married Stephen Hughes. De¬</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1033" r="353" b="1065"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ceased.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="306" t="1096" r="1578" b="1135"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1916 — Miss Louise Arnett — First Principal in two room</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1138" r="1578" b="1180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school. Led her class in B.A. degree at Mt. Allison University</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1183" r="1578" b="1227"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and has been teaching in East Northfield; Miss Grace Kirn -</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1227" r="1581" b="1272"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">First assistant teacher, married Evan Wright; Miss Annie Mathe-</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1271" r="1581" b="1315"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son - Now retired and lives at Travellers&apos; Rest; Miss Laura Mut-</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1316" r="1579" b="1360"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tart - Passed Grade 10 winning a Provincial Scholarship; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1360" r="1582" b="1406"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Celia Howatt - Assistant teacher five (5) years. Married Arthur</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1404" r="1582" b="1455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jay; Miss Adele Mulligan; Miss Clara Gallant; Miss Priscilla Car¬</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1449" r="1581" b="1494"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ruthers - Married Edward MacFadyen; Miss Bertha McCabe; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1493" r="1579" b="1538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Helen McCarville - Now lives in Carleton; Mr. Russel Leard - Mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1538" r="1575" b="1585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Muriel Lowther and is in Income Tax Office Ch&apos;town; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1583" r="1576" b="1633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doris Muncey-Is married to Reginald Haslam, Springfield; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1628" r="1578" b="1676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah Linkletter-Is married to Samuel Oldershaw, Mass.; Miss Sop¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1673" r="1578" b="1720"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">hia Henderson-Married Charles Green of Bedeque; Miss Bessie</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1719" r="1584" b="1767"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stevenson - Married Douglas Bell and lives in Ottawa; Miss Jean</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1763" r="1581" b="1811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Webster - Married Lome Carruthers of Augustine Cove; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1808" r="1586" b="1855"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miriam Proffitt - Is married to William Forbes, Summerside;</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1853" r="1584" b="1901"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Elva Bernard - Is married to Arthur Henry, Kensington;</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1897" r="1586" b="1947"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Helen Campbell - Is married to C.N.R. conductor Julian Her¬</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1942" r="1586" b="1995"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ring ; Miss Gladys Murphy - Is married to Aiden Mulligan of New¬</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="1987" r="1585" b="2035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton • Mr. Arnold Henderson - Is farming and lives in Bedeque.</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2030" r="1586" b="2080"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Married to Ruth Carruthers; Miss Bertha Carruthers - Is married</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2075" r="1587" b="2125"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Herbert Matthews, Alberton; Miss Verna Weeks - Is married</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2119" r="1586" b="2173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Sterling Gillespie, living in Souris; Miss Laura Muttart - Is</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2164" r="1588" b="2214"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married to John Haslam; Miss Mary Muttart - Is married to Hed-</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2208" r="1581" b="2265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ley Lowther; Mr. Elmer Roberts - Was principal for five (5)</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2253" r="1587" b="2310"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years. Deceased; Miss Dorothy Muttart - Is married to Lloyd</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2297" r="1588" b="2354"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Waugh Wilmot, P.E.I.; Miss Dorothy MacDonald - Is married</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2342" r="1589" b="2394"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Kenneth Muttart, live in Searletown; Miss Marj one MacCal-</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2387" r="1589" b="2439"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lum - Is married to George Gay and lives in Montreal; Miss Mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2432" r="1588" b="2490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">garet Woolner - Trained for a nurse and married a Doctor; Mr.</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2476" r="1591" b="2532"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gordon Gillespie - Comptroller at Canadair Co. Ltd., Montreal;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="626">
<line l="829" t="2584" r="969" b="2615"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—20—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1633" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="130" t="128" r="1536" b="1090"><region><rect l="130" t="128" r="1536" b="1090"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="161" t="145" r="1519" b="197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Elizabeth MacKay - Married Robert Carruthers lives in</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="192" r="1521" b="242"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kensington; Miss Miriam MacDonald - Married Stuart Jones of</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="235" r="1518" b="290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Toronto; Miss Doris Gillespie - Married Hazen Mac Williams; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="279" r="1519" b="336"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frances Brennan - Married James Dorsey, lives in Charlottetown;</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="325" r="1517" b="378"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Ruth Bam - Married Ellsworth Newsome, deceased; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="367" r="1506" b="422"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jame Thomas - Married to Edwin Crossman, Cape Traverse; Mr</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="412" r="1517" b="462"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Raymond MacTavish of Bedeque; Miss Louise Gillis - Trained</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="456" r="1516" b="510"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for a nurse; Miss Mae McCarville - Is married to Isley Crooks</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="502" r="1503" b="555"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and lives in Summerside; Mr. Calvin MacCaull of Ellerslie; Mrs</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="545" r="1517" b="596"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Albert MacDonald of Cape Traverse; Miss Georgie Matheson -</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="589" r="942" b="632"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Now retired, lives in Travellers&apos; Rest.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="7" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="247" t="690" r="1514" b="740"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1954 — Mrs. Ralph Connelly - First teacher in present school;</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="732" r="1514" b="784"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Marion Cairns - First primary teacher in present school;</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="776" r="1514" b="825"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Jean Curley of Clermont; Mrs. T. B. Gillespie - The former</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="821" r="1513" b="873"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mamie Lefurgey of North Bedeque; Mrs. Gordon MacDonald;</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="865" r="1511" b="915"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Miss Frances Craig - Is married to Cook Howatt of Carleton; Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="910" r="1511" b="960"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Elmer Gamble, Tryon; Miss Yvonne Gauthier of Freetown; Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="954" r="1511" b="999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alberta Todd of Rose Valley; Mrs. Hazen MacWilliams - The form¬</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="1001" r="1511" b="1050"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er Doris Gillespie; Mrs. Ellsworth Bassett, Albany; Mrs. Layton</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="1044" r="488" b="1085"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Noonan, Albany.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="512" t="1450" r="938" b="1604"><region><rect l="512" t="1450" r="938" b="1604"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1">
<line l="513" t="1489" r="912" b="1566"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I m       li</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="512" t="1553" r="753" b="1597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">m ^ m ■ .ii.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="1080" t="1402" r="1510" b="1626"><region><rect l="1080" t="1402" r="1510" b="1626"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="136" t="1634" r="802" b="1888"><region><rect l="136" t="1634" r="802" b="1888"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="814" t="1646" r="1522" b="1760"><region><rect l="814" t="1646" r="1522" b="1760"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="821" t="1648" r="1506" b="1721"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">^M^&apos;iAimmmmmm&apos;iw&lt;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1180" t="1816" r="1402" b="1844"><region><rect l="1180" t="1816" r="1402" b="1844"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1199" t="1820" r="1372" b="1836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&gt;:&quot;&apos;&apos;    &quot;        &apos;      &apos;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="112" t="2000" r="1514" b="2668"><region><rect l="112" t="2000" r="1514" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="51">
<line l="182" t="2020" r="1452" b="2072"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OFFICIAL OPENING OF NEW SCHOOL AT CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="302">
<line l="433" t="2103" r="1197" b="2151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Guardian, Friday, May 14, 1954</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="97" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="228" t="2181" r="1497" b="2233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In a program beginning at 8 p.m. this evening, local residents</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="2226" r="1498" b="2281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(and officials of the Provincial Government and Department of</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="2270" r="1497" b="2323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">education will attend the official opening of the new school at</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="2315" r="312" b="2350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="225" t="2388" r="1496" b="2442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Equipped with air-conditioning and oil heating, this modern</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="2432" r="1495" b="2489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school has three well-lighted classrooms on the main floor, vvhile</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="2477" r="1495" b="2529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the basement contains a community auditorium which extends</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="2522" r="759" b="2570"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the full length of the building.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="608">
<line l="739" t="2631" r="878" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—21—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1780" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="214" t="124" r="1618" b="2668"><region><rect l="214" t="124" r="1618" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="14" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="323" t="133" r="1590" b="177"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Work on the project began on November 9, 1953- The base¬</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="178" r="1589" b="222"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ment was dug in two days, and when the forms were completed</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="227" r="977" b="266"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the cement was poured in 18 hours.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="13" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="322" t="277" r="1589" b="319"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">From 12 to 14 men, for the most part local workmen, were</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="322" r="1588" b="365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">employed under the direction of Mr. Harry Muttart, of Carleton,</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="367" r="1591" b="408"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who was foreman of the job and chairman of the building com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="419" r="370" b="451"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mittee.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="12" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="323" t="473" r="1592" b="514"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Other members on the building committee were Ralph Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="523" r="763" b="562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Caull and Hedley Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="14" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="322" t="571" r="1590" b="614"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This building, measuring 25 x 90 feet, is located near the</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="616" r="1590" b="655"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">former school on somewhat more than an acre of land which was</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="665" r="928" b="706"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">purchased from Mr. John Haslam.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="13" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="323" t="715" r="1590" b="758"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The school part of the building is approached by cement steps</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="758" r="1591" b="803"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">leading to a double door which opens into the main entry. Here</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="804" r="1591" b="844"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is located hat racks and coat hangers for the children of the two</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="856" r="501" b="893"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">larger rooms.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="12" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="324" t="901" r="1591" b="942"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In a recess on one side of the entry is a drinking fountain and</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="946" r="1592" b="991"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">,on this site is a door leading to the basement. On the other side</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="994" r="1111" b="1035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the main entry is the boys wash-room.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="12" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="322" t="1043" r="1592" b="1088"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The building proper measures 25 x 90, and the room on each</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1090" r="1591" b="1132"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">end of the building each measures 25 x 80, while the center room,</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1134" r="1592" b="1178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which is designed for the youngest grades, has its own cloak-room</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1184" r="733" b="1223"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">facilities, and is 31 x 19-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="10" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="322" t="1231" r="1593" b="1276"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The ceilings throughout the school are 11 feet in height, with</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1276" r="1592" b="1317"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the first four feet of wall finished in masonite, the next four feet</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1321" r="1594" b="1365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Lakumite, followed by two feet of Donnacona board painted</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1368" r="1299" b="1412"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">white, and the remaining foot painted pink or green.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="9" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="324" t="1437" r="1595" b="1481"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The ceiling is finished in sixteen inch squares of Donnacona</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1481" r="1595" b="1527"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">board painted white, and the floors are laid with heavy red and</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1534" r="445" b="1566"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">white ties.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="8" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="324" t="1579" r="1596" b="1624"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Natural light is provided through spacious windows, which</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1628" r="1119" b="1670"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for the most part, are the glass block type.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="324" t="1694" r="1598" b="1740"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Four lighting fixtures in each classroom and three in the cor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1741" r="1484" b="1784"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ridor also insure adequate electric lighting for any occasion.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="6" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="325" t="1811" r="1598" b="1851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Four inches of insulation cover the walls and ceiling through¬</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1855" r="1596" b="1900"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">out the building. In each class room a green colored &quot;black-board&quot;</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="1906" r="958" b="1942"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">extends the full width of the room.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="324" t="1954" r="1598" b="1999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The community auditorium extending the full length of the</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1999" r="1597" b="2046"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">building is located in the basement. Entry to this auditorium is</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="2045" r="1599" b="2091"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ma&apos;de by single doors in the west end of the building and in the</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="2096" r="806" b="2131"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">main entrance at the front.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="326" t="2143" r="1601" b="2188"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Behind the stage at the east end of the auditorium is a kit¬</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="2189" r="1600" b="2236"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">chen, and in front of the stage the seating facilities occupies an</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="2234" r="1601" b="2280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">area 25 x 55, extending in a gradual slant towards the stage at</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="2285" r="810" b="2321"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the back of the auditorium.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="4" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="329" t="2324" r="1600" b="2365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the basement is the air conditioning and heating unit, and</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="2372" r="1132" b="2415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the electric water pump and pressure tank.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="327" t="2439" r="1603" b="2487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It is expected that Hon- A. W. Matheson, Premier of the</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="2485" r="1602" b="2532"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Province; L. W. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Education; and C. B.</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="2530" r="1604" b="2579"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jelly, district supervisor, will be among those present for the of-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="614">
<line l="843" t="2632" r="983" b="2664"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—22—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1621" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="116" t="126" r="1518" b="1146"><region><rect l="116" t="126" r="1518" b="1146"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="15" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="149" t="139" r="1502" b="196"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ficial opening this evening of this modern school building which</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="184" r="1124" b="235"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is reported to have cost approximately $23,000.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="152" t="255" r="1502" b="307"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">., °&quot;e of the hi&amp;hli&amp;hts of a brief program in connection with</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="301" r="1502" b="352"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the official opening will be the presentation of an address on the</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="343" r="1502" b="396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">history of Carleton school district by Mr. Albert Muttart, the dis¬</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="389" r="758" b="428"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trict s oldest lifetime resident.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="239" t="459" r="1502" b="512"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On completion of the ceremonies the women of the district</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="503" r="655" b="541"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">will serve a buffet lunch.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="8" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="235" t="573" r="1487" b="625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Members of the present school board are A. A. MacCallum</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="617" r="1500" b="672"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Harold Muttart, Elmer Stordy, and Eaymond Harvey is the sec¬</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="663" r="277" b="700"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">retary.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="6" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="233" t="741" r="1497" b="795"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The two present teachers are Mrs. Ralph Connelly and Miss</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="786" r="439" b="821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion Cairns.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="472">
<line l="606" t="887" r="1020" b="927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MUSIC TEACHERS</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="6" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="37">
<line l="226" t="951" r="1496" b="1005"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. Charles Macintosh; Prof. Wm. Jones; Mrs. Stanley New¬</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="995" r="648" b="1040"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">man; Mrs. Walter Craig.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="184">
<line l="318" t="1092" r="1304" b="1141"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OVER NIGHT COTTAGES AND TEA ROOM</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="180" t="1180" r="1422" b="1856"><region><rect l="180" t="1180" r="1422" b="1856"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="88" t="1860" r="1496" b="2570"><region><rect l="88" t="1860" r="1496" b="2570"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="210" t="1866" r="1484" b="1924"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">About the first overnight cottages and tea room on the Is¬</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="1910" r="1481" b="1975"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land were erected in 1932 by J. MacCurdy Bell and his wife, on</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="1957" r="1118" b="2006"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land purchased from Louis Muttart of Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="209" t="2026" r="1478" b="2090"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">^Jf* summer cottage at Carleton beach was built in the</formatting></line>
<line l="116" t="2073" r="1480" b="2136"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">year 1932 by Nathan Bell on his own land. In 1938 MacCurdy</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="2116" r="1477" b="2175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell and his wife decided to close the overnight cottages and tea</formatting></line>
<line l="113" t="2164" r="1479" b="2220"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">room and move them to the beach where they operated them for</formatting></line>
<line l="112" t="2215" r="1476" b="2270"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">L S neaIS aS *ummer cottages known as the Cliff Cottages.</formatting></line>
<line l="111" t="2256" r="1476" b="2309"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr Bell after a few years sold one of the cottages to Fred Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="110" t="2297" r="1475" b="2354"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and one to J. P. Crockett. Nathan Bell in a few years time built</formatting></line>
<line l="109" t="2342" r="1460" b="2398"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the second one, also bought Fred Bells and J. P. Crocketts cott</formatting></line>
<line l="109" t="2389" r="1474" b="2443"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">age and operated them for a number of years and then sold three</formatting></line>
<line l="108" t="2432" r="1474" b="2488"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of them to Mrs. Bruce Davison. The next cottages on the Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="108" t="2480" r="1474" b="2533"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">property were Capt. Wylie Irving, Capt. Herbert MacKenzie and</formatting></line>
<line l="108" t="2525" r="500" b="2566"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dr. John Downing.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="698" t="2624" r="820" b="2668"><region><rect l="698" t="2624" r="820" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="713" t="2631" r="819" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—23-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1793" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="214" t="134" r="1624" b="2676"><region><rect l="214" t="134" r="1624" b="2676"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="10" startIndent="89" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="324" t="144" r="1594" b="183"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Also on Carleton beach on land purchased from the late J. C.</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="188" r="1597" b="227"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gillispie by A. K. Lord are a number of cottages, name of owners</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="233" r="1600" b="272"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">are as follows: A. K. Lord, W. W. Lord, Hillard Gordon and</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="277" r="566" b="316"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lome Campbell.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="170">
<line l="403" t="372" r="1428" b="406"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">TRAILER COURT AND CAMPING  GROUNDS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="9" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="328" t="443" r="1600" b="482"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1961 Mr. A. K. Lord purchased a plot of land on Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="487" r="1601" b="527"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">beach from Hazen Lowther and opened a Trailer Court and</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="532" r="606" b="571"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Camping grounds.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="508">
<line l="741" t="611" r="1090" b="644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">SCHOOL FAIRS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="9" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="327" t="679" r="1601" b="719"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Around 1920 for Carleton and surrounding districts. One</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="726" r="940" b="765"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the Judges was Mr. Wm. Read.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="437">
<line l="670" t="803" r="1161" b="838"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LUMBER MILL 1850&apos;S</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="328" t="871" r="1603" b="912"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John D. Muttart built mill on land now owned by John Has-</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="917" r="1602" b="958"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lam later sold to Soloman Leard, sold to Alex Robblee sold to</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="961" r="1602" b="1003"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James T. Cameron sold to George Bryon and moved it to Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1012" r="421" b="1043"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Traverse.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="327" t="1077" r="1603" b="1120"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John &quot;King&quot; Mclnnis also owned a lumber mill on land now</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1126" r="769" b="1165"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by James Stewart.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="507">
<line l="740" t="1193" r="1092" b="1228"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">UNDERTAKING</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="327" t="1262" r="1603" b="1306"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">An early undertaking, business and also repair shop was oper¬</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1306" r="1514" b="1351"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ated by Mr. Benjamin Cameron in the late eighteen hundred.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="465">
<line l="698" t="1378" r="1134" b="1413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE POST OFFICE</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="5" startIndent="87" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="328" t="1445" r="1602" b="1491"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. Brow was the first postmaster in the 1870&apos;s Charles Doull</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="1491" r="1601" b="1539"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(Doull&apos;s Store) ; George Doull; Russell MacDonald; Mrs. Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1537" r="1605" b="1584"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell; Mrs. Stanley Howatt; Mr. Raymond Harvey now present</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1601" r="367" b="1623"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owner.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="525">
<line l="758" t="1655" r="1081" b="1690"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">SHOEMAKERS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="4" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="329" t="1722" r="1604" b="1764"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. Charles Doull made shoes and also repaired at Carle¬</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1766" r="1606" b="1815"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton Corner; Kenneth Holmes; Charles Doull (nephew) ; John</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1823" r="344" b="1857"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Peak.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="554">
<line l="787" t="1887" r="1052" b="1922"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE RINKS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="328" t="1954" r="1607" b="2003"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Two open air rinks were built at Carleton Siding during the</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="2008" r="775" b="2051"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years of 1920, 21 and 22.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="328" t="2071" r="1608" b="2120"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Many fine games of hockey being played. Among the play¬</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="2116" r="1605" b="2164"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ers were: Capt. John Read, Eddie MacWilliams, Philip Howatt,</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="2161" r="1609" b="2209"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Warren Lord, Harry Muttart, Norman Campbell, Dr. Everett</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="2213" r="1012" b="2250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell and Jack Gaudet as Goal Keeper.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="329" t="2276" r="1610" b="2326"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Amongst the Fancy skaters of the day were Mr. Albert Mut¬</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="2324" r="1359" b="2370"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tart who cut many fine figures while in his seventies-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="534" lineSpacing="72">
<line l="767" t="2397" r="1072" b="2433"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE  STORES</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" rightIndent="118" lineSpacing="72">
<line l="331" t="2465" r="1492" b="2509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">First store Mr. Brow Grocery Store at Muncy&apos;s Corner.</formatting></line>
<line l="330" t="2541" r="1172" b="2580"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald Morrison store at Doull&apos;s Corner.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="614">
<line l="847" t="2640" r="986" b="2672"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—24—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1636" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="136" t="122" r="1534" b="728"><region><rect l="136" t="122" r="1534" b="648"></rect><rect l="242" t="648" r="1534" b="728"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="100">
<line l="254" t="136" r="537" b="172"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles Doull.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="252" t="206" r="1518" b="262"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George and Harry Doull now owned by Mrs. Harry Doull</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="252" r="1124" b="297"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">operated by daughter, Mrs. Louis MacDonald.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" rightIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="252" t="321" r="1515" b="376"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Farmers Co-Op managed by Herbert Lord and son, Warren</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="366" r="852" b="408"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at Carleton Siding.   Burned 1923.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="37">
<line l="249" t="437" r="1517" b="489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fred Bell erected a store in 1926 sold to Charles Llewelvn</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="481" r="764" b="520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">m 1945 store burned in 1947.</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="4" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="36">
<line l="250" t="551" r="1514" b="604"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1948 the site was sold to Mr. Ralph MacCaull. built a gen¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="596" r="525" b="632"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">eral store in 1958.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="93">
<line l="247" t="666" r="1516" b="722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sold it to Mr. Raymond Harvey in 1959 who is now present</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="134" t="712" r="276" b="746"><region><rect l="134" t="712" r="276" b="746"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="152" t="719" r="273" b="742"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owner</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="100" t="772" r="1528" b="2664"><region><rect l="100" t="772" r="1528" b="2664"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="126">
<line l="245" t="780" r="1514" b="831"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Co-Operative store at Doull&apos;s Corner managers were as fol-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="30" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="28">
<line l="149" t="823" r="1513" b="880"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">l°,WS;,G?orge Watton&gt; David Murphy, Gordon MacDonald and</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="867" r="430" b="903"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. MacLean.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="515">
<line l="634" t="969" r="1020" b="1007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">WAR VETERANS</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="121">
<line l="240" t="1034" r="891" b="1081"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Boer War — Singleton Muncey.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="26" rightIndent="3" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="242" t="1105" r="1511" b="1157"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1914-1918 — Singleton Muncey, Alfred Bynon, Thomas Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="1148" r="1495" b="1202"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Micken, Joseph Trenholm, Ernest Waddell, Maurice Waddell   TJr</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1191" r="1019" b="1239"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ban Waddell, Fred Bell, Chester Ferguson.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="24" rightIndent="5" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="148" t="1236" r="1509" b="1291"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1938 — Deane Bell, Stanley Howatt, Ernest Deegan, Gordon Gil¬</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1280" r="1509" b="1337"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lespie, James Heffel, Johnny MacDonald, Wallace Muttart, Har¬</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="1324" r="1506" b="1381"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">old Bell Ralph Noonan, Herbert Stewart, Ralph Francis James</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1367" r="1506" b="1424"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Smith, Ernest Smith, Wendall MacWilliams, Richard Carver John</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1412" r="1155" b="1461"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Quigley, Vernon Gallant, Lt. Aletha Carruthers.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="206">
<line l="325" t="1494" r="1317" b="1544"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">RETURNED MEN SETTLED IN CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="15" rightIndent="9" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="139" t="1563" r="1505" b="1624"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">c+ Alb^ Craswell, Lloyd MacWilliams, Erie Thomson, Elmer</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1608" r="1503" b="1666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">btordy, Keith Stordy, Albert Morrison, Eldon Burke, Reginald</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="1651" r="1501" b="1712"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">O Connor, Frank Larkin, Leo Perry, Lawson Tremore, Randolph</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="1696" r="1499" b="1752"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stevenson, Jack Darrach, William Cohoon, Calvin Howatt Her¬</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="1741" r="1488" b="1796"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bert Cooper, Ivan Somers, Sheldon Nicholson, Donald Sutherland</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="1788" r="1290" b="1838"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald MacDonald, Kenneth Coughlin, Edgar Williams.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="389">
<line l="508" t="1871" r="1119" b="1913"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MEN IN REGULAR ARMY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="16" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="221" t="1934" r="1498" b="1995"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert Campbell Charles Doull, Austin McLellan, John</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="1979" r="1495" b="2042"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OConnell Ernest Sutherland, Henderson Harvey, Stanley Rogers,</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="2024" r="789" b="2068"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Quigley, Crawford LaVoie.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="456">
<line l="575" t="2110" r="1041" b="2150"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CONCERT ENJOYED</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" rightIndent="21" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="124" t="2175" r="1493" b="2235"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mu   T*?e ne,^ hal1 at Cape Traverse was packed to the doors on</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="2219" r="1492" b="2276"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thursday, May 8th, 1919 to welcome home the returned heroes</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="2267" r="1480" b="2320"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from Cape Traverse, Carleton and Augustine Cove.    Mrs   T   B</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="2311" r="1487" b="2367"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gillespie was chairman and after a short and appropriate remarks</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="2358" r="1208" b="2410"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">invited the following returned men to the platform:</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="23" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="119" t="2427" r="1491" b="2491"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">t?   /* E&quot;,x?1&apos;v°nne^&apos; Alfred Bynon&apos; Frank Deegan,  Frank Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="2473" r="1476" b="2531"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Farlane, William Campbell, John Mulligan, Parmenus Ferguson</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="2518" r="1026" b="2565"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George Hennessey and Thomas MacMicken.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="608">
<line l="727" t="2625" r="867" b="2659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—25—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1788" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="212" t="128" r="1618" b="2672"><region><rect l="212" t="128" r="1614" b="1032"></rect><rect l="714" t="1032" r="1614" b="1748"></rect><rect l="212" t="1748" r="1614" b="1762"></rect><rect l="212" t="1762" r="1168" b="1886"></rect><rect l="212" t="1886" r="1618" b="2672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="8" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="322" t="138" r="1593" b="179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On platform also were: Rev. Jas. MacDougall, Rev. J. J. Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="183" r="1413" b="224"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald, Rev. A. J. Mclntyre and Hon. W. M. Lea, M.L.A.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="9" startIndent="89" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="317" t="236" r="1590" b="275"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The audience stood while the Dead March was very impres¬</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="281" r="1591" b="322"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sively rendered by Mrs. Blanche Harper as a tribute to the brave</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="326" r="1592" b="366"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who shall ne&apos;er return, namely Charlie Buxton, Ken Bell, Albert</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="370" r="1503" b="411"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Campbell, and Pat Deighan, who made the supreme sacrifice.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="322" t="422" r="1594" b="464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The following program was carried out. Address Rev. J.</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="468" r="1596" b="509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacDougall chorus Welcome home, Address Rev. J. J. MacDon-</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="512" r="1593" b="553"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ald, Presentation of signet rings. Address Rev. A. J. Mclntyre,</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="555" r="1594" b="597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Recitation Helen Campbell. Address W. M. Lea; Selection by</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="600" r="1590" b="642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">quartette. - Address by Dr. W-H. Dougherty. Recitation by James</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="644" r="1593" b="685"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell. Address Gordon Dawson. Selection by quartette, recitation</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="688" r="1594" b="732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by Dorthy Gregson. Chorus. Red, White and Blue J. O&apos;Connor and</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="733" r="1595" b="776"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Geo. Hennessey, replied on behalf of the boys, thanking the peo¬</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="777" r="1594" b="822"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ple for their magnificent reception and welcome extended to them</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="820" r="1594" b="863"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on their arrival home. Lunch was served by the Red Cross and</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="866" r="1433" b="909"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the National Anthem brought the proceedings to a close.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="8" startIndent="115" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="342" t="918" r="1593" b="952"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In connection with World War 2 Veterans the following letters will</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="960" r="477" b="987"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">be of interest.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="509" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="735" t="996" r="1596" b="1028"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Air Vice Marshal                   CM.  McEwen,  C.B.,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1159">
<line l="1385" t="1030" r="1596" b="1063"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">M.C., D.F.C.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="509" rightIndent="101" startIndent="453" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="1188" t="1092" r="1500" b="1123"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">21st   March,   1945</formatting></line>
<line l="735" t="1129" r="1097" b="1161"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dear  P/O   Gillespie:</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="508" rightIndent="5" startIndent="75" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="810" t="1159" r="1596" b="1197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I was gratified to receive information that</formatting></line>
<line l="735" t="1193" r="1596" b="1232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">His Majesty the King has been pleased to confer</formatting></line>
<line l="734" t="1229" r="1501" b="1268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">upon  you  the  Distinguished   Flying  Cross.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="507" rightIndent="4" startIndent="75" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="810" t="1288" r="1596" b="1326"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Please accept my heartiest congratulations</formatting></line>
<line l="735" t="1323" r="1596" b="1359"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on this award. Your skill as an Air Bomber,</formatting></line>
<line l="733" t="1356" r="1597" b="1396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">your determination and devotion to duty, are of</formatting></line>
<line l="734" t="1398" r="1052" b="1431"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the highest order.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="509" rightIndent="4" startIndent="78" lineSpacing="39">
<line l="813" t="1451" r="1597" b="1490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">My best wishes and all good luck for the</formatting></line>
<line l="735" t="1494" r="850" b="1520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">future.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="813">
<line l="1039" t="1523" r="1326" b="1553"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Yours   sincerely,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="814">
<line l="1040" t="1580" r="1459" b="1614"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">C.  M.  McEwen, A.V.M.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="511" rightIndent="7" lineSpacing="34">
<line l="737" t="1639" r="1594" b="1679"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Flying   Officer   G.C.    Gillespie    DFC    (J.27402)</formatting></line>
<line l="737" t="1677" r="1304" b="1712"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">No. 419   (R.  C.  A. F.)Squadron</formatting></line>
<line l="737" t="1710" r="1433" b="1744"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MIDDLETON   ST.  GEORGE,  Durham.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2">
<line l="228" t="1772" r="1137" b="1809"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MINISTER OF NATIONAL DEFENCE FOR AIR</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="229" t="1821" r="733" b="1854"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Gillespie,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="229" t="1860" r="382" b="1890"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="229" t="1892" r="631" b="1921"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Prince  Edward  Island.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="4" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="230" t="1934" r="747" b="1967"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dear Mr. and Mrs. Gillespie:</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="116" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="344" t="1969" r="1599" b="2011"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I am writing to say that all ranks of the Royal Canadian Air Force</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="2004" r="1599" b="2047"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">join me in warmly congratulating you and the members of your family on</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="2038" r="1601" b="2076"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the honour and distinction which have come to your son, Flying Officer</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="2073" r="1601" b="2115"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gordon Cambell Gillespie DFC, through the award of the Distinguished Fly¬</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="2109" r="1601" b="2151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing Cross for great gallantry in the performance of his duty while serving</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="2146" r="1249" b="2185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with No. 419 Squadron of the Royal Canadian Air Force.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="118" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="344" t="2187" r="1464" b="2223"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The citation on which this award was made reads as follows:</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="119" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="611" t="2230" r="1526" b="2267"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;This   officer  has   completed  numerous  operations</formatting></line>
<line l="611" t="2265" r="1507" b="2305"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">against the enemy in the course of which he has</formatting></line>
<line l="611" t="2300" r="1378" b="2339"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">invariably  displayed  the  utmost  fortitude,</formatting></line>
<line l="610" t="2337" r="1171" b="2374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">courage and devotion to duty.&quot;</formatting></line>
<line l="345" t="2377" r="1601" b="2420"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The personnel of the Force are proud of your son&apos;s fine Service record.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="535" rightIndent="291" lineSpacing="37">
<line l="762" t="2439" r="1310" b="2476"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">With kindest personal regards</formatting></line>
<line l="761" t="2478" r="1047" b="2510"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Yours sincerely,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="502" rightIndent="52" startIndent="35" lineSpacing="33">
<line l="763" t="2539" r="992" b="2568"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robin Grisor</formatting></line>
<line l="728" t="2568" r="1549" b="2608"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Acting Minister of National Defence for Air</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="705">
<line l="931" t="2634" r="977" b="2667"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">26</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="230" t="1058" r="678" b="1722"><region><rect l="230" t="1058" r="678" b="1722"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1242" t="1808" r="1604" b="1884"><region><rect l="1242" t="1808" r="1604" b="1884"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="35">
<line l="1257" t="1813" r="1428" b="1841"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OTTAWA</formatting></line>
<line l="1258" t="1847" r="1588" b="1880"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">February  22,  1945</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1625" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="114" t="190" r="382" b="856"><region><rect l="114" t="190" r="382" b="856"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="131" t="198" r="206" b="230"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bell</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="243" r="240" b="275"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Black</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="132" t="288" r="271" b="321"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Brow .</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="131" t="332" r="307" b="364"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cameron</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="376" r="311" b="415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Campbell</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="131" t="421" r="348" b="453"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carruthers</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="465" r="288" b="497"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Connick</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="131" t="510" r="301" b="542"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Crockett</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="554" r="233" b="585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doull</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="598" r="298" b="637"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gillespie</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="643" r="254" b="680"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irving</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="686" r="247" b="718"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leard</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="731" r="349" b="763"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacDonald</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="129" t="775" r="367" b="807"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacFarland</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="130" t="820" r="310" b="852"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Maclnnis</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="540" t="122" r="1062" b="770"><region><rect l="540" t="122" r="1062" b="770"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="555" t="130" r="1041" b="167"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ORIGINAL SETTLERS</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="259" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="814" t="204" r="1017" b="237"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacLellan</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="261" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="816" t="248" r="992" b="281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacLeod</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="258" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="813" t="292" r="1035" b="325"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacMicken</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="257" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="812" t="337" r="1045" b="374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacQuarrie</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="380" r="962" b="413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Manson</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="257" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="812" t="424" r="989" b="457"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Morrison</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="469" r="943" b="507"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muncy</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="257" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="812" t="512" r="969" b="549"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="557" r="933" b="595"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Myers</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="601" r="965" b="633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Newson</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="645" r="907" b="677"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Peak</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="689" r="965" b="722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eobblee</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="256" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="811" t="734" r="992" b="766"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robinson</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="502" t="914" r="1060" b="960"><region><rect l="502" t="914" r="1060" b="960"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="517" t="922" r="1042" b="956"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">HOMES OF CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="90" t="986" r="824" b="2552"><region><rect l="90" t="986" r="824" b="2552"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="294" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="149" t="993" r="530" b="1032"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1.—Wendall Myers</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="6" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="147" t="1037" r="818" b="1077"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2.—Heber Myers                      49.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="211" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="147" t="1083" r="613" b="1116"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3.—Mrs. John Stewart</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="145" t="1125" r="823" b="1161"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">4.—Albert Stewart                  50.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="146" t="1169" r="824" b="1206"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5.—James O&apos;Connell                51.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="145" t="1215" r="823" b="1250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">6.—Herbert Stewart                52.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="145" t="1259" r="823" b="1295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">7.—Thomas MacMicken           53.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="143" t="1304" r="823" b="1344"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">8.—Lloyd MacWilliams            54.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="143" t="1348" r="823" b="1388"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">9.—Roy McCarville                  55.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="8" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="120" t="1393" r="816" b="1427"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">10.—William Noonan                 56.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="119" t="1438" r="823" b="1471"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">11.—Leo Noonan                       57.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="119" t="1482" r="823" b="1515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">12.—James MacKenzie              58.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="117" t="1527" r="823" b="1560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">13.—Frank Bell                         59.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="118" t="1572" r="823" b="1604"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">14.—James Stewart                   60.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="116" t="1616" r="823" b="1655"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">15.—Arnold Murray                  61.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="117" t="1661" r="823" b="1695"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">16.—John Haslam &amp; Son          62.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="116" t="1705" r="823" b="1738"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">17.—Donald Sutherland             63.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="115" t="1749" r="823" b="1788"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">18.—Hedley Lowther                 64.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="116" t="1794" r="823" b="1833"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">19.—Hazen Gillespie                  65.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="216" t="1838" r="823" b="1876"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wayne Hpwatt                   66.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="112" t="1882" r="823" b="1922"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">20.—Mrs. Walter Paynter         35.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="112" t="1927" r="823" b="1965"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">21.—Reigh Paynter                   36.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="111" t="1971" r="823" b="2012"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">22.—Paul LaVoie&apos;s Shop           37.-</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="359" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="111" t="2015" r="465" b="2049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">23.—Paul LaVoie</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="4" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="110" t="2060" r="823" b="2100"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">24.—Charles Paynter                38.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="109" t="2105" r="823" b="2140"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">25.—Ivan Somers                      39.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="108" t="2150" r="823" b="2185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">26.—Sheldon Nicholson             40.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="108" t="2195" r="823" b="2229"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">27.—William Chaisson               41.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="109" t="2240" r="823" b="2279"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">28.—Aneas Murphy                   42.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="108" t="2284" r="823" b="2324"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">29.—Leo Perry                          43.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="107" t="2329" r="823" b="2369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">30.—William Alyward               44.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="107" t="2374" r="823" b="2413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">31.—Alfred Paynter                  45.-</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="106" t="2418" r="823" b="2453"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">32.—Lawson Tremere               46.-</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="106" t="2463" r="823" b="2503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">33.—Elmer Stordy                     47.-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="4" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="110" t="2508" r="823" b="2548"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">34.—James Murphy                   48.-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="838" t="980" r="1508" b="2556"><region><rect l="838" t="980" r="1508" b="2556"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1" rightIndent="86" startIndent="28" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="867" t="992" r="1407" b="1031"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Tenant, Seldon Buchannan</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1037" r="1305" b="1075"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Owner, John Haslam</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="117" startIndent="26" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="865" t="1081" r="1326" b="1120"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Tenant, Harold Rector</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1126" r="1178" b="1160"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Fenton Howatt</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1169" r="1198" b="1204"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Railroad Station</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1215" r="1092" b="1248"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Keith Lord</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1259" r="1205" b="1299"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Austin Campbell</formatting></line>
<line l="838" t="1303" r="1182" b="1343"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Stanley Howatt</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1348" r="1170" b="1383"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Leith Cameron</formatting></line>
<line l="838" t="1393" r="1161" b="1434"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Frank Quigley</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1439" r="1137" b="1479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-John Quigley</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1483" r="1100" b="1523"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-John Myers</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1527" r="1173" b="1568"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Stanley Rogers</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1573" r="1214" b="1608"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Alfonze Chaisson</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1618" r="1151" b="1652"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Wilbur Cairns</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1662" r="1111" b="1696"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Nathan Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1707" r="1273" b="1743"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Mrs. Frank Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1752" r="1191" b="1785"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Albert Morrison</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1796" r="1278" b="1836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Mrs. Harry Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1841" r="1376" b="1882"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Raymond Harvey&apos;s Store</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1885" r="1213" b="1921"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Peter MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1930" r="1142" b="1964"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Frank Larkin</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="1974" r="1247" b="2014"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Reginald O&apos;Connor</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" startIndent="21" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="860" t="2019" r="1450" b="2058"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Louis MacDonald Store</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2064" r="1217" b="2099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Lewis MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2108" r="1116" b="2143"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Eldon Burke</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2153" r="1341" b="2190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Mrs. Grace MacCallum</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2198" r="1146" b="2233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Erie Thomson</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2242" r="1151" b="2278"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Frank Howatt</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2287" r="1275" b="2328"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Mrs. Irving Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2332" r="1302" b="2369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Wendall MacWilliams</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2377" r="1152" b="2417"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Calvin. Howatt</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2421" r="1214" b="2465"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Raymond Harvey</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2467" r="1178" b="2503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-William Cohoon</formatting></line>
<line l="839" t="2513" r="1493" b="2553"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Owner, Mrs. Grace MacCallum</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="710" t="2602" r="832" b="2646"><region><rect l="710" t="2602" r="832" b="2646"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="725" t="2609" r="831" b="2642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—27-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1729" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="172" t="92" r="1602" b="2612"><region><rect l="172" t="92" r="1602" b="2612"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="44">
<line l="192" t="108" r="1331" b="151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">67.—Mrs. Allie Gallant                  77.—Clayton LaVoie</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="202" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="192" t="152" r="1329" b="196"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">68.—Leonard &amp; Mark McCarville 78.—Edgar Williams</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="196" r="1387" b="244"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">69.—Randolph Stevenson                79.—Mrs. Sue Lowther</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="105" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="297" t="242" r="1313" b="284"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Service Station                       80.—James Paynter</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="197" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="192" t="283" r="1392" b="329"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">70._Bannie &amp; Kenneth Coughlin 81.—Donald MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="330" r="1300" b="377"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">71.—Reginald Noonan                    82.—Earle MacKay</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="194" t="375" r="1278" b="418"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">72.—Arnold Hill                              83.—Cook Howatt</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="207" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="194" t="417" r="1382" b="466"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">73.—Hedley &amp; Harold Muttart     84.—Edward McClellan</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="463" r="1325" b="511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">74._Boyd Lowther                        85.—Clifford Rogers</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="193" t="507" r="1329" b="551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">75.—Jack Darrach                          86.—Morley Muttart</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="4" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="196" t="551" r="1324" b="597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">76.—William Boyko                        87.—Hazen Lowther</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="588">
<line l="780" t="649" r="982" b="682"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="22" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="292" t="712" r="1564" b="763"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The story of the homes in this district begin in the north</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="756" r="1565" b="806"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side with Wendell Myers and history may be found in this book</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="800" r="1563" b="855"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Myers account. The next home where Heber Myers, his wife,</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="845" r="1567" b="897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son Gordon, his wife and family live has its history in Carruth-</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="904" r="562" b="944"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ers„ Myers story.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="12" startIndent="51" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="250" t="960" r="1565" b="1012"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Coming south along the road a short distance is the old Myers</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1005" r="1571" b="1054"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home which is also included in Myers, McBride, McCarville ac¬</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="1050" r="1569" b="1099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">count. Since December 1933 Mrs. John Stewart and family have</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="1094" r="1569" b="1145"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lived on this farm. Her husband passed away January 1946.</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="1138" r="1571" b="1192"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Her three (3) daughters are married — Bernice, (Mrs. Kenneth</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="1183" r="1565" b="1239"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacNeill) now lives in Carleton, Beatrice (Mrs. Lloyd Heckbert)</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1228" r="1572" b="1280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lives in Summerside and Marie (Mrs. Stanton MacNeill) in the</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="1274" r="1566" b="1330"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">neighboring district, Cape Traverse. Five (5) of her seven (7)</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1318" r="1573" b="1371"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons lives in Carleton. Herbert, Albert, Aubrey, Claude and</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1363" r="1575" b="1420"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leigh. Herbert is married to Angelina O&apos;Connell and with their</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1407" r="1575" b="1465"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family James, Everett, John, Mary, Elmer and Gary lives on the</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1452" r="1577" b="1506"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">next farm. Albert and his wife the former Margaret MacWil-</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="1497" r="1575" b="1551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">liams and their children Ronald and Sheila live in a house on the</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1540" r="1576" b="1595"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home farm. Claude and his wife the former Shirley Burke and</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1586" r="1576" b="1642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children Eric, Robert and Wilma Lee live in the home with Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1631" r="1577" b="1686"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stewart also her sons Aubrey and Leigh. Arnet Stewart and his</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="1677" r="1576" b="1732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife and family live in Summerside. Elmer passed away in 1948</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1734" r="838" b="1777"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at nineteen (19) years of age.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="7" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="301" t="1799" r="1580" b="1853"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next farm known as the Alexander MacDonald home</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1845" r="1580" b="1901"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had a son Dan who married Rosella Hogg, there children Lena</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1890" r="1580" b="1948"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Georgie. Lena is married to O&apos;Connell Noonan Searletown</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1934" r="1578" b="1993"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Georgie died in girlhood. Dan sold to Patrick O&apos;Connell from</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1978" r="1582" b="2038"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Iona who married Rose Anne Slaven. Their children James, Ed¬</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="2024" r="1582" b="2086"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ward, Andrew, John, Angelina and Mary. James and his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2070" r="1581" b="2134"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(the former Theresa Muttart) and their sons George and James</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="2133" r="681" b="2173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now live on this farm.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" startIndent="97" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="305" t="2193" r="1585" b="2256"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Opposite the O&apos;Connell home is a road to the shore where</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="2237" r="1573" b="2298"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas MacMicken and his wife (the former Pyrtle Crossman)</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="2283" r="1585" b="2343"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">live and their son John. The account of this farm is in MacMicken</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="2328" r="1585" b="2392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">history. Another home was first owned by Wesley Black who</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="2371" r="1586" b="2434"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sold to Alexander Howatt married to Mary Crockett. Around</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="2417" r="1586" b="2479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1900 Albert Weeks from Fredericton, P.E.I, bought it and with</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="2464" r="1589" b="2524"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his wife Harriett Muttart and daughters, Marion and Verna liv-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="632">
<line l="824" t="2576" r="964" b="2607"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—28—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1631" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="118" t="122" r="1528" b="2668"><region><rect l="118" t="122" r="1528" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="153" t="132" r="1511" b="176"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed till Neil Mclsaac a war veteran married to Julia Arsenault and</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="177" r="1509" b="226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their family Doris, Jean, Shirley, Norma, Phyllis, Gerald, LeRoy,</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="221" r="1511" b="266"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reginald lived there for a time and now the present owner is Her¬</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="266" r="419" b="299"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bert Stewart.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="15" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="244" t="336" r="1505" b="378"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">South of these farms Thomas MacMicken erected a house and</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="381" r="1510" b="422"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Lydia Crockett. Their son Bruce and his wife Sadie</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="425" r="1509" b="469"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doull lived till Bruce died. David Auld bought it and lived there</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="470" r="1510" b="511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a short time till selling to Stewart MacMicken. After some</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="515" r="1511" b="560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years Daniel Ross and his son Gordon married to Florence bought</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="559" r="1507" b="604"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it and lived there for a number of years before the present owner</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="603" r="760" b="644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lloyd MacWilliams bought it.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" rightIndent="1" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="243" t="675" r="1510" b="714"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Before coming to the cross roads in the north-east corner</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="719" r="1509" b="762"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was the Alexander MacLeod home. The buildings are gone and</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="763" r="1510" b="804"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">only a hollow marks the place where the house stood. The fam¬</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="807" r="1505" b="847"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ily was James Roderick and John. James married Sadie War¬</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="853" r="1504" b="897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren. Their family, Bliss, John, Thomas, Matilda, Cicily, Annie,</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="898" r="874" b="937"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Elizabeth, Agnes, Janie and Muriel.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="239" t="969" r="1508" b="1005"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bliss and John went to Western Canada. Matilda married</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="1013" r="1507" b="1054"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles Sharkey and her daughter Edith, Mrs. Edward McLellan</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1058" r="1503" b="1100"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lives in Carleton. Cicily and Annie married brothers, Neil and</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1103" r="1506" b="1145"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alec Mclnnis of Mt. Try on. Elizabeth married Neil MacNevin,</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1148" r="1507" b="1188"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Agnes, Charles McGaughey, Janie, Sylvester McMurrer and Mur¬</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1192" r="527" b="1231"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">iel lives in Albany.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="237" t="1262" r="1508" b="1302"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Roderick MacLeod had two sons, John and Vincent and Bur¬</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1307" r="861" b="1345"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pee MacMicken married his widow.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="5" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="1386" r="1505" b="1423"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first home on the shore road was Alex Manson. Their</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1430" r="1506" b="1467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son John lived on this farm and sold it to Thomas McCarville.</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1475" r="1505" b="1517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Manson and McCarville history will give a fuller account.</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1520" r="1505" b="1562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Crockett Sr., built the house by the shore. His son John</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1565" r="1505" b="1606"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">arid family lived in it before moving to Alberta and sold it to</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1609" r="707" b="1651"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Noonan of Albany.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="5" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="234" t="1689" r="1505" b="1732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Another arm of the cross roads was what they called the Bay</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1733" r="1506" b="1777"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Road leading to Albany. The first home owned in 1869 by Matt¬</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="1778" r="1505" b="1821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">hew Callbeck who had part of the present farm was married to</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="1823" r="1503" b="1867"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Charlotte Newsome. Their family Angonetta, Robert, William,</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="1868" r="1506" b="1910"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irene May, Caroline, Mary Jane. In later years Thomas Mac¬</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="1912" r="1504" b="1956"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Micken bought the farm and later owned by his son George, who</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="1958" r="1505" b="1999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">when he retired from farming sold it to Mr. Lasswaugh from</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="2002" r="1505" b="2044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Quebec who did not live there very long. George MacMicken then</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="2047" r="1506" b="2090"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bought it back for his son, Stewart who with his son, Arthur</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="2093" r="1506" b="2134"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were the owners till James Stewart, a son of Herbert&apos;s bought it</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="2138" r="1500" b="2178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and now lives there with his wife, the former Elaine Noonan and</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="2183" r="1506" b="2225"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their children Kathy, Karen and Stephen. In the early days of</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="2228" r="1505" b="2269"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this district Black Alec Mansion owned fifty acres of land on the</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="2272" r="568" b="2307"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">left side of the road.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="5" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="227" t="2352" r="1506" b="2393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next farm was owned by Donald Campbell who sold it</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="2397" r="1501" b="2437"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to an American, Henry Bramhall. When he retired and moved</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="2442" r="1506" b="2485"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Borden, Aden McCarville bought it followed by Arthur Car-</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="2487" r="1505" b="2529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ruthers purchasing it who after a few years sold to Stewart and</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="2531" r="1506" b="2568"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur MacMicken and now the owner is James O&apos;Connell.   The</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="613">
<line l="747" t="2631" r="887" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—29—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1759" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="178" t="118" r="1616" b="2672"><region><rect l="178" t="118" r="1616" b="2672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="1" rightIndent="38" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="197" t="136" r="1561" b="182"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house has been moved from the farm and the only building left</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="193" r="439" b="226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is the barn.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="35" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="292" t="251" r="1564" b="295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">At the turn in the road to Albany a house was built by Dan¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="294" r="1558" b="341"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">iel MacDonald after selling his farm to Patrick O&apos;Connell with his</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="341" r="1564" b="390"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife and grandson Emmett Noonan lived there till the house was</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="399" r="322" b="431"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">burnt.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="29" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="294" t="453" r="1567" b="500"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next home is Frank Bell&apos;s who with his wife and four of</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="498" r="1563" b="550"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his family live here, Darlene, Donald, Alan and Wendell- The his¬</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="545" r="1568" b="597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tory of this place is elsewhere in this book. The farm is now</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="587" r="1570" b="640"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by Arnold Murray also the adjoining farm formerly Theo¬</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="631" r="1569" b="679"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">dore Trenholm is now owned by Lloyd MacWilliams. an the right</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="676" r="1569" b="724"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side of this road in earlier days Michael Connick owned fifty</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="735" r="485" b="769"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">acres of land.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="25" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="298" t="790" r="1570" b="843"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Coming back to the main road south of the crossroads is the</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="835" r="1571" b="889"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George Bell farm later owned by his son William, then William</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="881" r="1570" b="934"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gillespie who sold to John Smith, followed by Elmer Francis,</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="924" r="1573" b="973"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Avalah MacCallum and the present owner Arnold Murray from</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="969" r="1574" b="1024"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Augustine Cove, his wife the former Helen Sherry and their</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1020" r="1125" b="1066"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children Eric, Brian, Linda, Leona and Dale.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="21" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="301" t="1083" r="1571" b="1132"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Across the road is a new home built by Donald Sutherland</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1129" r="1576" b="1178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who with his wife the former Mary McEachern came here from</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1172" r="1576" b="1228"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the eastern part of P.E.I. Their daughter Christine is married</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1219" r="1576" b="1270"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Edward McMurrer, Ernest is married and lives in Ontario,</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1262" r="1578" b="1315"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eileen is married to Donald Gillis of Miscouche, P.E.I., and the</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1308" r="1577" b="1360"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">rest of their family Marilyn, Joanne, Lome and Marie live at</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="1373" r="326" b="1405"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="13" startIndent="89" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="303" t="1414" r="1581" b="1465"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next farm was owned by Ambrose Mclnnis in the pion¬</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1459" r="1582" b="1516"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">eer days and in 1889 William S. Muttart and his bride (Ada Low-</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1503" r="1582" b="1560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ther) went there to live. Their only daughter Blanche married</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1547" r="1581" b="1604"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ernest Harper of Jacksonville, N.B., in 1913 and he lived in this</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1594" r="1583" b="1646"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home till his death for seventeen years. Their older son, William</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1636" r="1583" b="1692"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Samuel died in infancy and their other son Allison married to</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1683" r="1584" b="1736"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bernice Dixon of Try on live in the neighboring district of North</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1728" r="1586" b="1783"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton The present owner is John Haslam formerly of Spring¬</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1772" r="1586" b="1832"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">field, P.E.I., and is married to Laura Muttart. Their only son Al¬</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1819" r="920" b="1872"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bert&apos;lives with them on the farm.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="20" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="310" t="1878" r="1588" b="1933"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Across the road is land formerly owned by Thomas Gillespie</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1926" r="1589" b="1980"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and in 1931 Dr. Marven Bell bought some of this land and built a</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1970" r="1589" b="2025"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house and an office for his dental work. He and his wife the</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2016" r="1591" b="2073"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">former Kay Kappus lived in the home till 1940 when they mov¬</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2059" r="1591" b="2116"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed to New York. Albert Muttart bought it and on retirement</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="2107" r="1592" b="2160"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from his Carleton farm came to live in it with his wife the form¬</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2151" r="1592" b="2206"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er Minnie Toombs and his older daughter Mary. Mary is now</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="2199" r="1366" b="2252"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married to Hedley Lowther and they live in the home.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="608">
<line l="805" t="2284" r="1010" b="2320"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="27" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="315" t="2344" r="1596" b="2405"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The present boundry between Borden and Carleton school</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2393" r="1598" b="2447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">district crosses the Borden road a short distance East of the rail¬</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2436" r="1598" b="2493"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">road crossing known as Dickie&apos;s crossing. A house was built and</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2479" r="1599" b="2543"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">occupied by John Dickie, his wife Mary MacLure and their child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2527" r="1599" b="2585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren Aletha, Marion, Devona, Robert, Thomas  and Reta.    lhis</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="642">
<line l="839" t="2635" r="979" b="2667"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—30—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1637" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="112" t="114" r="1530" b="2666"><region><rect l="112" t="114" r="1530" b="2666"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="22" rightIndent="4" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="154" t="131" r="1511" b="186"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house was later owned and occupied by Daniel Eoss. It is now</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="178" r="1510" b="232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned and occupied by Elmer Stordy, his wife Margaret Adams</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="222" r="1421" b="273"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and their family, Eleanor, Gloria, Wendell, Janet and Dennis.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="115">
<line l="245" t="292" r="1510" b="350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was built by James MacCaull who married  Gladys</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="22">
<line l="152" t="337" r="1509" b="388"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Smith.   They had three sons, Sherman, Roy and Gerald.    It was</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="29" rightIndent="4" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="152" t="381" r="1511" b="432"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sold to Lawson Tremere who married Elizabeth Barrett     Their</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="424" r="1269" b="478"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family consists of Joy, Judy, Daniel, John and Barry.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="22" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="245" t="495" r="1512" b="552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was built by Willis Reeves who married Bessie Hay-</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="540" r="1510" b="590"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ward. They had two daughters Phyllis and Joan. It was sold</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="584" r="1512" b="640"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Leo Perry who married Una DesRoches. They had two daugh¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="629" r="1514" b="685"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ters Beverley and Nancy. The present owner is William Aly-</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="674" r="1515" b="728"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ward who married Elizabeth McCaughay. They have two daugh¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="718" r="601" b="754"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ters Anne and Susan.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="20" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="244" t="788" r="1513" b="837"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was purchased by Alfred Paynter and moved to a</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="831" r="1512" b="881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lot which he had bought. He, his wife Bessie Burke and their</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="876" r="1466" b="926"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children Gertrude Anne, Allan, Marion and Sandra live there.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="39">
<line l="242" t="947" r="1510" b="996"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">After selling his house Leo Perry built a new home where</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="990" r="800" b="1035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he, his   wife and family reside.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="20" rightIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="244" t="1062" r="1508" b="1116"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A new home was built by Aeneas Murphy who married Mary</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="1106" r="1393" b="1155"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Clarkin.    Their children are Brendon, Derryl and Roseline.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="237" t="1177" r="1507" b="1225"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was built by Frank Johnston who married Hilda</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1220" r="1507" b="1274"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Richardson. They had two daughters Marionne and Wendy. It</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1267" r="1508" b="1316"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was sold to Keith Taylor who married Geraldine Hughes. Their</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1310" r="1508" b="1358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children were Wayne and Wendy. The present owner is Peter</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1354" r="1506" b="1402"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacDonald who married Marion Whalen. Their children are</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1398" r="970" b="1441"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean Marie, Karen, Charles and Michael.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="9" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="34">
<line l="236" t="1469" r="1506" b="1517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">An account of the Gillespie home is given elsewhere in this</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1512" r="244" b="1545"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">book.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="232" t="1583" r="1506" b="1634"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hazen Gillespie built a new house on Gillespie land. Later</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1627" r="1506" b="1676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he sold it to Herbert Cooper, who married Gertrude White. Their</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1672" r="1505" b="1722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family were Patricia, Linda, Ronald, Josephine and Thomas. It</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1718" r="1505" b="1765"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was bought by William Chaisson who is married to Gertrude</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1761" r="1506" b="1811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Chaisson. Their family are William, Anne, Catherine and Ger¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1807" r="305" b="1840"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ald Leo.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="229" t="1886" r="1502" b="1937"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was built and is occupied by Frank Larkin, his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="1930" r="1498" b="1983"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dorothy McLaren and their family Kenneth, Carol, Joan, Myron</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="1975" r="376" b="2009"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Gerald.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="228" t="2054" r="1502" b="2101"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur Paynter bought a lot and had a house moved to it. He</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="2100" r="1386" b="2147"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Catherine Fall and they have one daughter Coleen.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="15" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="227" t="2178" r="1500" b="2224"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was built by Sheldon Nicholson who married Nadine</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="2221" r="1293" b="2268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Howatt.   Their children are Garth, Heather and Ensor.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="16" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="225" t="2302" r="1499" b="2349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Long&quot; Alex Manson whose history will be found with the</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="2346" r="1499" b="2392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mansons, sold his property to Charles Doull. It was later owned</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="2391" r="1499" b="2438"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by his son George Doull. The buildings were torn down and sev¬</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="2437" r="1498" b="2488"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">eral lots were sold and houses built. One of these is owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2480" r="1497" b="2527"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reginald O&apos;Connor who is married to Stella Handrahan. Their</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2526" r="1062" b="2572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children are Brenda, Gail, Marilyn and Paul.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="608">
<line l="738" t="2630" r="878" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—31—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1800" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="204" t="146" r="1616" b="2688"><region><rect l="204" t="146" r="1616" b="2688"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="322" t="153" r="1593" b="193"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was built by Ivan Somers who married Hazel Payn-</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="199" r="1110" b="232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter.    Their children are Gerald and Anna.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="7" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="322" t="267" r="1593" b="307"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A lot was bought and a house purchased and moved to it by</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="311" r="1593" b="352"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles Paynter who married Jean Campbell. Their children are</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="355" r="1570" b="396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Scott, Linda, Carol, Judy, Darlene, Beryl, Eoger, Dean and Dale.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="322" t="433" r="1594" b="475"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house was purchased and moved to a lot which was bought</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="478" r="1596" b="520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by Paul Lavoie. He was married to Olive Hickox and the mem¬</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="521" r="1596" b="564"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bers of their family are Pauline, Crawford, Clayton, Robert, Mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="566" r="1595" b="608"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">garet, Paul and Nancy. Clayton is married to Thelma MacLeod</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="614" r="945" b="647"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and is in business with his father.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="322" t="688" r="1595" b="731"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">These homes are along the old road from Borden to Carle-</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="732" r="1596" b="771"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton Corner. At the corner on one side of the road Michael Con-</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="776" r="1594" b="821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nick, his wife Jane MacLellan and their daughter Tisie Lived.</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="821" r="1595" b="865"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He sold to John MacKay who came from Argyle Shore. This</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="866" r="1596" b="911"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">property was later purchased by Alexander Waddell, who mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="910" r="1595" b="953"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Flora MacDonald. Their family consisted of two daughters</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="953" r="1594" b="999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and three sons, Christina, Ernest, Maurice, Bertha and Urban.</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="998" r="1595" b="1039"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Daniel James Mclnnis who married Christina Waddell lived in</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1042" r="1594" b="1083"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this house for a time. Their children were Florence, Lloyd,</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1086" r="1595" b="1130"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bertha and Claude. Daniel Ross later purchased this home, his</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1131" r="1596" b="1173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife was the former Elsie Inman and their family Rhoda, Hattie</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1175" r="1597" b="1217"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Gordon. Rhoda married Hector MacKenzie, Borden. After</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1221" r="1597" b="1262"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">her husband&apos;s death she and her son Gordon moved to Summer-</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1264" r="1597" b="1307"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side where Gordon is a teacher in the High School. Hattie is a</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1308" r="1597" b="1356"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">dietician in Prince County Hospital, Summerside. Gordon Ross</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1354" r="1596" b="1403"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is head potato inspector in Charlottetown. After a few years</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="1396" r="1597" b="1441"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this home was sold to Stewart MacMicken and it was occupied by</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1441" r="1596" b="1491"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Norman Oatway, his wife and family, Edward, Alvin, Roland,</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1486" r="1598" b="1537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lloyd and Wendell. Harry Doull purchased the property a short</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1532" r="1598" b="1576"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">time later. He married Bessie Crossman and their children were</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1574" r="1597" b="1624"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles and June. He operated a service station here. June with</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1618" r="1596" b="1665"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">her husband Louis MacDonald and their children David, Jewel,</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1671" r="1105" b="1714"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Peter and Dixie are the present occupants.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="320" t="1743" r="1598" b="1789"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On the north side of the road is a home where Mrs. Nathan</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1789" r="1598" b="1836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leard and her three daughters, Bertha, Maude and Hattie lived</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1834" r="1594" b="1880"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">after the death of her husband. She was formerly Francis Bell.</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1879" r="1597" b="1926"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Later she was married to Alexander Robblee. He had formerly</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1923" r="1599" b="1971"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">been married to a Miss Edwards who had died leaving five child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1969" r="1597" b="2022"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren, Fannie, Jean, Deinstadt, Howard and Charlie. After Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="2015" r="1597" b="2061"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leard and Alexander Robblee married they lived in this home.</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2059" r="1599" b="2112"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had three children Albert, Harrison and Penzie. Later</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="2103" r="1598" b="2155"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Daniel Matheson, his wife Amanda MacNeill and their family</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2148" r="1598" b="2202"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William, Georgina, Annie, Jeannie and Florrie lived here. The</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2195" r="1598" b="2241"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">next resident was William Manson whose father was known as</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="2238" r="1599" b="2286"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Black Alex&quot; Manson and who had two sons, Edward who after¬</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2290" r="1197" b="2336"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wards was. mayor of Summerside and William.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="318" t="2363" r="1599" b="2417"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Benjamin Cameron lived here later. He married Charlotte</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2407" r="1599" b="2461"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Manson and they had two sons Keith who lived in Summerside</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2453" r="1599" b="2506"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and George who now resides in Amherst, N.S. This property</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2498" r="1600" b="2550"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was later owned by Alexander Muttart. It is now occupied by</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2542" r="1599" b="2597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reagh Paynter his wife Frances MacDonald, their sons, Ivan with</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="615">
<line l="839" t="2651" r="979" b="2684"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—32—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1647" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="132" t="100" r="1560" b="2640"><region><rect l="132" t="100" r="1560" b="2640"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="30" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="183" t="115" r="1542" b="168"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his wife Wilma Reeves and Lowell with his wife Esther Caseley</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="160" r="1543" b="206"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Glen and their daughter Mrs. John Clark. Lowell&apos;s have a</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="204" r="1543" b="250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter Theresa. Mrs. Clark has a son Mervin. Members of</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="248" r="1541" b="295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Paynter family who moved from Carleton to live elsewhere</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="293" r="1535" b="345"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">are Pearl (Mrs. Morley Croszier) and Marjorie (Mrs. Colin Burt)</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="337" r="418" b="375"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kensington.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="29" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="274" t="426" r="1542" b="471"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On the main highway opposite Doull&apos;s store and shoemaker</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="469" r="1541" b="515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">shop was a house built by Donald Morrison. He married Minnie</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="515" r="1539" b="566"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Weatherby, widow of George Muttart who had two daughters,</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="559" r="1147" b="600"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Grace and Bessie, and a son Norman Morrison.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="27" rightIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="273" t="630" r="1540" b="676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Grace married George Lord and had a daughter Bessie who</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="673" r="1011" b="713"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is Mrs. Harold Crockett of Summerside.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="25" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="271" t="744" r="1541" b="794"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie married Alexander Henderson and had four daugh¬</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="789" r="1540" b="836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ters and five sons. Gussie, Mrs. Vernon Craig, Sophia, Mrs. Char¬</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="832" r="1532" b="884"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">les Green, Bedeque, Florence and Ethel (Mrs. Fred W. E. Haslam)</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="876" r="1539" b="926"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">deceased. George and Charles live in Bedeque, Herbert, Wilbert</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="921" r="686" b="957"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Sutherland deceased.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="24" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="39">
<line l="268" t="966" r="1537" b="1010"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Norman Morrison went to Western Canada and is now de¬</formatting></line>
<line l="175" t="1011" r="312" b="1043"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ceased.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="267" t="1072" r="1537" b="1124"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next family in this house was John Campbell from Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="1116" r="1538" b="1161"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Traverse and his wife Annie Williams of Elmsdale. Four of</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="1161" r="1536" b="1206"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their children lived or were born here. Earle killed over seas in</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="1205" r="1536" b="1255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the First World War, Alida, married Keith Sherran of Crapaud</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="1250" r="1535" b="1294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and another daughter Hazel was married and both live in Am¬</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="1293" r="1535" b="1341"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">herst, N.S. Glenn married a Sackville, N.B., girl and lives in</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="1337" r="1534" b="1387"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Montreal. After moving from P.E.I., John Campbell was active</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="1381" r="685" b="1423"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Salvation Army work.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" rightIndent="9" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="261" t="1444" r="1534" b="1489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Theodore Trenholm, his wife Jessie Gamble and their four</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1487" r="1531" b="1537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children moved to this home and during their years here a</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1532" r="1531" b="1584"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Bertha was born August 1901 before moving to the Bay</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="1576" r="660" b="1620"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Road leading to Albany.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="13" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="257" t="1639" r="1530" b="1685"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Dunn, a carpenter was the next owner and his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="1683" r="1529" b="1733"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Matilda Wright lived here for four or five years and moved to</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="1727" r="1529" b="1779"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse where he ran a saw-mill and was instantly killed</formatting></line>
<line l="162" t="1773" r="1528" b="1824"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at his work. They had two daughters, one died in infancy and</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="1817" r="470" b="1853"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie in 1942.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="16" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="253" t="1880" r="1526" b="1932"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This house then became the home of Cornelius MacMillan,</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1924" r="1527" b="1974"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his wife Annie Hennessey and their children Lome, Lena Daniel</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1969" r="1524" b="2021"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Alban who all moved to Western Canada. Mrs. Peter Ranag?</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2013" r="1524" b="2065"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">han bought it and the next owner was Robert Carmichael, his</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2059" r="1522" b="2111"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife Annie Kelly and their family Margaret, Dorothy, Duncan,</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2104" r="1097" b="2148"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Anna, Gertrude, Mary, Benjamin and Robert.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="18" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="248" t="2167" r="1523" b="2219"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1931 this house was sold to Rev. Wm. Monaghan, P.P.,</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2212" r="1525" b="2264"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">aind he moved it to Borden. Today it is the home of Oscar Camp¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2256" r="1523" b="2302"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bell and family. A house on the next lot was moved there and</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2303" r="1407" b="2346"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">occupied by Ambrose Wedge until it was moved to Borden.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="20" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="245" t="2365" r="1523" b="2415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Norman MacWilliams and his wife Dorilda Howatt bought</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2409" r="1523" b="2460"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the land where these two houses stood and built a house and gar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2455" r="1521" b="2500"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">age where they lived till moving to operate a Fina service Station</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2499" r="757" b="2537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and tourist cabins at Borden.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="610">
<line l="761" t="2602" r="900" b="2635"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—33—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1753" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="168" t="122" r="1598" b="2674"><region><rect l="168" t="122" r="1598" b="2674"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="33" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="276" t="134" r="1548" b="179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Keith Stordy, his wife Jean Howatt and two daughters, Ar-</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="178" r="1547" b="221"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lene and Diane lived in this house. They are now living at Vic¬</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="225" r="1389" b="269"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">toria, P.E.I., and Mrs. Grace MacCallum, owns this home.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="33" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="275" t="284" r="1548" b="328"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The third house in the group was built by John Muttart and</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="333" r="1234" b="372"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was first situated north of the railway to Borden.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="28" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="277" t="391" r="1548" b="432"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1885 a road was cleared through the woods of trees and</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="436" r="1548" b="482"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stumps and the house was moved to the William S. Muttart farm.</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="480" r="1548" b="520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Part of the kitchen has been remodeled and is used by John Has-</formatting></line>
<line l="186" t="524" r="1550" b="570"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lam and family. The main house was again moved and is owned</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="569" r="1551" b="617"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by John Haslam. Many families have lived in this home and claim</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="613" r="1551" b="656"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it to be warm in winter although built in the early days of this</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="657" r="1552" b="700"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">settlement. The Mrs. Scottie Robertson family lived a few yards</formatting></line>
<line l="186" t="701" r="1552" b="745"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from the above home and their story appears elsewhere in this</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="746" r="1553" b="794"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">volume, also our new three room school is set further from the</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="801" r="285" b="833"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">road.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="25" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="282" t="852" r="1554" b="895"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On the west side is the Charles Doull property, one of the</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="896" r="1555" b="946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">early homes. Anyone who has been absent from Carleton would</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="941" r="1556" b="989"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">not recognize it with the store, shed and kitchen gone which at</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="993" r="746" b="1033"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one time were joined to it.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="24" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="282" t="1046" r="1557" b="1095"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Murphy bought it and now Eldon Burke, his English</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1091" r="1557" b="1136"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife Edith and sons Terrance, Gerald and Derek live in this</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1149" r="306" b="1180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="19" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="283" t="1196" r="1559" b="1243"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next home was built by Stanley Linkletter and his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1242" r="1562" b="1294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Myrtle Murray. They had a son Gordon and moved to St. Elean¬</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1286" r="1560" b="1336"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ors. George. Doull bought it and sold to Avalah MacCallum.</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1331" r="1562" b="1379"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Grace MacCallum, her son Lloyd and daughter Pauline are</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1391" r="516" b="1429"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">present owners.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="16" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="287" t="1438" r="1565" b="1484"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Two lots further south is a new house built by Erie Thom¬</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="1481" r="1564" b="1529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son and his wife Beulah Robinson. Frank Howatt and his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="1524" r="1564" b="1578"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mildred Logan live in the next home which was built by his fath¬</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="1573" r="1423" b="1625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er, Cook Howatt.  Their family is named in Howatt family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="15" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="290" t="1633" r="1566" b="1685"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Beside this property is the Irving Muttart home built by he</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="1689" r="815" b="1731"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and his wife, Ethel MacLean.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="290" t="1740" r="1566" b="1788"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Next is the Mrs. William Bell property which was sold to</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="1786" r="1568" b="1837"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wendall MacWilliams and his wife, Mildred Muttart. Their sons</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1843" r="582" b="1881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">are Earl and Eric.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" rightIndent="11" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="292" t="1891" r="1570" b="1942"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fred Bell built the nearby home where Calvin Howatt, his</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1945" r="1029" b="1993"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife, Marion Craig and son Russel live.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="17" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="293" t="1998" r="1573" b="2055"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Raymond Harvey married to Thelma Henderson built the</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2043" r="1572" b="2096"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">next home. Their family are Lloyd, married to Grace, Howatt,</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2090" r="1574" b="2140"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Henderson married Cleone Arsenault and Rowena married Har¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2142" r="1060" b="2192"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">vey Costain and has a daughter Barbara.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="295" t="2195" r="1574" b="2247"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The seventh home in this group of houses was built by Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2240" r="1576" b="2294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Minnie Bell Kennedy where she lived for two years is now owned</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2285" r="1577" b="2346"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by William Cohoon and his wife, Helen McCarron. They have</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2342" r="864" b="2387"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two daughters Sheila and Reta.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="298" t="2391" r="1579" b="2445"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Before the twentieth century near where Vera Webster&apos;s</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2438" r="1579" b="2499"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">potato warehouse now stands lived John and Betsy Peake.</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2486" r="1581" b="2539"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Their daughter Mrs. James Dawson is the mother of T. Arthur</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="2530" r="1375" b="2587"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dawson, Tryon.   There were two sons Lewis and John.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="633">
<line l="816" t="2636" r="956" b="2669"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—34—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1646" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="134" t="130" r="1546" b="2672"><region><rect l="134" t="130" r="1546" b="2672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="473">
<line l="624" t="140" r="1067" b="179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CARLETON  SIDING</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="262" t="206" r="1527" b="257"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the fall of 1913 work was started on a new branch of the</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="249" r="1528" b="308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Canadian National Railway, leaving the line running into Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="294" r="1529" b="345"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Traverse at a point in the eastern end .of Carleton School Dis¬</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="340" r="1528" b="390"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trict, running through Carleton to a terminal at Carleton Point</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="383" r="1529" b="434"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">later renamed Port Borden in honor of Sir Robert Borden who</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="430" r="1527" b="480"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was then Prime Minister of Canada. As the railway came into</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="473" r="1527" b="523"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">being, a siding was established at Carleton on land which was</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="518" r="1323" b="564"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">purchased from Frank Muttart and Michael McCarville.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="263" t="580" r="1528" b="631"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first building to appear at the Siding was a potato ware¬</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="623" r="1529" b="678"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house owned by Herbert Lord and operated by Lords Companv</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="668" r="1528" b="717"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Cape Traverse. This building was later moved to Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="713" r="1529" b="765"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">shore and transformed into a summer cottage by its present own¬</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="758" r="473" b="795"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er, Keith Lord.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="40">
<line l="261" t="820" r="1528" b="874"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next building was another potato warehouse owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="864" r="1528" b="917"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Edward MacFadyen which was later replaced by a much larger</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="908" r="338" b="947"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">building.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="261" t="971" r="1527" b="1018"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Before long other buildings began to move in. One was mov¬</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1015" r="1527" b="1067"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed from Wright Leard&apos;s in Bedeque by Warren Lord who, with</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1059" r="1527" b="1111"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his wife Millicent Muttart, occupied it for a number of years. He</formatting></line>
<line l="168" t="1104" r="1526" b="1156"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was followed by John H. Howatt, an employee of the C.N.R., who</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1148" r="1527" b="1200"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with his wife, Mary James, and family, Jennetta, Harold, Llovd</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1193" r="1526" b="1246"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Vivian, made it their home for some time. The property</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1238" r="1526" b="1287"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was then acquired by Montague Campbell who occupied it until</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="1281" r="1527" b="1333"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his death together with his wife, Barbara MacFarlane, and daugh¬</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="1326" r="1525" b="1373"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter Helen, now Mrs. Julian Herring of Charlottetown. The house</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="1370" r="1525" b="1421"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is presently occupied by Austin Campbell and his wife, Ora Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="1414" r="1524" b="1463"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Innis, whose family consist of Audrey, Robert, Jean and Sharon.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="257" t="1476" r="1525" b="1523"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cook Howatt, Sr., a C.N.R. employee, moved a house from</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="1520" r="1524" b="1572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse in which he lived with his wife, Edna Howatt, and</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="1565" r="1524" b="1615"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family for a number of years (see Howatt History). The house</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="1611" r="1525" b="1660"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was later sold to its present owner, Hedley Muttart, for use of</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="1654" r="1523" b="1706"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his farm help. It is now occupied by Stanley Rogers, his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="1699" r="1523" b="1750"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Teresa Pineau, and family, Eric, Linda, Donna, Gerald, Gail and</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="1743" r="338" b="1777"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kenneth.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="253" t="1806" r="1524" b="1857"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A building which had been used as a school house in Augus¬</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1850" r="1521" b="1902"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tine Cove was moved to its present site by Edward MacFadyen.</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1894" r="1521" b="1946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It was first occupied by Peter Peters, his wife Luella Leard, and</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1939" r="1522" b="1985"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family, Ralph, Betty and Shirley, Alphonse Chaisson is now mak¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1983" r="1522" b="2034"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing his home in it together with his wife, Bella Gallant, and fam¬</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2028" r="1519" b="2081"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ily consisting of Willard and Betty who are not at home, Ernest,</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="2073" r="1111" b="2116"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Peter, Leonard, Joseph, Catherine and Albert.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="9" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="248" t="2136" r="1520" b="2185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house moved from Cape Traverse passed through several</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2180" r="1520" b="2228"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">hands and was finally acquired by Frank Quigley whose comfort¬</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2225" r="893" b="2268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">able home it is at the present time.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="9" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="248" t="2288" r="1520" b="2337"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home of John Quigley, his wife Hazel Gunning, and fam¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2332" r="1519" b="2380"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ily Gale, Carol, Brenda, Eric, Loretta and Leona, was moved from</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2378" r="1362" b="2421"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the George Bynon property which is dealt with elsewhere.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="9" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="245" t="2441" r="1520" b="2491"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wilber Cairns built a new home and is at present occupying</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2485" r="1519" b="2536"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it with his wife, Thelnia Quigley, and their family consisting of</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2530" r="805" b="2572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret, Raymond and Frank.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="609">
<line l="760" t="2634" r="898" b="2667"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—35—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1774" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="176" t="102" r="1614" b="2672"><region><rect l="176" t="102" r="1614" b="2672"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="36" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="287" t="125" r="1559" b="170"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home recently acquired by Leith Cameron and his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="170" r="1559" b="214"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Aletha Dickie was originally moved from Cape Traverse by Mel¬</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="214" r="1561" b="258"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bourne Howatt and had a succession of owners including John</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="258" r="1563" b="307"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Crockett, and others, and was ultimately purchased by Fred Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="303" r="1563" b="347"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who made extensive alterations and additions to it. On his de¬</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="348" r="1563" b="398"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">parture from the community the house was bought by Ralph</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="392" r="1563" b="436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacCaull who lived in it for a number of years together with his</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="436" r="1564" b="486"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife, Selina Myers, and daughters Elizabeth and Edith, until his</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="482" r="1564" b="532"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">entry into the Christian Ministery made it necessary for him to</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="536" r="637" b="573"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">leave the community.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="30" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="293" t="597" r="1567" b="644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house built by Hedley Muttart was purchased by Erie</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="642" r="1567" b="691"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomson, a Fruit and Vegetable Inspector, who made it his home</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="687" r="1568" b="737"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">accompanied by his wife, Beulah Robinson, for a number of years</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="732" r="1569" b="782"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">until they built a new home, when they sold the house to its pre¬</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="774" r="1570" b="825"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sent owner, John Myers, who is now occupying it with his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="821" r="1566" b="867"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Priscilla MacLeod. Mr. Myers holds a position as Seed Potatoe</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="880" r="400" b="918"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Inspector.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="24" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="297" t="936" r="1571" b="982"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Another house built by Hedley Muttart was purchased by</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="980" r="1572" b="1029"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cook Howatt Sr., who made it his until his death in 1934. The</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1025" r="1576" b="1074"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">house is still occupied by his widow, Edna Howatt, and son Stan¬</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1070" r="1572" b="1123"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ley with nis wife and family.    (See Howatt History elsewhere).</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" rightIndent="23" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="298" t="1141" r="1574" b="1186"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Nathan Bell who sold the old homestead farm at Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1185" r="1576" b="1232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">built a new home at Carleton Siding where he and his wife, Annie</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1229" r="1577" b="1281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Howatt, still live. Their only son, Dean, with his wife and family</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="1283" r="693" b="1323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">reside in Amherst, N.S.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" rightIndent="19" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="301" t="1347" r="1579" b="1390"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">At retirement Frank Muttart and his wife Helen Ferguson</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1391" r="1581" b="1436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">built a new home on a lot of land taken from the old farm prop¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1434" r="1579" b="1487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">erty which was acquired by his son Morely, his wife, Alice Jewell,</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1481" r="1327" b="1530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and daughter Susan, who still occupy the homestead.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" rightIndent="14" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="305" t="1550" r="1586" b="1597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A house from Cape Traverse was moved to its present loca¬</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="1593" r="1585" b="1647"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tion by Harry Muttart, a C.N.R. employee, who with his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1640" r="1580" b="1687"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Tessa Howatt and daughter Jean, occupied it- Jean is now Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="1687" r="1329" b="1740"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(Dr.) Brenton Stewart and resides in Moncton, N.B.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" rightIndent="11" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="307" t="1755" r="1588" b="1804"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home now occupied by Albert Morrison and his wife Ora</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1800" r="1587" b="1855"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Rose, together with their four daughters, Dale, Donna, Judith</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1845" r="1588" b="1898"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Corrine, was originally built on its present site by Fred Bell</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1890" r="1589" b="1940"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It was in the meantime the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. B. Doull</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1943" r="961" b="1986"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Stewart.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="22" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="309" t="2008" r="1589" b="2059"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Following the sale of this general store at Cape Traverse,</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2051" r="1591" b="2105"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Keith Lord, who had previously built a potato warehouse at the</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2095" r="1591" b="2152"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Siding built a new home on the site of the general store which</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2140" r="1589" b="2197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had been operated by Lord&apos;s Limited and destroyed by fire He</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="2187" r="1595" b="2240"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">still resides in this house with his wife, Vera Doughart, whose</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2231" r="1594" b="2290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family of four daughters include Margaret, Anita, Marion and</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2277" r="1596" b="2336"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Joyce. Marion is now the wife of Lloyd Ramsay who is associat¬</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2322" r="1596" b="2378"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed in the produce shipping business of Lord and Ramsay Ltd. A</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2369" r="1527" b="2427"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">grandson, Donald Crossman, makes his home with the Lord s.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="27" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="314" t="2435" r="1599" b="2490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs Helen Bell moved from Victoria following the death of</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="2482" r="1600" b="2538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">her husband and built a home which also incorporated the Carle¬</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="2530" r="1600" b="2583"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton Post Office.   Her family consists of Charles, Kenneth, Elea-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="646">
<line l="840" t="2635" r="980" b="2668"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—36—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1647" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="132" t="84" r="1546" b="2638"><region><rect l="132" t="84" r="1546" b="2638"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="17" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="169" t="104" r="1530" b="156"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nor, Marion, Harold and Claud. Mrs. Bell sold this property to</formatting></line>
<line l="168" t="148" r="1529" b="195"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the McCarville family where Mrs. Annie McCarville made her</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="192" r="1528" b="241"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home until her death a few years ago. Her sons, Leonard and</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="237" r="1324" b="282"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mark, and daughters Helen and Mary still reside there.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="260" t="299" r="1528" b="347"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home occupied by Randolph Stevenson, his wife Areta</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="343" r="1528" b="395"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bernard, and family Marjory and Louis, was moved to its pres¬</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="389" r="1527" b="436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ent location by Frank Howatt formerly of Cape Traverse who</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="433" r="1528" b="478"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">made it his home for a number of years. After his death the</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="480" r="1529" b="526"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">property was acquired by George Campbell and his wife, who in</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="523" r="1128" b="568"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">turn sold it to its present owner and occupant.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="258" t="585" r="1528" b="629"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Alley Gallant and son, David, home was moved to its</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="630" r="1527" b="676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">present site by John O&apos;Connor who sold it to Russel MacDonaJd</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="674" r="1529" b="718"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who, with his wife Mae Fall, and family (who all attended Carle-</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="719" r="1526" b="768"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton School while living here) consisting of Dorothy, Amelia,</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="756" r="1526" b="813"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Joseph, Hensley, Meriam, Ruth, Eleanor, John, Lois and Gordon,&apos;</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="808" r="1528" b="852"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">made it their home for a considerable time before his retirement</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="852" r="1526" b="899"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from the service of the C.N.R. carferry. Alley Gallant, who died</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="897" r="1528" b="941"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">suddenly, purchased it from Russel MacDonald, and his widow still</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="941" r="1525" b="991"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">occupies the house. Their family consists of Pauline, Vernon,</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="985" r="1032" b="1027"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Angeline, Gloria Jean, Merylin and David.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="257" t="1048" r="1528" b="1091"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1951 the Trans Canada Highway to Borden was commenc¬</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="1092" r="1528" b="1135"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed and was completed the following year. The homes that are</formatting></line>
<line l="162" t="1130" r="1317" b="1179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">situated on the Trans Canada Highway are as follows:</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="3" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="254" t="1198" r="1524" b="1248"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. and Mrs. Jack Darrach (Norma Howatt, Tryon) Linda,</formatting></line>
<line l="162" t="1242" r="1525" b="1286"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">David and Donnie. A new home and restaurant combined known</formatting></line>
<line l="162" t="1287" r="1526" b="1331"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">as Norma&apos;s Restaurant was built. At present a new White Rose</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="1330" r="1527" b="1381"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Filling Station and Restaurant are being built and are to be oper¬</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="1375" r="1525" b="1419"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ated by Mr. and Mrs. Darrach. They are erected on the land</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="1419" r="1189" b="1460"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">formerly owned by Mr. and Mrs. Celestine Smith.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="5" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="251" t="1481" r="1525" b="1531"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. and Mrs. William Boyko (Janice Waddell, Cape Trav¬</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="1526" r="1525" b="1577"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">erse). Dale and Janet Hilda. Mr. Boyko operates the Auto Body</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1569" r="416" b="1610"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Repair Shop.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="6" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="251" t="1632" r="1524" b="1681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Williams (Ruby Harvey, Enmore). Mr.</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1676" r="1523" b="1722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Williams is quartermaster on one of the boats between Borden</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1722" r="613" b="1761"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Cape Tormentine.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="99">
<line l="249" t="1783" r="1522" b="1828"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home of Fenton Howatt is given elsewhere in this book.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98">
<line l="248" t="1845" r="1498" b="1889"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home of Boyd Lowther is given elsewhere in this book.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="8" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="38">
<line l="248" t="1906" r="1522" b="1954"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The home of Hedley and Harold Muttart is given elsewhere</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1950" r="411" b="1984"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in this book.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="247" t="2013" r="1523" b="2058"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The house at the intersection south of the Trans-Canada</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2057" r="1522" b="2107"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Highway is owned by Mrs. Leigh Lowther, nee Sue Muncey. The</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2103" r="1509" b="2154"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">story of the Munceys and Brows is given in the Muncey history.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="8" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="245" t="2165" r="1522" b="2217"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The farm across the road west of this property was formerly</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2211" r="1522" b="2257"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by John Bell, Calvin Bell, Henry Crockett, J. Frank Mut¬</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2256" r="1520" b="2305"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tart, and is now owned by his son Morley Muttart, his wife, Alice</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2300" r="735" b="2340"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jewell, and daughter Susan.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="9" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="243" t="2363" r="1521" b="2413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first house east of this farm was formerly owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="2407" r="1521" b="2457"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leonard Gardiner and moved from Cape Traverse. Its present</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="2453" r="1519" b="2501"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owner is James Paynter, his wife, Marjorie Martin, and son&apos;s</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="2497" r="671" b="2537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Garry, Garth and Daniel.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="600">
<line l="750" t="2599" r="891" b="2632"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—37—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1772" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="168" t="130" r="1598" b="2682"><region><rect l="168" t="130" r="1598" b="2682"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="34" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="276" t="138" r="1548" b="178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The house south of this one was formerly owned by William</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="184" r="1549" b="225"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Murphy and moved from the Bradford Road. The present owner</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="227" r="1550" b="268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is Donald MacDonald, his wife, Marie Landry, and children Ron¬</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="275" r="788" b="314"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ald, Faye, Jerry and Mitchell.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="33" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="277" t="340" r="1550" b="382"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next house was built by McCurdy Bell, and formerly</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="384" r="1550" b="429"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by Church of Scotland, Rev. James Howe, his wife Lily</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="429" r="1551" b="473"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Crozier. The present owner is Earl MacKay, and his wife, Pauline</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="481" r="320" b="518"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irving.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="32" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="278" t="543" r="1552" b="585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next house was built by Richard Carver, and formerly</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="587" r="1551" b="633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by Fenton Howatt. The present owner is Cook Howatt,</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="635" r="1003" b="677"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his wife, Frances Craig, and son David.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="25" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="280" t="701" r="1555" b="744"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The next house was formerly owned by Fred Bell and mov¬</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="745" r="1554" b="792"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed to its present site. The owner is now Edward McLellan, his</formatting></line>
<line l="186" t="789" r="1549" b="837"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife, Edith Sharkey, son Charles who is married to Lillian Heck-</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="835" r="1555" b="881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bert, Wesley who is married to Opal Silliker, Austin who is mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="878" r="1554" b="923"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried to Gloria Gaudet, Leonard and Stewart. One daughter, Mary,</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="922" r="1559" b="966"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was married to Clifford Rogers. They have four children, Deb¬</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="966" r="1556" b="1016"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">orah, Donald, Deanna, and Beverly, and live in a house owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1011" r="1534" b="1060"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Morley Muttart which was moved from Borden and remodelled.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="23" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="284" t="1080" r="1559" b="1125"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The farm south-west of Morley Muttart&apos;s farm was formerly</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1124" r="1560" b="1175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by Mrs. J.C. Gillespie, Elmer Francis, his wife, Mildred</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1169" r="1561" b="1218"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacWilliams, and three sons, Arnold who is married to Marion</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="1214" r="1560" b="1264"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Parker, Darryl, and Winston. The present owner is Hazen Low-</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="1259" r="1560" b="1310"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ther, his wife, Helen Ahearn, and children Catherine, Charles,</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="1309" r="1032" b="1355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leigh, Joanne, Dennis, Keith and Ricky.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="16" startIndent="87" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="281" t="1377" r="1556" b="1423"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arnold Hill, son of Roy and Elizabeth Hill of Freetown, was</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="1420" r="1566" b="1467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born Feb 1924. On September, 1945 he married Eva Joyce Fras-</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="1464" r="1566" b="1513"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er of North Bedeque who was born in July 1925. They moved</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="1508" r="1566" b="1557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Carleton in August 1952 purchased and took up residence in</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1553" r="1564" b="1603"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a home owned by Leonard MacCarville. In June 1957 he purchas¬</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1598" r="1566" b="1646"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed a lot of land from Elmer Frances and moved the house on this</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="1643" r="1568" b="1692"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lot. He became employed with the Canadian National Railways</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="1687" r="1567" b="1736"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1950. To them were born five children, namely Diane, Carter,</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1744" r="742" b="1786"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Barrie, Wayne and Bryan.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="13" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="292" t="1804" r="1570" b="1851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James MacDonald erected home sold it to Reginald Noonan</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1848" r="1571" b="1897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who is married to Lucille Murphy from Vernon, they have one</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="1909" r="415" b="1946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son Barry.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="524">
<line l="708" t="1978" r="1063" b="2013"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">BELL HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="296" t="2042" r="1573" b="2093"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Bell as a young married man immigrated from Gretna,</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2087" r="1575" b="2138"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Scotland to Prince Edward Island in the year 1820. His wife was</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="2131" r="1569" b="2184"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jane Little who was born in Carlyle, England. They had six (6)</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2177" r="1578" b="2230"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons and five (5) daughters. The Atlantic was a long and peril¬</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2221" r="1578" b="2276"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ous crossing in those days and Prince Edward Island an unknown</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2266" r="1579" b="2322"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">country They took ship at Bowness, Scotland and landed at Mir-</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="2311" r="1577" b="2368"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">amichi, N.B., and then to Ch&apos;town, P.E.I. The City then con¬</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2356" r="1581" b="2411"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tained about sixty (60) houses and they found temporary shelter</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="2401" r="1581" b="2455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at the Windmill Hotel kept by one MacDonald. There they hired</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="2446" r="1581" b="2500"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">some Indians to row them up the West River. The whole family</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="2495" r="1582" b="2546"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and their belongings embarked with the Indians in an open crazy</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="2537" r="1584" b="2591"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">craft which went adrift but finally landed them at Samuel Daw-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="641">
<line l="825" t="2644" r="965" b="2677"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—38—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1626" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="120" t="128" r="1528" b="2656"><region><rect l="120" t="128" r="1528" b="2656"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="9" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="136" t="136" r="1496" b="175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons. They then walked by a footpath through the forest to Cra-</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="181" r="1497" b="220"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">paud and on to Tryon where they rented a farm up the Branch</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="225" r="1498" b="264"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">road from Fred B. Holland. They stayed there for a year. One</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="269" r="1500" b="307"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of their neighbours was John Gould who ran a flour-mill where</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="313" r="1499" b="352"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reid&apos;s Woollen Mills were later built. The next year the family</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="358" r="1501" b="396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved to Cape Traverse and settled on Bell&apos;s Point, which be¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="403" r="661" b="435"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">came the Bell homestead.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96">
<line l="232" t="472" r="1389" b="511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Bell, Sr.—had six (6) sons and five (5) daughters.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="8" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="233" t="542" r="1502" b="581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Squire John — who married Janet Campbell and their child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="586" r="1500" b="625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren were Calvin, who married a Miss Crawford and had one</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="631" r="1501" b="671"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Gwen. Captain William had no family. John married</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="676" r="1501" b="715"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret Humphrey, had one son, Bert. Jane married Neil Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="719" r="1500" b="761"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fadyen and had two boys, John and Finley and one daughter,</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="764" r="1501" b="804"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary. Christine married Robert Carruthers and they had one</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="811" r="463" b="849"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Eliza.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="94">
<line l="230" t="879" r="1226" b="919"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Isabella, Elizabeth and Margaret never married.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96">
<line l="232" t="950" r="1114" b="987"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Walter — had six sons and five daughters.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="7" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="231" t="1019" r="1501" b="1059"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George never married. William E., married Lucy Rogerson</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1063" r="1503" b="1104"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and they had four children. Edith, Cpl. Kenneth killed in action</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1109" r="892" b="1148"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in World War 1, Bessie and Douglas.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="8" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="232" t="1177" r="1502" b="1217"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert married Maud Robblee and they had three children,</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1224" r="607" b="1263"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Walter, Jean and May.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96">
<line l="232" t="1292" r="1131" b="1331"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John H. married Helen Howatt, no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="5" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="1362" r="1504" b="1401"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald married Eva Myers and they had five sons and two</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1405" r="1505" b="1446"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughters, Everett, Morley, Kilborn, Walter and Harrison and</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1450" r="1504" b="1490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the daughters Winnie and Marguerite.    Cornelius never married.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96">
<line l="232" t="1521" r="1363" b="1561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Elizabeth married John Bloor, had one son, Reginald.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="4" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="231" t="1590" r="1506" b="1631"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jane married John Dixon and they had two sons, Reginald</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1637" r="908" b="1676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and John and one daughter, Deborah.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="233" t="1705" r="1503" b="1746"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret married John Crockett and their sons were Edwin,</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1751" r="1505" b="1789"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur and Walter. Sarah married Chas. Macintosh and they</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1795" r="1507" b="1836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had eight sons, Major, Brent, Whitfield, John, Douglas, Ray and</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1840" r="1414" b="1881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Everett and three daughters, Gertrude, Nellie and Elizabeth.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96">
<line l="232" t="1911" r="1245" b="1951"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Matilda married John MacDonald, had no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="234" t="1980" r="1507" b="2020"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas — married Jane Muttart and they had six sons and</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="2026" r="1508" b="2066"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">four daughters. Soloman married Elizabeth Leard. They had</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2071" r="1508" b="2110"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one son Dr. A. M. Bell and two daughters, Ethel and Ella May.</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2115" r="1509" b="2155"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles married Rachel MacFarlane and they had five sons and</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2160" r="1509" b="2201"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two daughters, Thomas, Nathan, Eber, Fred, McCurdy, Lena and</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2206" r="1507" b="2245"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean. Thomas married Helen Smith and they had four sons,</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2250" r="1508" b="2291"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Chas., Kenneth, Harold and Claud and three daughters, Eleanor,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2294" r="1509" b="2335"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion and one who died in infancy. Nathan married Annie</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2339" r="1510" b="2380"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Howatt and they had one son, Dean. Eber married Charlotte</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2383" r="1510" b="2426"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Simpson and they had one son, Lome. Fred married Bessie Link-</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2428" r="1510" b="2469"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">letter and had one daughter, Feme. MacCurdy married Flossie</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="2473" r="1510" b="2515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Walker and had no family. Lena married Harry Webster and</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2517" r="1510" b="2560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had three sons, Vernal and two who died in infancy and four</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="614">
<line l="750" t="2619" r="891" b="2651"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—39—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1743" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="156" t="112" r="1572" b="2626"><region><rect l="156" t="112" r="1572" b="2626"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="7" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="182" t="119" r="1549" b="160"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughters, Jean, Doris, Grace and Margaret who died young.</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="163" r="1549" b="203"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean married James Crockett, had no family. Albert married</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="207" r="1548" b="249"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Ann Bell and they had one son, Frank and one daughter,</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="252" r="1550" b="290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irene. Artimas married Minnie Howatt and they had two sons,</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="300" r="573" b="333"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eoland and Leland.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="276" t="365" r="1551" b="409"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ephriam first married Mary Buxton, then married Annie</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="410" r="1549" b="453"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Henderson. They had three sons, Vernal, Arthur and Carmen.</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="454" r="1552" b="497"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eber died while quite young. The daughters were: Francis who</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="499" r="1554" b="541"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Nathan Leard. They had three daughters, Bertha, Hat-</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="544" r="1553" b="583"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tie and Maud. She later married Alex Robblee and they had two</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="587" r="1554" b="630"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons and one daughter, Albert, Harrison and Penzie. Harriet</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="631" r="1553" b="673"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Samuel Carruthers and they had one daughter, Eliza.</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="677" r="1554" b="718"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ida married Dr. Alder Black. They had no family. Penzie never</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="729" r="354" b="761"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="278" t="789" r="1554" b="836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George — married Catherine Jelly and they had six sons and</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="836" r="1552" b="880"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">three daughters. John married Clara Smith and had two sons,</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="880" r="1552" b="927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Rupert and Fred. Avard married Gertie Myers and had one son,</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="922" r="1554" b="968"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Russell and one daughter, Cora. James married Ella Campbell</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="967" r="1554" b="1015"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and they had four daughters, Viola, Minnie, Jean and Evelyn.</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="1013" r="1553" b="1056"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William married Jeannie MacFadyen and they had four sons,</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="1056" r="1554" b="1105"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Herbert, Finley, Harry and Campbell. Herbert, who moved to</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="1100" r="1554" b="1149"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Salt Lake City; George E., married Margaret Harvey, had no</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="1144" r="1556" b="1195"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family. The daughters were: Mary Ann, wife of Albert Bell;</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="1189" r="1555" b="1240"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charlotte, wife of William Lowther who had a son, Percy and</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="1239" r="1041" b="1285"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Leah.   Harriett never married.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="99" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="275" t="1305" r="1509" b="1349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William — moved to Ontario, married, had two daughters.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="99" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="275" t="1379" r="1368" b="1420"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James — also moved to Ontario when quite young.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="99" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="275" t="1452" r="976" b="1491"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah — married William Leard.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="273" t="1521" r="1019" b="1560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Elizabeth — married John Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="274" t="1592" r="1017" b="1632"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jane — married Cornelius Howatt.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="273" t="1661" r="1120" b="1707"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret — married Hector MacFadyen.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" lineSpacing="71">
<line l="273" t="1733" r="892" b="1772"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ann — married John Walker.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="272" t="1797" r="1555" b="1847"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">After living at Bell&apos;s Point for a few years Thomas and</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1843" r="1553" b="1896"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Squire John moved to Carleton. Thomas settled on the farm,</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="1887" r="1557" b="1935"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">later known as the Bell homestead now owned by Hazen Low¬</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="1932" r="1556" b="1984"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ther. Squire John settled on the land now owned by Morley Mut¬</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="1976" r="1555" b="2025"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tart. He later left the property to his son, Calvin and moved</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="2022" r="1554" b="2070"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">back to Bell&apos;s Point to the property now owned by the Gardiners.</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="2065" r="1556" b="2119"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James, Avard, George and Soloman also lived for a number of</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="2124" r="555" b="2167"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years in Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="271" t="2181" r="1555" b="2232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Bell family have given public men who have served their</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="2227" r="1554" b="2280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">country well and are still remembered by many of the present</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="2274" r="1364" b="2327"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">generation, among whom we might mention in passing:</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="94">
<line l="270" t="2348" r="1039" b="2392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hon. John H. Bell, Premier of P.E.I.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="93">
<line l="269" t="2415" r="1365" b="2463"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dr. Herbert Bell, Prof., of Edinborough University.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="94">
<line l="270" t="2491" r="968" b="2531"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dr. A. Marvin Bell of New York.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="618">
<line l="794" t="2589" r="934" b="2621"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—40—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1657" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1444" t="146" r="1520" b="192"><region><rect l="1444" t="146" r="1520" b="192"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="352" t="200" r="728" b="328"><region><rect l="352" t="200" r="728" b="328"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1138" t="210" r="1222" b="238"><region><rect l="1138" t="210" r="1222" b="238"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1140" t="212" r="1222" b="233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mmS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1038" t="244" r="1484" b="334"><region><rect l="1038" t="244" r="1484" b="334"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="88">
<line l="1039" t="245" r="1484" b="333"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;S}^M^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1476" t="296" r="1520" b="344"><region><rect l="1476" t="296" r="1520" b="344"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1480" t="320" r="1496" b="343"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I ■</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1124" t="350" r="1332" b="466"><region><rect l="1124" t="350" r="1290" b="424"></rect><rect l="1244" t="424" r="1332" b="466"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1137" t="360" r="1278" b="392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■V&apos;-&apos;:::W&apos;-:;:N&apos;</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="107">
<line l="1244" t="423" r="1331" b="466"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hill</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="982" t="434" r="1522" b="552"><region><rect l="982" t="434" r="1522" b="538"></rect><rect l="1400" t="538" r="1522" b="548"></rect><rect l="1400" t="548" r="1446" b="552"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="116">
<line l="984" t="434" r="1504" b="550"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">iilllllll</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="222" t="538" r="1516" b="1794"><region><rect l="580" t="538" r="1400" b="540"></rect><rect l="222" t="540" r="1400" b="548"></rect><rect l="222" t="548" r="1506" b="576"></rect><rect l="222" t="576" r="1516" b="1794"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="168" t="1808" r="1574" b="2556"><region><rect l="168" t="1808" r="1574" b="2556"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="309">
<line l="493" t="1816" r="1249" b="1841"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CHAS.   W.   BELL  -  THE   OLD   HOME   -   1915</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="100" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="284" t="1870" r="1188" b="1909"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Vernal A. Bell, Attorney of Baltimore, Md.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="280" t="1923" r="1039" b="1962"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dr. Arthur I. Bell of Maltimore, Md.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="96" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="280" t="1977" r="1195" b="2016"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dr. Everett A. Bell of Cape Traverse, P.E.I.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="281" t="2030" r="1125" b="2069"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Morley M. Bell, Q.C., Summerside, P.E.I.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="281" t="2083" r="915" b="2117"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Rev. A. C. Bell of Halifax N.S.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="97" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="281" t="2136" r="1489" b="2178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hubert Bell, Supt. Gt. Northern Ry., Salt Lake City, Utah.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="282" t="2200" r="1558" b="2240"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The descendants now living are Roland, Bank of N.S., Hali¬</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="2244" r="1558" b="2285"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fax, Douglas of CarletQn, Nathan and Eber of Carleton, Fred of</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="2289" r="1558" b="2328"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Summerside, McCurdy of Charlottetown, Russell and Arnett of</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="2333" r="1555" b="2374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Borden, William of Moncton, N.B., Walter of Tryon, Walter H.,</formatting></line>
<line l="186" t="2378" r="1555" b="2419"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Tryon, Dean, C.B.C. Sackville, N.B., Lome, C.I.L., Montreal,</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="2423" r="1556" b="2464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles, Dept. of Education, Prince-Rupert, B.C., Kenneth of Tor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="2468" r="1556" b="2509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">onto, Harold, Civil Engineer, Fredericton, N.B., Claud, Travel</formatting></line>
<line l="184" t="2512" r="527" b="2552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bureau, Toronto.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="828" t="2606" r="904" b="2646"><region><rect l="828" t="2606" r="904" b="2646"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="829" t="2612" r="903" b="2642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-41-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1789" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="186" t="138" r="1594" b="2668"><region><rect l="186" t="138" r="1594" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="331">
<line l="533" t="146" r="1249" b="181"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">HECTOR CAMPBELL&apos;S FAMILY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="303" t="216" r="1573" b="254"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hector Campbell was born in Searletown and married Eunice</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="260" r="1573" b="297"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacQuarrie of Carleton Point. He moved to Borden and owned</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="305" r="1528" b="344"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the shore part of the farm now owned by John E Read &amp; Sons.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="304" t="374" r="1575" b="414"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had nine children, one son and eight daughters 1. Don¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="419" r="1575" b="457"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ald died when a young man he was never married. 2. Flora mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="463" r="1574" b="503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried William Gillespie. They lived many years on the farm now</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="507" r="1574" b="548"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by Frank Noonan, they later moved to West Royalty. 3.</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="552" r="1575" b="591"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Margaret who never married. 4. Euphemia who never mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="596" r="1574" b="629"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried. 5. Annabelle married in U.S.A. 6. Hannah married Alfred</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="641" r="1574" b="674"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cook. 7. Eunice never married. 8. Catherine lived in U.S.A. 9.</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="685" r="1575" b="724"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eliza lived in U.S.A., for many years and just last year passed</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="729" r="1485" b="768"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">away in Charlottetown where she had resided for some time.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="419">
<line l="621" t="818" r="1164" b="851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">CARRUTHERS HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="303" t="889" r="1575" b="927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Among the earliest settlers at Carleton Point was Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="932" r="1576" b="971"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carruthers, a native of Dumfries Shire Parish, Scotland, who</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="977" r="1577" b="1016"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with his wife Elizabeth Lait and six (6) of their seven (7) child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1022" r="1576" b="1061"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren emigrated to this country in 1820. They landed at Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1066" r="1576" b="1104"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Point and built a home for themselves a few hundred yards from</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1111" r="1577" b="1151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the shore directly east of the present Borden Breakwater. Trad¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="1155" r="1576" b="1194"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ition has it that the name of -the ship on which they crossed was</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1200" r="1575" b="1237"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the &quot;Hector&quot; and that she was lost at sea on her next voyage.</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1244" r="1576" b="1285"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Being God fearing people and not wishing to be buried in a strange</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1288" r="1577" b="1329"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land with nothing to mark his grave, Mr. Carruthers brought</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1333" r="1399" b="1369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with him from Scotland a tombstone. After his death in</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1377" r="1576" b="1418"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this stone \yas erected to mark his grave and may still be seen in</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1421" r="1578" b="1464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the graveyard directly behind the present Free Church of Scot¬</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1470" r="630" b="1509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land, Cape Traverse.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="1" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="297" t="1536" r="1571" b="1573"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Their eldest son remained at home in Scotland and died soon</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1580" r="1575" b="1624"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">after his parents came out. His wife also died young and they</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1624" r="1576" b="1668"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">left one (1) one, Joseph who as a young boy came to P.E.I, with</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1669" r="1576" b="1713"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a Mr. Gillespie who had returned to Scotland for tools to enable</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1714" r="1577" b="1757"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">him to carry on his trade as a wheel wright. In his young man¬</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1758" r="1576" b="1802"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">hood Joseph and James Irving sailed a produce vessel between</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1802" r="1574" b="1846"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton Pt., P.E.I., and River John, N.S. On one of these trips,</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1846" r="1575" b="1888"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">while anchored at River John, Joseph fell overboard and although</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1891" r="1575" b="1936"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a strong swimmer, he was drowned. The following identifications</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1936" r="1574" b="1979"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">are the first and last pages of a small psalm book which he always</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1981" r="1575" b="2022"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">carried with him and which was in his pocket when his body was</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="2032" r="409" b="2066"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">recovered.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="299" t="2103" r="1576" b="2143"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The other children of Thomas Carruthers and Elizabeth Lait</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2148" r="1576" b="2195"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were, Thomas, James, Samuel, Jennie, Mary and William. These</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2194" r="1577" b="2239"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">six (6) children were all born in Scotland. Mary, the youngest</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2238" r="1334" b="2283"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was eleven (11) years old when they came to Canada.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="298" t="2316" r="1575" b="2358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas the second son married Peggy MacDonald and lived</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2361" r="1575" b="2409"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on part of the farm now owned by Wilbert Wright. They had</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2413" r="418" b="2452"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="4" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="297" t="2484" r="1574" b="2526"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James was born in 1832 and killed in 1867 while working</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="2533" r="1255" b="2572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in a saw-mill near where John E. Read now lives.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="616">
<line l="818" t="2631" r="957" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—42—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1657" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="148" t="130" r="1540" b="824"><region><rect l="148" t="130" r="1540" b="824"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="258" t="137" r="1521" b="176"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Samuel married Sophia Muttart and settled in Bedeque.</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="181" r="1521" b="220"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had twelve (12) children, Thomas, James, Robert, George,</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="225" r="1237" b="264"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bella, Margaret, Mary, Bessie, Sarah, Ann, Jennie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="258" t="287" r="1523" b="325"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jennie married James Gillespie from Long River. Among</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="331" r="832" b="369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their children were, Peter, John.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="257" t="392" r="1524" b="431"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary married Hugh Campbell of Searletown and their child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="436" r="1523" b="476"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren were, James, Donald, Bella, Mary, Hector, Sarah, Ewen, Thom¬</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="482" r="463" b="520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">as and Joseph.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="257" t="542" r="1523" b="581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James married Ellen MacMicken of Carleton and they had</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="586" r="1523" b="625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two (2) children Priscilla who died quite young and Adah who</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="631" r="1522" b="669"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married William Carruthers of Carleton Pt., and who today may</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="675" r="1342" b="713"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">be the oldest living descendant of the Carruthers family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="256" t="737" r="1522" b="775"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald married Mary Ann MacPherson from Orwell and they</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="781" r="1432" b="819"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had four (4) children, William, Mary, Margaret and Georgie.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="154" t="848" r="1530" b="1766"><region><rect l="154" t="848" r="1530" b="1766"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="254" t="1784" r="710" b="1814"><region><rect l="254" t="1784" r="710" b="1814"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="269" t="1787" r="694" b="1811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">REV.   WILLIAM   CAMPBELL</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1032" t="1782" r="1350" b="1816"><region><rect l="1032" t="1782" r="1350" b="1816"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1047" t="1788" r="1334" b="1811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">DR. CARRUTHERS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="138" t="1832" r="1540" b="2560"><region><rect l="138" t="1832" r="1540" b="2560"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="251" t="1840" r="1519" b="1880"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William James Campbell was educated in P.W.C., Charlotte-</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1885" r="1523" b="1925"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">town, Ohio Northern University, Ada Ohio, and Bangor Theologi¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1930" r="1521" b="1969"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cal Seminary. In 1924 Dartmouth College conferred on him the</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1975" r="1521" b="2014"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">degree D.D. (Doctor Divinity) and ordained him into the Church</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2019" r="1522" b="2059"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Scotland. His first field was in Kings County, P.E.I, then in</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="2064" r="1520" b="2105"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cambridge, Mass., for two (2) years. He was now Dr. Campbell,</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="2109" r="1518" b="2149"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">M.A., S.T.B., D.D. (Master of Arts, Bachelor of Sacred Theology,</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2154" r="1518" b="2194"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doctor Divinity). He was also minister of a Congregational Body</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="2198" r="1523" b="2239"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and afterward president of Atlanta Theological Seminary Affili¬</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2244" r="1104" b="2283"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ation with Vanderbilt at Nashville, Tennessee.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="95">
<line l="249" t="2316" r="611" b="2355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary died young.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="1" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="247" t="2386" r="1523" b="2426"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret married Johnstone Lidstone,  a former Mayor of</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="2432" r="1497" b="2470"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Summerside.    Her sons are, Donald and Davis of Summerside.</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2476" r="1522" b="2515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Both are married and have families.    Margaret passed away in</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2523" r="256" b="2555"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1961.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="796" t="2612" r="870" b="2656"><region><rect l="796" t="2612" r="870" b="2656"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="797" t="2620" r="869" b="2651"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-43-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1730" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="178" t="118" r="1594" b="1532"><region><rect l="178" t="118" r="1594" b="1494"></rect><rect l="178" t="1494" r="874" b="1532"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="15" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="290" t="141" r="1561" b="194"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Georgie attended college here and attended a nursing school</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="186" r="1561" b="237"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from which she graduated. She married in U.S.A., and had one</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="235" r="1127" b="286"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(1) daughter, Louise who lives in New York.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="8" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="290" t="300" r="1564" b="354"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary married William Crockett and died quite young leav¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="343" r="1563" b="400"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing no family. Mr. Crockett later married her sister, Bella who</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="386" r="1566" b="442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had one (1) daughter, Matilda who married Alder Wright of</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="432" r="1568" b="489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse. They had three (3) sons. Stewart who is De¬</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="476" r="1565" b="535"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">puty Minister of Agriculture in Charlottetown, Wilbert who lives</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="523" r="1454" b="572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on the homestead in North Carleton and Arthur in Ontario.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="7" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="295" t="589" r="1569" b="640"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hector married Flora MacKenzie from Orwell and lived in</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="633" r="1569" b="689"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Chelton. They had three (3) children, Norman, Melvina and</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="684" r="1435" b="731"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Annie who all died comparatively young without marrying.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="4" startIndent="86" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="298" t="747" r="1571" b="800"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah married James Gillespie of Carleton and they had six</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="792" r="1572" b="852"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(6) children, James, Campbell, William, Thomas, Euphemia, Jen¬</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="854" r="542" b="891"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nie and Rebecca.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="298" t="905" r="1573" b="959"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ewen attended P.W.C. and taught for several years. He</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="953" r="1573" b="1007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Margaret McArthur and had two (2) daughters, Adah</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="996" r="1574" b="1050"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Bertha. Adah married Alex Grant and died childless. Ber¬</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1038" r="1573" b="1096"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tha married L. W. Saunders and had three (3) children, Dorothy</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1084" r="1575" b="1146"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(Mrs. Hennessey), Marion (Mrs. Rev. Kennedy) and Dr. Allison</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1146" r="768" b="1185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Saunders of Charlottetown.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="299" t="1198" r="1576" b="1253"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas married Ella Cairns. He attended P.W.C. and later</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1243" r="1562" b="1300"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a medical school from which he graduated with his M.D degree</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1288" r="1576" b="1349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He practiced in New London, Northam and Alberton. They had</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1330" r="1576" b="1393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two (2) daughters, Beatrice (Mrs. Rev. Vance MacLean) and</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1377" r="1564" b="1436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion (Mrs. Will Rogers, Freetown). Both have passed away</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1421" r="1575" b="1479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion had two (2) daughters, Evelyn and Dorothy, both of</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1481" r="871" b="1523"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">whom are married in Freetown.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="186" t="1518" r="1600" b="2602"><region><rect l="200" t="1518" r="1600" b="1652"></rect><rect l="186" t="1652" r="1600" b="2602"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="301" t="1533" r="1577" b="1597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Joseph married Sarah Dixon and was a farmer all his life.</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1579" r="1578" b="1638"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He had two (2) daughters, Myrtle and Georgie who both_live m</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="1622" r="1578" b="1685"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cambridge, Mass. Myrtle has a son and a daughter Waldron</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1657" r="1578" b="1728"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">anTFlorSce Simmons. Florence married Arthur Brook of New</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="1711" r="1578" b="1777"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jersey They have two (2) children, Ellen and Chip (Arthur</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="1785" r="296" b="1823"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jr.).</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="4" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="301" t="1826" r="1579" b="1889"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William (Thomas&apos;s son) married Jean Gillespie They lived</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1872" r="1577" b="1934"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Carleton and farmed. They had eight (8) children, Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="1916" r="1579" b="1974"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who died voung and never married. Sarah, Mary Ann, Sophia</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1949" r="1578" b="2024"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1888 1860&quot;jaLl837 - 1891, Elizabeth 1834 - 1892, Robert 1839-</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="2024" r="824" b="2068"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1927 and Charles 1959 - 1911.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="303" t="2079" r="1581" b="2138"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah married Charles Doull of Carleton Corner who was a</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="2123" r="1581" b="2185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">shoe maker and for many years kept the post office.and ran;a</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="2169" r="1579" b="2230"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">small general store. They had five (5) children, William, Annie,</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="2210" r="1581" b="2272"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah George and Harry. William died young as did also his</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="2247" r="1583" b="2319"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sfster&apos;AnnTe Sarah married Bruce McMicken and lived on the</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="2300" r="1582" b="2363"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">arm now owned by Lloyd MacWilliams. . After .Mr. McMicken</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="2348" r="1581" b="2409"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">died she moved to Boston where she married David Wilbur who</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="2390" r="1581" b="2454"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now survives her. She had no family George married Jesse</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="2435" r="1582" b="2499"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hume and carried on his father&apos;s merchant business He later</formatting></line>
<line l="208" t="2481" r="1583" b="2545"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Mabel Knight. They had no children.. Ham married</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="2530" r="1582" b="2590"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie Crossman from Cape Traverse and had two  (2)  children,</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="854" t="2634" r="978" b="2674"><region><rect l="854" t="2634" r="978" b="2674"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="855" t="2639" r="961" b="2670"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-44—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1647" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="130" t="134" r="1526" b="1180"><region><rect l="130" t="134" r="1526" b="1180"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="151" t="142" r="1506" b="181"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles and June. Charles married Aletha Large and they have</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="186" r="1508" b="226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two (2) children, June married Louis MacDonald and they live</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="231" r="1125" b="271"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at Carleton Corner and have four (4) children.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="243" t="316" r="1509" b="358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Ann married James Irving and they had one (1) daugh¬</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="364" r="971" b="402"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter, Ann who married Stephen Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="100">
<line l="245" t="450" r="1308" b="489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sophia died from Diphtheria when a young woman.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="244" t="527" r="1508" b="561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jane and Elizabeth both died in their sixties and neither was</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="573" r="423" b="605"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ever married.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="243" t="649" r="1510" b="688"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charles married Ann Dawson from Tryon. He lived on a</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="693" r="1510" b="733"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farm at Carleton Pt., and had two (2) children, Newton who never</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="736" r="1510" b="778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married and died quite young and Sophia who married William</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="782" r="1183" b="821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mclnnes of Carleton and had eleven (11) children.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="243" t="867" r="1507" b="902"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert married Hannah MacWilliams 1846 - 1923. He lived</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="913" r="1510" b="947"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on the same farm as the first Carruthers settler at Carleton but</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="957" r="1508" b="998"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved farther up from the shore and built a new house for him¬</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="1002" r="1506" b="1042"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">self. They had a family of five (5) sons and two (2) daughters,</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="1045" r="1510" b="1086"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William, Jan., 1st 1866 - Nov. 17, 1939, Sophia Nov. 1867, Ed¬</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1090" r="1501" b="1131"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ward 1869 - July 30, 1897, Norman May 6, 1872 - Thomas 1875 -</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1135" r="1500" b="1176"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1955, Major Sept, 23, 1878 - 1955 and Eliza May 4, 1882 - 1934,</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="126" t="1266" r="1524" b="2674"><region><rect l="126" t="1266" r="1524" b="2674"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" startIndent="46" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="194" t="1274" r="1507" b="1314"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">, William the eldest son lived on the homestead at Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="1318" r="1508" b="1357"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and his father and mother and the rest of the family bought the</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1361" r="1507" b="1403"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farm in Augustine Cove now owned by Claire Carruthers. He</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1407" r="1508" b="1447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">crossed on the Iceboats between Cape Traverse and Cape Tormen-</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1449" r="1507" b="1492"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">time for many winters. In 1895 he married Adah Campbell of</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1496" r="1506" b="1537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Searletown and they had two (2) sons and four (4) daughters.</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1539" r="1506" b="1581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur farmed uptil quite recently when he sold the Carruthers</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1583" r="1506" b="1627"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">property to John E. Read who now owns all the lands first settled</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1628" r="1505" b="1671"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by the Carruthers family when they came from Scotland and is</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1673" r="1506" b="1714"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">himself a fifth generation descendant from the first Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="1717" r="1507" b="1758"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carruthers. Arthur has retired and is at present boarding at</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1766" r="504" b="1799"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Borden Hotel.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="236" t="1840" r="1507" b="1878"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James lives in Borden and works for the C.N.R. He married</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="1885" r="1507" b="1927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eva Williams of O&apos;Leary and they have one (1) daughter, Linda</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1934" r="408" b="1968"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born in 1952.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="234" t="2010" r="1505" b="2051"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Aletha graduated from P.W.C. and taught school in Borden,</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2055" r="1506" b="2098"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bedeque and Summerside before going to North Adams, Mass.,</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2099" r="1508" b="2140"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">where she entered a Nurse&apos;s Training School and graduated in</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2143" r="1507" b="2187"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1925. During the last war she served as a Nurse in the Ameri¬</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2190" r="1503" b="2233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">can Army from which she was retired with the rank of Lieuten¬</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2234" r="1508" b="2277"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ant. She at present is with the Presbyterian Hospital, New York</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2283" r="237" b="2323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">City.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="234" t="2358" r="1506" b="2400"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mabel attended P.W.C. and taught in Cape Traverse, Borden,</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2403" r="1508" b="2446"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">North Bedeque and Belmont. She married Arnett Simpson of</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2446" r="1501" b="2493"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Belmont and has two (2) daughters, Olga (Mrs. Harley Gamble)</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2492" r="1508" b="2536"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lot 16 who has two (2) sons, Robert and John, and Shirley who</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2537" r="1373" b="2578"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is with the Red Cross Blood Donors Clinic in Halifax, N.S.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="612">
<line l="752" t="2637" r="891" b="2670"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—45—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1795" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="506" t="184" r="1322" b="1516"><region><rect l="506" t="184" r="1322" b="1472"></rect><rect l="674" t="1472" r="1322" b="1490"></rect><rect l="1048" t="1490" r="1322" b="1516"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="668" t="1490" r="1048" b="1522"><region><rect l="668" t="1490" r="1048" b="1522"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="684" t="1493" r="1044" b="1517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ALETHA   CARRUTHERS</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="200" t="1536" r="1606" b="2604"><region><rect l="200" t="1536" r="1606" b="2604"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="312" t="1544" r="1588" b="1583"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bertha also went to P.W.C. and taught in Tryon, Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1589" r="1588" b="1627"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Alberton. She married Herbert Matthews of Alberton, own¬</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1633" r="1586" b="1675"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er of the Matthews turkey farm. They have two (2) children,</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="1682" r="650" b="1716"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gordon and Barbara.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="311" t="1774" r="1588" b="1813"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Priscilla attended P.W.C. and taught in Albany, Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1818" r="1587" b="1862"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Augustine Cove. She married Edward MacFadyen who with</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1862" r="1588" b="1905"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the late J. B. MacFadyen of Augustine Cove was among the first</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="1907" r="1588" b="1947"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Certified Seed Potato Growers in P.E.I. They had five (5) child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1952" r="1588" b="1997"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren, Wendell, Eileen, Gerald, Lorna and Aletha. Wendell receiv¬</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1996" r="1580" b="2039"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed a Provincial Scholarship and attended P.W.C. for four (4)</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2040" r="1589" b="2088"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years. He married Grace Webster. They have four (4) child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2089" r="1056" b="2132"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren, Sandra, Edward, Joanne and David.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="97" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="312" t="2182" r="1588" b="2224"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gerald attended P.W.C. for two (2) years and married Joyce</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2227" r="1588" b="2269"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Rodd from Charlottetown. They have three (3) children, Don¬</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2271" r="1587" b="2318"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ald, William and Neil. Wendell and Gerald now jointly farm the</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2321" r="1098" b="2364"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">large property owned by their late father.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="310" t="2413" r="1589" b="2455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eileen went to P.W.C. for three (3) years and worked in</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2459" r="1590" b="2500"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">several offices in Charlottetown before marrying Raymond Ham-</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2504" r="1587" b="2551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bly of Central Royalty. They have five (5) children, Donna,</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2553" r="895" b="2596"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Judy, Karen, Janice and Rodney.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="814" t="2642" r="938" b="2686"><region><rect l="814" t="2642" r="938" b="2686"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="831" t="2650" r="937" b="2681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—46-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1644" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="128" t="116" r="1530" b="2656"><region><rect l="128" t="116" r="1530" b="2656"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="250" t="136" r="1514" b="183"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lorna went to P.W.C. for three (3) years and taught school</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="180" r="1514" b="224"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Pleasant Grove and Cape Traverse. She then returned to</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="224" r="1513" b="272"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.W.C. and graduated in commerce. She was secretary to Mr.</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="268" r="1515" b="315"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacKinnon, Provincial Secretary until she married George Nichol¬</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="313" r="1515" b="360"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son of Crapaud. They have four (4) sons, Robert, John, Roger</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="358" r="393" b="391"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Ronnie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="248" t="427" r="1513" b="473"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Aletha graduated from the commerce department of P.W.C.</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="471" r="1513" b="512"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and for several years worked in the Income Tax Office. She</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="516" r="1512" b="562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Hubert Harvey of Crapaud and has five (5) children,</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="559" r="1036" b="602"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Heather, Linda, Harley, Douglas and Dale.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="247" t="630" r="1513" b="675"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sophia married William Campbell of Cape Traverse and had</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="675" r="1514" b="720"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one (1) son, Norman. He attended Business College in Char-</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="719" r="1512" b="764"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lottetown and is a Veteran of both World Wars and very recent¬</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="763" r="1511" b="803"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ly retired from the Offices of Veterans Affairs in Charlottetown.</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="807" r="1487" b="853"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He married Florence Toombs of Carleton.   They have no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="245" t="878" r="1512" b="924"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Edward marr/&apos;ed Margaret Bell of Albany and farmed part</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="922" r="1511" b="968"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the property now owned by Arnold Murray. He died quite</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="968" r="677" b="1007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">young and had no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="4" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="246" t="1036" r="1510" b="1076"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Norman E., taught school in P.E.I, from 1890 to 1901 in such</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="1081" r="1511" b="1124"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">schools as Victoria, Kensington and North Bedeque and was Pre¬</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="1126" r="1510" b="1166"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sident of the Educational system of P.E.I. In 1902 he went to</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="1170" r="1511" b="1214"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lacombe, Alberta where he taught till 1917, nine (9) years of</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="1215" r="1509" b="1259"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this he was principal of Lacombe High. He married Lydia Boyd.</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="1259" r="1509" b="1302"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They have four (4) children, Helen (Mrs. Lester Walker) who</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="1304" r="1508" b="1347"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has one (1) son Jimmie. Boyd, Edward and Thomas. All boys</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="1349" r="1509" b="1389"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">served in the last world war. Boyd and Thomas were retired from</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="1393" r="1509" b="1436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the army with the rank of Captain and Edward from the Navy</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="1437" r="1511" b="1474"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">W.O. Writer. All are married and have families and live in Al¬</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="1482" r="904" b="1520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">berta as does Mr. Carruthers&apos; widow.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="242" t="1552" r="1510" b="1592"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas D., attended P.W.C. and taught in several schools on</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="1597" r="1511" b="1638"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.E.I. He farmed for a few years and married Margaret Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="149" t="1642" r="1511" b="1683"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fadyen of Augustine Cove. They had three (3) children, Min¬</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="1686" r="1511" b="1726"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nie (Mrs. Ernest Walker) of Summerside, who like her father</formatting></line>
<line l="148" t="1731" r="1509" b="1772"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">also taught school. She has five (5) children, Evelyn (Mrs. Dr.</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1775" r="1511" b="1816"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank) Sackville, Kenneth of Summerside, George teacher in</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1820" r="1511" b="1858"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kentville, N.S., Neil and John of Summerside. His son John</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="1864" r="1510" b="1905"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">passed away a few years ago. Another daughter Miriam (Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1908" r="1511" b="1950"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reginald Muttart) lives in Kentville and has two (2) sons, David</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1953" r="1512" b="1989"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Peter. Mr. Carruthers later married Etta Walker of New</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="1998" r="1511" b="2038"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Annan who now survives him. After moving to Summerside he</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="2043" r="1511" b="2081"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was for many years associated with the P.E.I. Fox Breeders As¬</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="2088" r="1172" b="2127"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sociation and travelled extensively in its interest.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="239" t="2158" r="1512" b="2197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Major married Mary Cameron of Augustine Cove and en¬</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2204" r="1511" b="2243"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gaged in farming. They had one (1) son Lome who married</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="2249" r="1507" b="2289"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean Webster and they in turn have seven (7) children, Errol,</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="2294" r="1512" b="2334"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret, Claire, Norman, Beth, Doris and Esther, Errol went</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2339" r="1512" b="2378"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to P.W.C. for two (2) years and receiving the Lord Beaverbrook</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2385" r="1512" b="2425"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Scholarship he went to Mount Allison University from which he</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2430" r="1510" b="2469"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">graduated with his B.Sc. degree. He then attended McGill Uni¬</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="2476" r="1511" b="2516"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">versity for two (2) years and received his master&apos;s degree in</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="2521" r="1512" b="2555"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">science.   He worked at Atomic Research at Chalk River for two</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="606">
<line l="749" t="2618" r="889" b="2652"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—47—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1789" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="340" t="124" r="1744" b="2676"><region><rect l="340" t="124" r="1744" b="2676"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="11" rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="366" t="149" r="1725" b="191"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and one-half (21/9) years and is now teaching in Brookville High</formatting></line>
<line l="366" t="193" r="685" b="232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">School, Ontario.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="456" t="264" r="1727" b="306"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret entered P.W.C. with a Bell Scholarship and after</formatting></line>
<line l="364" t="309" r="1727" b="349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">graduating she taught in Pownal, Central Bedeque and Augus¬</formatting></line>
<line l="365" t="353" r="1726" b="394"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tine Cove. She then went to the United Church Training School</formatting></line>
<line l="364" t="399" r="1726" b="439"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and later received her B.A. from Western University. She is at</formatting></line>
<line l="364" t="444" r="1480" b="483"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">present teaching at Perens River, Northern Manitoba.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="456" t="514" r="1726" b="553"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Norman also received a Bell Scholarship and graduating from</formatting></line>
<line l="364" t="558" r="1725" b="597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.W.C. he went to Mount Allison, Sackville for two (2) years and</formatting></line>
<line l="367" t="602" r="1725" b="642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">received his B. Sc. He worked for several years for the C.I.L. Co.</formatting></line>
<line l="363" t="647" r="1727" b="686"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Calgary, Alberta and is at present at Mount Allison Univer¬</formatting></line>
<line l="364" t="692" r="1085" b="730"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sity working for the B.Ed, degree.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="456" t="761" r="1718" b="801"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Beth won a Bell Scholarship and went to P.W.C. for two (2)</formatting></line>
<line l="363" t="805" r="1725" b="845"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years, later teaching in North Tryon. She entered the P.E.I.</formatting></line>
<line l="362" t="849" r="1727" b="889"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hospital School of Nursing from which she graduated and re¬</formatting></line>
<line l="365" t="894" r="1725" b="934"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ceived her R.N. She is at present on the staff of the Sick Child-</formatting></line>
<line l="362" t="940" r="849" b="979"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">rens&apos; Hospital, Toronto.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="1" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="453" t="1009" r="1726" b="1049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doris won a provincial scholarship to P.W.C. which she at¬</formatting></line>
<line l="362" t="1053" r="1725" b="1094"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tended for two (2) years then taught one (1) year in Augustine</formatting></line>
<line l="362" t="1097" r="1726" b="1138"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cove. She is this year completing her fourth year at Mount</formatting></line>
<line l="361" t="1144" r="1286" b="1183"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Allison and working for her B.A. Secretarial.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="451" t="1211" r="1724" b="1252"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Esther attended P.W.C. and U.C.C., Charlottetown and is</formatting></line>
<line l="360" t="1259" r="1292" b="1298"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now employed by Maritime Central Airways.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="3" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="453" t="1327" r="1724" b="1365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Claire remained at home on the farm and is one of Augustine</formatting></line>
<line l="361" t="1374" r="1159" b="1413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cove&apos;s most successful young farmers.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="2" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="451" t="1442" r="1725" b="1483"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eliza married Arthur Campbell of Cape Traverse. She had</formatting></line>
<line l="359" t="1485" r="1725" b="1528"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two (2) children, Evelyn (Mrs. Ivan MacKinnon) of DeSable.</formatting></line>
<line l="362" t="1530" r="1724" b="1572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">She has one (1) daughter, Juanita (Mrs. George Riley) of Baltic,</formatting></line>
<line l="360" t="1579" r="863" b="1617"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who has one son, David.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="453" t="1645" r="1725" b="1686"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cedric married Helen Lord of Cape Traverse. He farms his</formatting></line>
<line l="359" t="1693" r="1135" b="1732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fathers&apos; farm.   They have no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="298">
<line l="653" t="1787" r="1423" b="1822"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THOMAS CARRUTHERS HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="449" t="1858" r="1727" b="1897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas Carruthers immigrated from Dumfriershire, Scot¬</formatting></line>
<line l="358" t="1902" r="1724" b="1945"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land, and landed at Carleton Point, Prince Edward Island in 1820.</formatting></line>
<line l="359" t="1948" r="1724" b="1989"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">One of his sons, Samuel married Sophia Muttart and to them were</formatting></line>
<line l="357" t="1991" r="1726" b="2034"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born twelve (12) children. Later, this family excluding the eld¬</formatting></line>
<line l="359" t="2040" r="1231" b="2079"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">est son, Robert, moved to North Bedeque.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="448" t="2108" r="1654" b="2147"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas — never married but farmed at North Bedeque.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="448" t="2153" r="1726" b="2190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James — married Sarah Jane Clark. To this union were</formatting></line>
<line l="355" t="2197" r="1726" b="2240"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born six (6) children namely, Elizabeth (Mrs. (Rev.) S. J. Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="356" t="2241" r="1724" b="2285"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur), Clement, Hattie (Mrs. P. J. Clark), Ida (died young),</formatting></line>
<line l="358" t="2288" r="1450" b="2330"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Simeon (Medical Doctor), Vera (Mrs. Bishop Read).</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="448" t="2358" r="1727" b="2401"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George — became a medical doctor and practiced in Char¬</formatting></line>
<line l="356" t="2402" r="1724" b="2447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lottetown for many years. His wife was Phoebe Ann Callbeck.</formatting></line>
<line l="356" t="2448" r="1724" b="2493"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had three (3) children, namely, Georgie (Mrs. W. J. Reid).</formatting></line>
<line l="356" t="2494" r="1726" b="2532"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie who married Dr. J. S. Bonnell and Bruce a Mounted Police</formatting></line>
<line l="355" t="2541" r="1458" b="2577"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in the North West Territories.   His second wife was</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="611">
<line l="966" t="2640" r="1105" b="2671"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—48—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1577" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="518" t="190" r="806" b="574"><region><rect l="518" t="190" r="806" b="574"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="854" t="316" r="978" b="474"><region><rect l="854" t="316" r="978" b="474"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="126">
<line l="872" t="348" r="960" b="474"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;1</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="608" t="596" r="776" b="650"><region><rect l="608" t="596" r="776" b="650"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="625" t="608" r="759" b="641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ififc&quot;&quot; **.,</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="436" t="710" r="1040" b="1106"><region><rect l="436" t="710" r="1040" b="1054"></rect><rect l="436" t="1054" r="836" b="1084"></rect><rect l="436" t="1084" r="764" b="1106"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="40" t="1084" r="1442" b="2518"><region><rect l="764" t="1084" r="1442" b="1108"></rect><rect l="40" t="1108" r="1442" b="2518"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="439" rightIndent="453" startIndent="270" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="764" t="1084" r="828" b="1108"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">BE...</formatting></line>
<line l="494" t="1130" r="972" b="1154"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">DR.   SAMUEL   N.   ROBERTSON</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="98" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="155" t="1182" r="1425" b="1223"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary — married John Baker. Their family consisted of</formatting></line>
<line l="57" t="1226" r="1417" b="1266"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Annie (Mrs. Arthemas MacCaull) and Robert who farmed in</formatting></line>
<line l="57" t="1271" r="372" b="1309"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">North Bedeque.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" rightIndent="6" startIndent="88" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="154" t="1324" r="1419" b="1365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie — married George Burns of Freetown. They had two</formatting></line>
<line l="66" t="1368" r="662" b="1407"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(2) sons, Gordon and Eobert.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="3" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="150" t="1421" r="1416" b="1462"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Isabella — married John Scottie Robertson, a sea captain</formatting></line>
<line l="58" t="1466" r="1417" b="1507"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who was drowned at sea at the age of thirty-one (31). To this</formatting></line>
<line l="59" t="1511" r="1418" b="1552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">union were born four (4) children, namely, Sophia (Mrs. William</formatting></line>
<line l="60" t="1555" r="1420" b="1597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Callbeck), Samuel Mapier, a graduate of Dalhousie University and</formatting></line>
<line l="60" t="1600" r="1419" b="1641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">later Principal of Prince of Wales College, Charlottetown, Thomas,</formatting></line>
<line l="60" t="1645" r="1422" b="1685"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a graduate in dentistry from the University of Maryland in Bal¬</formatting></line>
<line l="61" t="1689" r="1422" b="1726"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">timore, Sarah married Dr. John Lowther. After the death of her</formatting></line>
<line l="60" t="1735" r="1420" b="1775"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">husband Mrs. Robertson and her family lived with her brother,</formatting></line>
<line l="56" t="1779" r="452" b="1812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert at Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="1" startIndent="89" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="152" t="1833" r="1422" b="1873"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret — married Murdock Ross and they had a family</formatting></line>
<line l="63" t="1876" r="1423" b="1917"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of nine (9) children, namely, John, died young; Sophia, a medical</formatting></line>
<line l="61" t="1921" r="1423" b="1962"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">doctor; Annie, a former matron of Prince County Hospital; Jen¬</formatting></line>
<line l="60" t="1966" r="1424" b="2006"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nie, a teacher; Lottie, married D. J. McCutcheon; Theodore, a</formatting></line>
<line l="60" t="2010" r="1422" b="2050"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school teacher, later became a United Church Minister; George,</formatting></line>
<line l="59" t="2055" r="1421" b="2096"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lawyer, later became Senator; Gordon, died young; Amy, died</formatting></line>
<line l="56" t="2112" r="189" b="2141"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">young.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="5" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="151" t="2154" r="1419" b="2194"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah — married Joseph Read. They had two (2) sons,</formatting></line>
<line l="55" t="2199" r="1420" b="2240"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">namely, George, a medical doctor and Captain John, who sailed</formatting></line>
<line l="56" t="2243" r="1420" b="2284"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to many parts of the world and was later Captain of the P.E.I.-</formatting></line>
<line l="55" t="2287" r="612" b="2327"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">New Brunswick Car Ferry.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="150" t="2341" r="1416" b="2380"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Anne — Married Hon. Alexander Laird. Their four (4)</formatting></line>
<line l="55" t="2385" r="1421" b="2427"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children were, Sadie, lived at home; David, a teacher in Van¬</formatting></line>
<line l="56" t="2430" r="1422" b="2473"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">couver; Alexander, Lawyer; Robert, was engaged in the lumber</formatting></line>
<line l="57" t="2480" r="236" b="2513"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">business.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="652" t="2594" r="774" b="2638"><region><rect l="652" t="2594" r="774" b="2638"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="667" t="2601" r="773" b="2633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—49-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1743" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="158" t="138" r="1566" b="2678"><region><rect l="158" t="138" r="1566" b="2678"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="93">
<line l="271" t="147" r="1408" b="186"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jennie — married Jessie A. Wright and had no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="8" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="273" t="207" r="1540" b="246"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert — lived in Carleton on the farm now owned by Hazen</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="251" r="1541" b="290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lowther. He built a vessel which he sailed for some years until</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="295" r="1541" b="334"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it was wrecked off Bell&apos;s Point. He first married Eliza Crockett</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="339" r="1541" b="380"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and to this union were born two (2) children, namely, Samuel</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="384" r="1541" b="423"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and John. His second wife was Christina Bell and they had one</formatting></line>
<line l="187" t="427" r="1542" b="473"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(1) daughter, Eliza (Mrs. J. C. Gillespie). John - went to the</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="472" r="1543" b="514"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Western States and was engaged in mining. Samuel - was a farm¬</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="516" r="1541" b="557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er and first married Harriett Bell. They had one (1) daughter,</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="560" r="1543" b="606"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eliza (Mrs. James Chisholm. After his first wife&apos;s death, he</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="604" r="1542" b="650"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">later married, Jessie Crozier, of Hamilton, P.E.I, and to this union</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="649" r="1543" b="693"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were born a son, Robert and a daughter, Ruth (Mrs. Arnold Hen¬</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="693" r="1544" b="740"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">derson). Robert continued to farm his father&apos;s homestead and</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="736" r="1544" b="783"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was also engaged in Fox Ranching. He married a school teach¬</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="781" r="1543" b="830"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er, Elizabeth MacKay of Pleasant Valley, P.E.I, and they have</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="826" r="1543" b="874"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one (1) son, Ralph and an adopted daughter, Isabel. In 1946</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="870" r="1544" b="919"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">they sold the farm to Heber Myers of Carleton and moved to</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="913" r="1544" b="962"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kensington where he is a Representative of The Canada Life In¬</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="969" r="551" b="1007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">surance Company.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="395">
<line l="573" t="1050" r="1151" b="1088"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE CROCKETT FAMILY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="7" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="272" t="1107" r="1544" b="1153"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Crockett and his wife Margaret Manson emmigrated</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1151" r="1545" b="1199"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from Scotland about the year 1820 and settled on the Branch</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1195" r="1544" b="1247"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Road in Tryon. They lived there for a short time, then moved</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1240" r="1544" b="1287"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Carleton to the farm now occupied by William Noonan. John</formatting></line>
<line l="183" t="1293" r="980" b="1338"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sr., had four sons and five daughters.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="7" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="272" t="1345" r="1545" b="1393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John: married Margaret Bell and they had three sons, Arthur</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="1389" r="1545" b="1438"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Nellie Affleck, had three children. Walter married Annie</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1434" r="1545" b="1485"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lord and they had two children Kenneth and Margaret, Edwin</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1479" r="1544" b="1528"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Alma Sobey and they had three children. Hope, Jean</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="1538" r="402" b="1573"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Sarah.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="273" t="1586" r="1546" b="1633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William: the second son married Flora Campbell, had one</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="1629" r="1546" b="1681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son Stuart, who died when young, and one daughter Matilda who</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="1673" r="1548" b="1723"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Alder Wright. They had three sons, Stuart, Wilber</formatting></line>
<line l="185" t="1733" r="426" b="1768"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Arthur.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="272" t="1780" r="1546" b="1832"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Henry: married Sarah Livingstone and they had three sons</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1824" r="1546" b="1875"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and three daughters. The sons were George who had two boys</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="1868" r="1545" b="1922"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and a girl. Louis married and had three children. Dr. Roland</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="1912" r="1547" b="1964"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married and had two children. They were Mammie who married</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="1959" r="1546" b="2010"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Webster and they had two children, Warren and Marion.</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="2003" r="1548" b="2054"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Matilda never married. Kate married in B.C. Haddah married</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="2048" r="1548" b="2102"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">J Livingstone and had two children. James settled on a farm</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="2094" r="1546" b="2144"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">next to John. He married a Miss Platts and they had one son,</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="2136" r="1549" b="2189"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James who was the founder of Crockett &amp; Storey. He married</formatting></line>
<line l="182" t="2182" r="1546" b="2236"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean Bell, had no family. John Sr&apos;s daughter Margaret,</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="2229" r="1549" b="2280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who married Alex. Affleck. They had five children, they were</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="2273" r="1548" b="2329"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret, who married Robert Howatt and had six children.</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="2317" r="1545" b="2371"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Pearl married George Irving, had no family; Hilda married Gleen</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="2362" r="1547" b="2416"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Waddell had two daughters Florilda married Norman MacWil-</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="2408" r="1546" b="2461"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">liams had no family. Liste married Ralph Steele, had two</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="2453" r="1549" b="2506"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children Roberta married Bernard Dale and had three</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="2502" r="1547" b="2551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children. Earle died while young. Alex Affleck&apos;s sons were</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="2544" r="1552" b="2597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stewart who married Pearl MacLean but had no family, Ham-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="615">
<line l="793" t="2641" r="931" b="2673"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—50—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1669" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="136" t="104" r="1538" b="2644"><region><rect l="136" t="104" r="1538" b="2644"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="10" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="154" t="118" r="1511" b="159"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mond married Elizabeth Bowness. They had two daughters,</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="161" r="1512" b="206"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean and Margaret, and one son Harold who married Dorothy</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="206" r="1513" b="247"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Darrach. William married Dorilda Castonquey, had one daught¬</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="257" r="690" b="296"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">er.   Joseph married away.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="5" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="251" t="329" r="1513" b="374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Sr&apos;s., second daughter was Mary who married Alex</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="374" r="1514" b="419"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Howatt. They had one son John W., who married Sadie MacPhee</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="417" r="1515" b="464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and they had a family of three. Mabel married Gordon MacWil-</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="462" r="1516" b="508"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">liams and they had three children: Reta married Douglas Cross-</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="505" r="1515" b="551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">man: Marion died while young and a son Lloyd who married</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="550" r="1516" b="596"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion Dawson. They had four girls and a boy. John W&apos;s son</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="594" r="1516" b="637"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Orin married Blanche Francis and they had one son Wendall.</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="639" r="1516" b="681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Melbourne married Bertha Halliwell and they had three boys</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="682" r="1516" b="732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Vernon, Austin and Kelsey and two girls Mildred and Greta.</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="727" r="1518" b="772"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alex Howatt also had a daughter Lydia who married Leslie Camp¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="772" r="1516" b="821"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bell. They had two sons Austin and Hensley, and two daughters</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="815" r="1518" b="864"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Velda and Olga. Austin married Ora Mclnnis and they had four</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="859" r="1517" b="909"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children, Robert, Audrey, Jean and Sharon. Velda married</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="904" r="1517" b="954"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank MacKay and they had two children, Earle who married</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="949" r="1515" b="998"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Pauline Irving and a daughter Sybil. Ensley married Dorothy</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="993" r="1517" b="1041"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacFarland had no family. Ellen the 3rd daughter married</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1038" r="1517" b="1086"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas Platts and they had eight sons, and one daughter. The</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1082" r="1517" b="1131"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons were William, John, Thomas, Henry, Russell, Fred, James</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1135" r="975" b="1174"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Robert and one daughter Margaret.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="251" t="1213" r="1516" b="1262"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Matilda another daughter married Andrew Aiton, and they</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1259" r="1517" b="1308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had five children, Ensley, Melbourne and Harry and two girls</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1315" r="580" b="1355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret and Grace.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="251" t="1392" r="1519" b="1436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lidia married Thomas MacMicken. This family will be in</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1436" r="1518" b="1487"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the history of the MacMickens. Many of the descendants of the</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1481" r="1520" b="1530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Crockett family have become scattered, but some are still living</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1537" r="464" b="1572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in this district.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="506">
<line l="660" t="1653" r="1013" b="1688"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE  MANSONS</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="249" t="1747" r="1521" b="1788"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alexander Manson came out from Scotland, when a young</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1788" r="1519" b="1834"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">man. He was often called long Alex. Heclerked in Strong&apos;s</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1834" r="1521" b="1883"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">store in Bedeque, but after his marriage, he bought a farm in</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1878" r="1521" b="1928"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton, then all woodland, and cleared fifty acres which he sold</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1923" r="1521" b="1968"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">later to Chas. Doull. Then he bought the Crockett farm. There</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1968" r="1520" b="2017"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were eight children in the family five sons and three daughters.</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="2013" r="1522" b="2060"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William who was injured in school playing ball and died from</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="2056" r="1521" b="2105"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the effects. George who was kicked on the head by a horse, and</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2101" r="1522" b="2147"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">died as a result. Herbert who died from pneumonia and John</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="2145" r="1522" b="2195"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who married Mary Clark. They had one daughter Georgie and</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2189" r="1522" b="2237"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lived on the farm later bought by Thomas McCarville and David</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2243" r="860" b="2287"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Manson, who married Ella Currie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="249" t="2323" r="1523" b="2373"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The daughters were Charlotte who married Benj amine</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="2368" r="1523" b="2415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cameron an undertaker in Carleton. They had two sons George</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2412" r="1523" b="2459"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Keith. Catherine the second daughter never married, who</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="2457" r="1523" b="2511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">passed away in California and Anna, Mrs. Dr. Reynolds who also</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="2513" r="527" b="2549"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">died in California.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="615">
<line l="769" t="2606" r="908" b="2639"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—51—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1742" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="176" t="148" r="1580" b="2670"><region><rect l="176" t="148" r="1580" b="2670"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="390">
<line l="581" t="157" r="1156" b="191"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE GILLESPIE FAMILY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="12" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="284" t="234" r="1555" b="277"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Gillespie homestead was built on the farm which is now</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="277" r="1555" b="322"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bounded by the first paved road to Borden and the North Carle-</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="321" r="1554" b="361"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton road. This farm had first been owned by &quot;King&quot; Mclnnis</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="366" r="1556" b="407"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stnd the remains of his home are down at the spring at the rear</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="410" r="1555" b="454"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the farm, and the hill which runs out to the road is still known</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="461" r="484" b="499"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at King&apos;s Hill.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="8" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="287" t="532" r="1558" b="576"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Gillespie and his wife Euphemia Campbell landed</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="577" r="1558" b="620"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from Dumfries, Scotland, on the ship &quot;Hector&quot; April 3rd, 1829.</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="620" r="1559" b="667"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had two sons, William who married Flora Campbell, and</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="664" r="1558" b="712"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">they had no children. James, who married Sarah Jane Campbell,</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="708" r="1557" b="750"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and lived in the home at Carleton. They had three sons and</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="754" r="1558" b="799"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">three daughters, namely — James Campbell familiary known as</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="798" r="1560" b="841"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;J. C.&quot; who married Eliza Jane Carruthers and lived on the farm</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="842" r="1559" b="888"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which had formerly belonged to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="886" r="1560" b="930"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carruthers. J. C. died at middle age and his widow lives in Char-</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="932" r="1306" b="978"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lottetown, quite active, both physically and mentally.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="4" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="289" t="1009" r="1562" b="1054"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The second son, William Ewen married his cousin, Bessie</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1053" r="1562" b="1103"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gillespie, from Long River. They lived on the farm, which is</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1098" r="1563" b="1146"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now owned by Arnold Murray. They had three children, Sterling</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1141" r="1563" b="1186"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who married Verna Weeks of Carleton, and who was manager of</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1187" r="1564" b="1233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Perfection Dairy at Souris, and is now living in Charlotte-</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="1230" r="1561" b="1281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">town, where their only child, Ann, is married to Stewart Aitken.</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="1276" r="1563" b="1326"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Olive, on the staff of the Queen Charlotte High School, who mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="1320" r="1561" b="1366"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Preston Green of Malpeque, and has one daughter, Shirley,</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1364" r="1564" b="1411"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married to Art Craig of Middleton, they have a daughter, Janet</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1422" r="314" b="1461"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lynn.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="4" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="291" t="1487" r="1564" b="1537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Viola, married to Duncan MacPherson of Charlottetown, who</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="1542" r="624" b="1581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has one son, Archie.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="101">
<line l="292" t="1614" r="1295" b="1658"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. W. E. Gillespie still lives in Charlottetown.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="290" t="1681" r="1565" b="1731"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The youngest son, Thomas Benjamin, married Mamie Lefur-</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1726" r="1565" b="1778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gey of North Bedeque. They had three children, Hazen, who lives</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1770" r="1566" b="1817"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on the homestead and works at the Scale House at Borden. He</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1815" r="1564" b="1861"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Verna Gardiner of Cape Traverse and they had one child,</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1860" r="1564" b="1910"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dianne, now married to Wayne Howatt of Cape Traverse, who</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="1905" r="1567" b="1951"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">live with Hazen. They have a girl, Terry, and a baby boy, Ben¬</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1949" r="1565" b="2002"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">jamin Bruce, died of pneumonia at the age of three months,</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="1993" r="1567" b="2040"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">November 1961. The youngest son, Gordon Campbell, attended</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="2038" r="1566" b="2090"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Prince of Wales College, taught in Carleton School, enlisted in</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="2081" r="1567" b="2130"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the R.C.A.F. in World War II and served overseas as Flying Of¬</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="2126" r="1568" b="2179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ficer, completed his tour of operations and received the Distin¬</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="2171" r="1567" b="2226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">guished Flying Cross for his services. After the war, he at¬</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="2215" r="1567" b="2265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tended Acadia University, where he met his future wife, Kathyrn</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="2260" r="1567" b="2313"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Machum, of Wolfville, then obtained his B.A., in Business Admin¬</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="2304" r="1566" b="2355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">istration at Queens University, Kingston, then married and has</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="2349" r="1568" b="2402"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">three daughters, Mary Susan, Janet and Lynn. The live in Mont¬</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="2393" r="1567" b="2444"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">real where he is a Comptroller at Canadair Co. Ltd. T. B.&apos;s only</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="2439" r="1566" b="2494"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Doris, married Hazen MacWilliams of Cape Traverse.</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="2482" r="1568" b="2538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">For the past five years she has been Principal of Carleton Sid¬</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="2544" r="421" b="2585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing School.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="617">
<line l="808" t="2633" r="948" b="2665"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—52—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1655" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="122" t="124" r="1522" b="2652"><region><rect l="122" t="124" r="1522" b="2652"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="9" startIndent="89" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="228" t="130" r="1495" b="169"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James Gillespie&apos;s three daughters were: Euphemia, married</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="175" r="1496" b="214"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Rev. Donald Campbell. They had three daughters, Ruth, a</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="219" r="1497" b="258"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">high school teacher in Saskatoon; Olive, in Toronto; and Mar-</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="263" r="1496" b="302"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">jorie who with her husband, Carl Gryte, teach in high school in</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="307" r="1495" b="346"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Toronto. They have three sons, Carl Campbell, Daniel Gillespie,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="351" r="1498" b="391"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Stephen. &quot;Phemie&apos;s&quot; son, Dr. James Campbell, is a specialist</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="396" r="411" b="428"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Saskatoon.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="233" t="474" r="1498" b="512"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Rebecca &quot;Rae&quot; was a school teacher and taught in the West</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="518" r="1498" b="557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">until she was pensioned, and moved to Charlottetown where she</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="563" r="400" b="595"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">died in 1960.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="234" t="641" r="1499" b="679"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Jennie&quot;, Sarah Jane, was also a school teacher who taught</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="685" r="1499" b="724"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in different schools in P.E.I., then married Conductor Ernest</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="728" r="1497" b="768"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">McLaren. They lived in Charlottetown with their son Victor,</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="773" r="1498" b="812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">until he retired from the C.N.R. and they moved to Toronto where</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="817" r="1500" b="856"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Victor married and has two daughters. He was a Sports Writer</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="861" r="1498" b="895"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for the Toronto Star. Conductor McLaren died in 1957 and his</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="907" r="508" b="939"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife died in 1961.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="399">
<line l="537" t="1020" r="1096" b="1053"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MACFARLANE HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="5" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="1089" r="1500" b="1128"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">David MacFarlane was born in Bedeque, Prince Edward Is¬</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1133" r="1499" b="1174"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land. When a young man he moved to Carleton and bought the</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1178" r="1500" b="1219"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farm now owned by Mark McCarville and was the first MacFar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1221" r="1501" b="1258"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lane settler in this district. In 1842 he married Ellen Manson of</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1266" r="1493" b="1308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton, and to this union was born nine (9) children, five (5)</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1310" r="1499" b="1352"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons and four (4) daughters. Besides being a farmer David was</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1354" r="1500" b="1397"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a carpenter and helped build the old Carleton School which still</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1399" r="1498" b="1439"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stands at Carleton Corner. It is said that during the year 1858,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1443" r="1501" b="1486"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">when a terrible epidemic of diphtheria broke out in this part of</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1487" r="1502" b="1530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.E.I, that Mr. MacFarlane was busy day and night building cof¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1532" r="1501" b="1576"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fins, in which to bury the dead, of which two (2) were his own</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1576" r="1502" b="1620"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children, William A., who was only three (3) years old and John</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="1626" r="771" b="1666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">T., who was two (2) years old.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="233" t="1702" r="1500" b="1744"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James, his eldest son, was like his father, also a carpenter,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1745" r="1501" b="1783"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">but little is known about his work as he died in 1875 when only</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1794" r="731" b="1833"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">twenty-three (23) years old.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="235" t="1868" r="1505" b="1912"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Ellen moved to Haverhill, Mass., and worked in a ment¬</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1913" r="1347" b="1957"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">al hospital.   She married Finaldo Glines and died in 1932.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="234" t="1990" r="1505" b="2034"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald, another son, was also a carpenter and helped build</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2036" r="1505" b="2078"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the old Landsdown Hotel at Cape Traverse wharf, and also the</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2080" r="1506" b="2126"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">present Free Church of Scotland, of Cape Traverse, the spire of</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2124" r="1505" b="2168"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which for many years was a guiding landmark for the ice-boat</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2173" r="815" b="2212"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">crews when crossing the Straits.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="235" t="2250" r="1506" b="2290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Eliza Jean taught school at Carleton before moving to Den¬</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2294" r="1506" b="2339"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ver, U.S.A., where she received further education at University</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2338" r="1506" b="2377"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and later became the first woman in North America to become</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2382" r="1505" b="2424"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Assistant District Attorney. She practiced in San Francisco,</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2426" r="1507" b="2471"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">her work being largely with broken homes and needy children.</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="2471" r="1507" b="2515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">She married Harry DeGrear in 1899 and John Tedigh in 1927.</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="2520" r="669" b="2564"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">She passed away in 1936.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="611">
<line l="749" t="2616" r="887" b="2648"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—53—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1734" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="178" t="140" r="1590" b="2696"><region><rect l="178" t="140" r="1590" b="2696"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="10" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="290" t="160" r="1558" b="205"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Barbara married Montague Campbell of Cape Traverse in</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="204" r="1558" b="255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1895 and passed away in 1932. They had one(l) daughter,</formatting></line>
<line l="197" t="250" r="1558" b="300"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Helen (Mrs. Julian Herring) at present living in Charlottetown.</formatting></line>
<line l="198" t="291" r="1561" b="340"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Helen attended P.W.C. and taught school at Cape Traverse. Af¬</formatting></line>
<line l="199" t="336" r="1561" b="388"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter being married she lived in Borden for several years before</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="379" r="1563" b="433"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moving to Charlottetown. She now conducts the Program &quot;To¬</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="424" r="1562" b="479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">day at Home&quot; - on C.F.C.Y. T.V. and also the Women&apos;s Institute</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="468" r="1564" b="525"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">program on radio. She is a Past Worthy Mistress of the Order</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="512" r="1563" b="562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Eastern Star of. Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia. She</formatting></line>
<line l="201" t="556" r="1564" b="610"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has three (3) children. Doris (Mrs. Edward Flanagan), Barbara</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="599" r="1565" b="657"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(Mrs Dana Robinson) and Garth, an accountant at Canada Pack¬</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="644" r="1565" b="700"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ers, Charlottetown. Doris has four (4) children, Barbara, Mich¬</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="689" r="1300" b="745"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ael,&apos; Cathy and Robbie.   Garth has one (1) son, Paul.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98">
<line l="295" t="779" r="1433" b="830"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret Louise died in 1889 aged sixteen (16) years.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="297" t="866" r="1566" b="914"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gordon farmed the homestead at Carleton for many years</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="906" r="1567" b="961"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and later bought the farm in Augustine Cove, now operated by</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="953" r="1566" b="1009"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his grandson who bears his name. In his young manhood Mr.</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="996" r="1567" b="1049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacFarlane worked for seventeen (17) winters on the ice-boats</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1041" r="1567" b="1095"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which carried passengers and mails from Cape Traverse P.E.I, to</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1083" r="1568" b="1144"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Tormentine, N.B. In 1891 he married Catherine Webster of</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1129" r="1560" b="1188"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Augustine Cove and passed away in 1938 at the age of eighty (80)</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1203" r="322" b="1235"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="296" t="1258" r="1568" b="1314"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr and Mrs. MacFarlane had two (2) sons, Frank p., and</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1304" r="1569" b="1364"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Harry B. During the First World War Frank enlisted m 1916</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1351" r="1569" b="1405"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in the 2nd Siege Battery and went overseas in March 1917. He</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1393" r="1568" b="1451"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fought in such battles as Vimy Ridge, Amiene and many others.</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1438" r="1571" b="1494"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">After the Armistice in November, 1918, he was returned home in</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1485" r="1569" b="1536"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">March 1919 Shortly afterwards he married Daisy Howatt ot</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1523" r="1570" b="1588"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Augustine Cove. They had one (1) daughter, Kathleen Frank</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1568" r="1571" b="1628"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farmed until 1940 when he, his wife and daughter moved to Mur¬</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="1612" r="1570" b="1677"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ray Harbour where he and his brother-in-law Crilly Lea, formed a</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1660" r="1568" b="1723"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a partnership in the merchant business, known as Lea and Mac¬</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="1709" r="1171" b="1762"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Farlane.   His wife died in 1941 and he in 1952.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="297" t="1789" r="1572" b="1847"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kathleen attended P.W.C. for two (2) years and taught</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="1834" r="1569" b="1895"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school at Augustine Cove, Central Royalty and Murray Harbour,</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1878" r="1571" b="1940"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">before entering the P.E.I. Hospital School of Nursing from which</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="1924" r="1569" b="1987"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">she graduated in 1945. After practicing her profession on P.E.I,</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="1966" r="1572" b="2030"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for a few years she went to British Columbia where she married</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2012" r="1568" b="2076"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Buries Bowler in 1950. She has four (4) children, Beverley,</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="2059" r="1568" b="2121"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Patricia, Paula, and Robert. She is now Camp Nurse in a logging</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2121" r="693" b="2169"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">camp at Pitt Lake, B.C.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="297" t="2191" r="1573" b="2251"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Harry married Edna Howatt of Augustine Cove in 1918 and</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2237" r="1561" b="2296"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has continued to farm. They have three (3) children, Margaret</formatting></line>
<line l="205" t="2280" r="1566" b="2342"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gordon and Kathryn. Margaret attended P.W.C for two (2)</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="2325" r="1573" b="2391"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years and taught school at South Granville and Augustine Cove</formatting></line>
<line l="203" t="2357" r="1574" b="2446"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sore entering the P.E.L Hospital school of Nursing from wh^</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2416" r="1574" b="2481"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">she graduated in 1945. She worked with the P.E.I. Hospital tor</formatting></line>
<line l="204" t="2458" r="1575" b="2522"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">some time then moved to Toronto, Ontario where she is now Sup¬</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="2498" r="1570" b="2566"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ervisor of the Women&apos;s Surgical Ward in the East General Hos-</formatting></line>
<line l="202" t="2577" r="304" b="2618"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pital.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="616">
<line l="813" t="2658" r="951" b="2691"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—54—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1654" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="124" t="112" r="1520" b="2650"><region><rect l="124" t="112" r="1520" b="2650"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="96" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="235" t="121" r="1493" b="161"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gordon farms the homestead in partnership with his father.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="233" t="165" r="1495" b="207"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kathryn graduated from the School of Commerce, P.W.C.</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="210" r="1496" b="251"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and for several years was Secretary to Dr. Shaw of the Depart¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="247" r="1496" b="295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ment of Education^ Charlottetown. She married Windsor Bre-</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="299" r="1497" b="340"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">haut and they have one (1) daughter, Barbara Gail. They re¬</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="346" r="625" b="384"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side in Central Royalty.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="477">
<line l="616" t="414" r="1017" b="447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">IRVING   HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="6" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="234" t="493" r="1495" b="533"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The farm where Boyd Lowther now lives was James Irving&apos;s</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="538" r="1490" b="578"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who was married to Mary Ann Carruthers. They had one (1)</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="582" r="1497" b="623"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Annie who married Stephen Muttart and he moved</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="626" r="1490" b="667"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">into the home where they lived to celebrate their sixty-fifth (65)</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="674" r="569" b="712"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wedding anniversary.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="232" t="749" r="1498" b="790"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">There were five (5) children, Maria, James, Irving, Lydia</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="798" r="365" b="830"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Hettie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="7" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="230" t="872" r="1489" b="910"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Maria married John Toombs of Cavendish and had two (2)</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="916" r="1495" b="959"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughters and three (3) sons. Florence the oldest of the family</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="961" r="1496" b="999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was born and lived in this home till she went as a saleslady to</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1004" r="1496" b="1044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Summerside and afterward married Norman Campbell of Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1056" r="326" b="1087"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Traverse.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="94">
<line l="233" t="1131" r="1146" b="1170"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James died in boyhood from Scarlet Fever.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="6" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="234" t="1207" r="1497" b="1250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irving stayed home on the farm and married Ethel MacLean</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1251" r="1497" b="1292"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who came from Scotland at three (3) years of age. When the</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1295" r="1497" b="1338"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farm was sold to the present owners, Irving built a lovely home</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1339" r="1491" b="1382"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Carleton where they have lived to celebrate their sixtieth (60)</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1388" r="849" b="1428"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wedding anniversary in July, 1960.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="233" t="1463" r="1497" b="1507"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lydia too remained at home and took care of her parents in</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1507" r="1499" b="1551"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their old age. After her Mother&apos;s death she was housekeeper for</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1552" r="1497" b="1594"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a time for Rev. J. H. Bishop and later for her cousin, the late</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1603" r="414" b="1641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George Doull.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="235" t="1675" r="1500" b="1715"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hettie was a school teacher and married Lloyd Linkletter of</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1721" r="1499" b="1759"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Linkletter Road and she and her husband are living on the same</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1768" r="903" b="1808"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farm as their son, Harold Linkletter.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="234" t="1855" r="1498" b="1897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On the Irving farm in the third field north of the highway,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1899" r="1500" b="1943"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in the early days was a grist mill run by a Mr. Dickie. The</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1943" r="1500" b="1989"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stones he used in grinding were brougbt to the spacious lawn and</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1988" r="1501" b="2035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">placed beside the picturesque flower garden as ornaments not far</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2032" r="1500" b="2076"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from the shapely tall spruce tree which could be seen for miles</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2082" r="878" b="2123"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">away towering above average trees.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="233" t="2167" r="1503" b="2204"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Further east on this road was a saw-mill which was first</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2211" r="1502" b="2255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">run by John D. Muttart followed by Alexander Robblee also</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2255" r="1502" b="2295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James Thomas Cameron who lived in a house not far from the</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="2300" r="1503" b="2346"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">present Carleton C.N.R. Station. Margaret Cameron was their</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2350" r="351" b="2390"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">only child.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="234" t="2424" r="1502" b="2467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George Bynon too run the mill and lived in a house nearby.</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2468" r="1502" b="2509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He was married to Martha Clare and had five (5) children, Roy,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2516" r="817" b="2558"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert, Agnes, Alfred and Mary.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="607">
<line l="746" t="2613" r="884" b="2645"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—55—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1745" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="172" t="114" r="1574" b="2668"><region><rect l="172" t="114" r="1574" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="287" t="130" r="1554" b="179"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Shortly after his school days Roy went to New Brunswick</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="174" r="1552" b="229"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and married Barbara Nickerson. At present he and his wife, one</formatting></line>
<line l="200" t="218" r="1553" b="271"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(1) son and two (2) daughters are living near Niagara Falls, On¬</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="262" r="299" b="295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tario.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="4" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="40">
<line l="286" t="333" r="1554" b="381"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert, is unmarried and has lived most of his life since</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="377" r="954" b="418"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">leaving his boyhood home in Halifax.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="5" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="285" t="447" r="1552" b="495"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Agnes went to Massachusetts and married Arthur Stewart.</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="490" r="1552" b="538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">After her Mother&apos;s death, she, her husband and son Gordon came</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="535" r="1553" b="586"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and looked after her Father. Her husband was a carpenter and</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="579" r="1552" b="630"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lived here for seven (7) years during which time a son, Wendall</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="624" r="1551" b="676"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and a daughter, Evelyn were born. Owing to ill health they mov¬</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="669" r="1553" b="720"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed back to U.S.A., in 1930 where Mr. Stewart passed away over</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="714" r="1552" b="763"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">twenty-five (25) years ago. Agnes lives with her son, Gordon</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="758" r="1553" b="809"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and family. Wendall is married and lives in California and Evelyn</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="801" r="1423" b="846"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is also married and lives near her Mother in Massachusetts.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="3" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="285" t="873" r="1555" b="920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alfred Bynon enlisted in the First World War, went over¬</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="918" r="1554" b="962"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">seas and was in the front line ranks. He returned home after the</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="961" r="1554" b="1009"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Armistice and due to the exposure and hardships of war which</formatting></line>
<line l="195" t="1006" r="1555" b="1052"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he endured at an early age, did not live long after his home com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1052" r="264" b="1089"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="284" t="1123" r="1557" b="1171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Bynon went away to U.S.A. and married Morris Rey¬</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1167" r="1554" b="1214"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nolds, a native of Nova Scotia. She had two (2) sons, Alfred</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1212" r="1554" b="1260"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Layton. Her health failed and she passed away at an early</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1266" r="269" b="1294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">age.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="2" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="283" t="1328" r="1555" b="1372"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Deegan, a war veteran, bought the Bynon home and</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1373" r="1556" b="1413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with his wife and son, Ernest lived in the home till his retire¬</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="1418" r="1553" b="1463"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ment from C.N.R. While living here they adopted a daughter,</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="1463" r="1555" b="1508"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion and also had a son, John born to them. Now the family</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1508" r="636" b="1547"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">live in Amherst, N.S.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="284" t="1579" r="1557" b="1620"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The house was moved to Carleton Siding and is the home of</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1623" r="1555" b="1666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Quigley and family. The six (6) acres of land is owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="1668" r="473" b="1701"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Haslam.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="2" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="287" t="1739" r="1556" b="1774"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On the north side of this road was a farm where John Robin¬</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1783" r="1556" b="1824"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son and family lived. In their sojourn here, five (5) of the fam¬</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="1829" r="1556" b="1868"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ily died of Diphtheria. William Siliker bought this farm. His</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1874" r="1554" b="1915"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife was an Irving, a relative of James Irving. They had a son,</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="1919" r="1554" b="1959"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">James who married Martha Doull and lived in part of the house.</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1964" r="1488" b="2003"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had four (4) children, Ellen, William, Fraser and Laura.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="282" t="2035" r="1556" b="2074"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ellen married and had three (3) sons, Artemas, Stanford</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="2079" r="1556" b="2113"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and James Cameron who lived in the home and went to school</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="2124" r="1556" b="2164"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Carleton. James is the only one living and is married and</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="2169" r="659" b="2202"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lives in Charlottetown.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="281" t="2238" r="1557" b="2279"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William lived in Albany and Tryon and was twice married</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="2283" r="1426" b="2323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and has a son.   He is living in Moncton, N.B., with his son.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="1" startIndent="85" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="281" t="2353" r="1557" b="2394"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fraser married Sadie Hayes of Searletown and had three</formatting></line>
<line l="196" t="2399" r="1370" b="2440"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(3) girls and one son.  He lives in O&apos;Peary with his son.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="281" t="2443" r="1558" b="2479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Laura married Ernest Woodside of Knutsford and lived in</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="2488" r="1558" b="2530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the home for some years, then moved to Chelton and is now a</formatting></line>
<line l="188" t="2532" r="1558" b="2575"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">widow living in Massachusetts.   She had two (2) daughters and</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="613">
<line l="801" t="2631" r="941" b="2663"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—56—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1680" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="136" t="86" r="1534" b="2628"><region><rect l="136" t="86" r="1534" b="2628"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="160" t="106" r="1518" b="163"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a son. Norma, her older daughter is married to George Camp¬</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="150" r="1518" b="202"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bell and lives in the western part of the Island. Her other</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="195" r="1180" b="241"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter and son live near her in Massachusetts.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="526">
<line l="678" t="289" r="992" b="329"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MACQUARRIE</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="252" t="353" r="1518" b="403"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John MacQuarrie was born in Bonshaw and married Mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="161" t="398" r="1515" b="453"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">garet Campbell, a sister of Hector Campbell of Borden and Hugh</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="441" r="1516" b="493"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Campbell of Searletown. They had six children, two sons and</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="485" r="474" b="524"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">four daughters.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="254" t="557" r="1516" b="609"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1.  Donald married Lucy Bears from Brooklyn, they had two</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="600" r="1504" b="650"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children. Annie who married                                      from U.S.A</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="645" r="1517" b="695"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and died quite young. John married Mabel Bramhall of Carle-</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="689" r="1516" b="738"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton, when quite young he moved to U.S.A. where he learned en¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="735" r="1515" b="782"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">graving of jewellery. He was engraver for T. Eatons of Moncton</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="777" r="1517" b="827"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for a number of years. They and their family still reside in Monc¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="823" r="340" b="860"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton, N.B.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98">
<line l="251" t="894" r="1334" b="939"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2.  John married Katie Forbes and lived in Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98">
<line l="251" t="965" r="862" b="1003"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3.  Flora married James Cook.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98">
<line l="253" t="1035" r="1191" b="1077"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">4.  Mary Jane married a Mr. Bears from East.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="98">
<line l="251" t="1105" r="921" b="1144"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5.  Euphemia who never married.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="250" t="1184" r="1514" b="1232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">6.  Another daughter married a Mr. Compton from East and</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1228" r="1516" b="1278"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their daughter Margaret married Rev. James MacDougall who</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1273" r="1516" b="1325"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was Church of Scotland, minister in Cape Traverse for many</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1318" r="1515" b="1365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years. They had four children George, Emma, James and Ada.</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1361" r="1517" b="1410"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George and Emma both married but both died young. Ada mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1405" r="1516" b="1452"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Alfred Cleveland and live in Vancouver, B.C. James married</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1450" r="1518" b="1496"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a Miss MacLean and he and his family now reside in Summer-</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="1494" r="244" b="1527"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="457">
<line l="609" t="1596" r="1060" b="1633"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE  MACMICKEN&apos;S</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="251" t="1672" r="1511" b="1723"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sometime before the Miramichi Fire, Oct. 7, 1825, three (3)</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1716" r="1517" b="1767"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacMicken Brothers came from Scotland and settled there. They</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1761" r="1517" b="1808"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lost all their possessions in the fire and two (2) brothers came</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1806" r="1517" b="1852"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Prince Edward Island landing in the Miminegash area. From</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1850" r="1517" b="1893"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">there Thomas came to Carleton and settled on land now owned</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="1894" r="1517" b="1945"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by Lloyd MacWilliams. He married Lydia Crockett and they</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1939" r="1314" b="1987"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had four (4) boys: Bruce, George, Thomas and Burpee.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="40">
<line l="248" t="2019" r="1516" b="2067"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bruce married Sadie Doull of Carleton and died in early life</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2064" r="521" b="2103"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">leaving no family.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="97" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="249" t="2143" r="1518" b="2190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George married Ada Myers and bought land owned by King</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2187" r="1511" b="2232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Maclnnis and they had five (5) children: Stewart, Thomas,</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2232" r="1517" b="2272"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur, Hazel and Wesley. Stewart married Annie Howatt of</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2278" r="1516" b="2320"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Tryon and settled in Carleton. Their only son, Arthur lives in</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2322" r="1517" b="2361"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charlottetown and is married to Helen Robertson and their</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2367" r="1152" b="2407"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children are: William, Ronnie, Anne and Karen.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="247" t="2447" r="1515" b="2490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George&apos;s second son, Thomas went away when a young man</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2492" r="637" b="2525"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and lives in Vancouver.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="611">
<line l="763" t="2590" r="901" b="2622"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—57—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1719" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="172" t="152" r="1556" b="504"><region><rect l="172" t="152" r="1556" b="504"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="92">
<line l="272" t="168" r="753" b="205"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Arthur died in infancy.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="272" t="225" r="1533" b="276"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hazel married Ralph Campbell of Fernwood and has four (4)</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="270" r="1540" b="323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons: George, Neil, Lome and Wesley. The youngest son, Wesley</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="313" r="1542" b="364"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacMicken married Dorothy Wright of Middleton and live in Hali¬</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="358" r="1540" b="408"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fax.   Their children are: Ada, Bertha, Helen, Robert and Susan.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="94">
<line l="274" t="430" r="1476" b="478"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas MacMicken Jr., died at fifteen (15) years of age.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="412" t="530" r="1322" b="1166"><region><rect l="412" t="530" r="1322" b="1166"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="170" t="1174" r="1578" b="2674"><region><rect l="170" t="1174" r="1578" b="2674"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="491">
<line l="680" t="1180" r="1050" b="1212"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">BURPEE   McMICKEN</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="7" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="281" t="1258" r="1552" b="1312"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Burpee married Margaret Gillis MacLeod and settled on part</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1301" r="1552" b="1353"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the old home farm. He took a keen interest in politics and</formatting></line>
<line l="190" t="1347" r="1554" b="1398"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">school affairs being a faithful efficient secretary of school trus¬</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1391" r="1552" b="1443"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tees for thirty-five (35) years in this district. His son Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="189" t="1434" r="1555" b="1490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Pyrtle Crossman of Cape Traverse and they and their</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="1485" r="1076" b="1537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">only son John reside on the old homestead.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="6" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="282" t="1549" r="1554" b="1600"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ellen MacMicken, a sister of Thomas Sr., married James</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="1593" r="1556" b="1652"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Campbell. They had a daughter Ada now Mrs. William Carruth-</formatting></line>
<line l="191" t="1652" r="685" b="1693"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ers formerly of Borden.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="322" lineSpacing="70">
<line l="511" t="1737" r="1233" b="1781"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE MUNCEY&apos;S OF CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="632" lineSpacing="70">
<line l="821" t="1813" r="922" b="1846"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">AND</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="385" lineSpacing="70">
<line l="574" t="1880" r="1169" b="1920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE TELEGRAPH OFFICE</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="284" t="1945" r="1558" b="1997"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Townshend Coffin Muncey, the youngest in the family of</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="1991" r="1558" b="2044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Francis Muncey and his wife, Ann Madden, was born in the</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="2035" r="1557" b="2093"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Magdalens Islands, January 2nd., 1847 and died at Carleton, P.E.I.</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2080" r="1558" b="2137"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">February 9th., 1904. In 1865 he came to Charlottetown where</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="2125" r="1558" b="2180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his father kept store. Here &quot;Town,&quot; as he was known and his</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="2172" r="1559" b="2225"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">brother Singleton who was later operator at Tormentme, Sum-</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2216" r="1560" b="2269"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">merside and other points, were employed by the Telegraph Com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2262" r="1560" b="2319"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pany This company was successor of the Newfoundland and</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="2306" r="1557" b="2359"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Prince Edward Island Electric Telegraph Co., and later still of the</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2353" r="1562" b="2405"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">New York-Newfoundland and London Telegraph Company, com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="192" t="2396" r="1560" b="2455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">panies which envisaged the Island as an important link in the</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2442" r="1558" b="2495"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">transatlantic service but which later shunted its facilities into the</formatting></line>
<line l="193" t="2487" r="1562" b="2545"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">quiet bywaters of purely local service. This serice was at first</formatting></line>
<line l="194" t="2532" r="1559" b="2586"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">so seldom used that when the packet ships ran regularly m the</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="612">
<line l="801" t="2639" r="939" b="2670"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—58—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1679" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="134" t="130" r="1524" b="270"><region><rect l="134" t="130" r="1524" b="270"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="152" t="137" r="1507" b="171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">summer the office closed down for lack of work. Indeed on</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="182" r="1508" b="221"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lake&apos;s map of 1863 the telegraph cable service is labelled &quot;win¬</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="227" r="456" b="265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter telegraph.&quot;</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="602" t="902" r="1020" b="952"><region><rect l="602" t="902" r="1020" b="952"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="605" t="903" r="1014" b="951"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">::-\:^-l:XM-2uy;-\:</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="986" t="896" r="1050" b="930"><region><rect l="986" t="896" r="1050" b="930"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="1050" t="746" r="1272" b="948"><region><rect l="1050" t="746" r="1272" b="948"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="120" t="968" r="1524" b="2652"><region><rect l="120" t="968" r="1524" b="2652"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="454" rightIndent="237" startIndent="-226" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="367" t="974" r="1270" b="1000"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">L   TO R HEDLEY MUTTART, S MUNCEY, IRVING MUTTART,</formatting></line>
<line l="593" t="1026" r="1038" b="1049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">EARLY    TELEGRAPH    OFFICE</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="235" t="1078" r="1501" b="1117"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Town Muncey came to Cape Traverse as a linesman. He</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1122" r="1507" b="1162"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">learned telegraphy at the cable hut in Cape Traverse on the</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="1167" r="1501" b="1205"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farm of Captain Lewis Muttart of ice-boat fame. The first tele¬</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1210" r="1502" b="1250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">graph operator was possibly Michael Quinlan though an old di¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1255" r="1501" b="1295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">rectory suggests that possibly Captain Lewis himself was an</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1299" r="1501" b="1339"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">operator. The latter was married to Susan Jane Allen of Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1343" r="1500" b="1383"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Tormentine and the news of the birth at Cape Traverse of their</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1387" r="1499" b="1428"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter Harriet on December 11, 1852 is believed to have been</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1431" r="1499" b="1472"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one of the earliest local messages sent through the undersea cable</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1478" r="556" b="1517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Cape Tormentine.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="6" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="1546" r="1501" b="1588"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Harriet Muttart grew up with the cable service. Her oldest</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1590" r="1501" b="1632"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">brother George became the second operator and in 1873 she be¬</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="1634" r="1500" b="1677"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">came the wife of T. C. Muncey, who for a short time was possibly</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1679" r="1501" b="1722"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the third operator at Cape Traverse. He went to Kensington in</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1723" r="1499" b="1766"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1875 when the P.E.I. Railway opened its first office there, the</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1769" r="1500" b="1812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muncey&apos;s moved back to Lot 28 in 1877 when the Cape Traverse</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1813" r="1501" b="1856"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">office of the Anglo American Telegraph Co., (note how the name</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1857" r="1501" b="1901"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">changed again) was moved to Carleton to suit the operator. Here</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1901" r="1500" b="1946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">T. C. Muncy bought a lot complete with comfortable house</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1946" r="1501" b="1990"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">from the sons of William Brow early Carleton merchant. On this</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1991" r="1501" b="2035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he moved an old kitchen purchased from John Mclnnis, North</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2036" r="1501" b="2079"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton. This was fixed up as a terminal office for the Anglo</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="2080" r="1501" b="2125"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">American Telegraph Company, with a sign hung out. The hours</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2125" r="1436" b="2169"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of service were 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. closing for meals 12-1 and 6-7.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="2194" r="1502" b="2236"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The office at Carleton received messages from Sackville</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2239" r="1502" b="2287"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">originating in many parts of the world for all the Island. It re¬</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="2283" r="1501" b="2331"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">peated these messages and so was called a &quot;repeating office.&quot;</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2328" r="1502" b="2377"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The electric power came from a series of old fashioned batteries.</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2372" r="1504" b="2421"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">These were glass jars containing a solution of blues tone (copper</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="2417" r="1505" b="2468"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sulphate) with a cr°ws foot in the middle of each connected to¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2462" r="1504" b="2513"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gether with copper wire covered with gutta percha. The crows</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2506" r="1504" b="2557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">foot was a squared upright metal rod standing on five short legs.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="607">
<line l="746" t="2614" r="885" b="2648"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—59—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1771" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="190" t="150" r="1610" b="2678"><region><rect l="190" t="150" r="1610" b="2678"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="27" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="207" t="160" r="1567" b="200"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">At first there were 24 one quart jars but later there were 12 two-</formatting></line>
<line l="207" t="203" r="1568" b="246"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and-a-half quart jars. These batteries were kept in a little closet</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="248" r="1567" b="288"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">off the office and it was always someone&apos;s duty to see that any</formatting></line>
<line l="206" t="292" r="1568" b="334"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">corrossion was wiped away and the jars properly filled with cop-</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="339" r="743" b="380"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">,per sulphate once a week.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="26" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="299" t="405" r="1569" b="447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The office was heated by a low pot-bellied stove — a Hot</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="450" r="1569" b="492"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Blast — which always had its middle whitewashed. A brass lamp,</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="496" r="1569" b="537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stil in existance, lit the office on winter evenings. It sat on a</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="539" r="1568" b="581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bracket and its small candlepower was re-inforced by a reflector.</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="585" r="1368" b="627"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">On holidays the flagpole on the office never went bare.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="19" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="302" t="652" r="1574" b="697"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The telegraph line, unlike the present day ones which fol¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="697" r="1573" b="742"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lows the Railway, went to Charlottetown by way of Crapaud and</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="742" r="1573" b="786"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cornwall. The nearest operator was at Crapaud where for many</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="785" r="1574" b="833"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years Penelope Howatt was operator. She was one of the earliest</formatting></line>
<line l="209" t="831" r="1573" b="877"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pupils to learn telegraphy in the Carleton office. T. C. Muncey</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="876" r="1574" b="921"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">trained many other operators most of whom are now forgotten.</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="918" r="1576" b="966"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They included Al Laird of North Bedeque, Herb Muttart of Au¬</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="961" r="1576" b="1011"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gustine Cove, W. A. MacQuarrie of Hampton, Fred Pearson of</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1007" r="1576" b="1050"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Chelton and at least one of Carleton&apos;s school teachers, Ethel</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1055" r="1255" b="1099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Brennan, who took lessons after school each day.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="306" t="1121" r="1577" b="1170"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Key tapping was music to all the Muncey family and the</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1165" r="1578" b="1212"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children in the home, Sue, Frank, Sing, Neenah and Nan all</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1209" r="1579" b="1254"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">learned to receive and send messages by Morse Code, and all</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1254" r="1580" b="1299"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">worked in the office when their father needed them. T. C. Mun¬</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1298" r="1579" b="1350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cey died of pneumonia in 1904 and his office saw a succession of</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="1344" r="1578" b="1395"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">young operators from Charlottetown including Charles Webster,</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1388" r="1580" b="1437"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cleveland White, Ernest Large, Jack MacLeod and Mark Calder.</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="1434" r="1581" b="1478"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">All these boarded in the Muncey home. The office closed out in</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1477" r="1582" b="1529"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the period 1914-1916 when Borden was born at Carleton Point</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="1521" r="1581" b="1569"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and the new Car Ferry terminal needed a telegraph office close</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="1580" r="275" b="1619"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="11" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="310" t="1635" r="1582" b="1684"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A little earlier, 1913, the Western Union took over the Island</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="1680" r="1582" b="1732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">telegraph lines though the name Anglo-American continued, to</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="1723" r="1584" b="1773"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">be used till 1924. Since 1929 telegraph service has been closely</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1769" r="1584" b="1822"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">integrated with the Government-owned railways and has been</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="1817" r="1213" b="1861"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">known as the Canadian National Telegraph Co.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="310" t="1884" r="1586" b="1933"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The little Anglo-American office at Carleton was sold by</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1929" r="1587" b="1979"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Muncey in October of 1921 to Charles Doull who moved it</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="1974" r="1587" b="2025"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to the Siding where it took on the pleasant pungent smell of new</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="2018" r="1587" b="2067"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">leather and where the tap of the cobbler&apos;s hammer replaced the</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2063" r="1589" b="2112"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tick-a-tack-tack of the message key. Many years later, after</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2106" r="1589" b="2161"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">being empty and idle for some time when Charles Doull served</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="2151" r="1589" b="2204"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on the Car-ferry, the old shop was moved (1952) across theroad</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="2196" r="1591" b="2252"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by Keith Lord and converted into a produce office. Such it re¬</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="2246" r="1265" b="2294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mains today, one of Carleton&apos;s historic buildings.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="16" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="316" t="2310" r="1593" b="2365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">History is made of little incidents, many of them trifling</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="2355" r="1592" b="2410"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">but adding their bit to the picture of the past. Such was the</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="2400" r="1594" b="2455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muncey cow, a Jersey called Daisy who had her picture taken</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="2445" r="1595" b="2500"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in a day before &quot;snapshots&quot; and who even made the Charlotte¬</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="2492" r="1595" b="2546"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">town press by her ability at the pail. The Weekly Examiner</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2534" r="1595" b="2591"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Friday, August 5, 1887 told of how Muncey&apos;s two year old</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="632">
<line l="838" t="2641" r="977" b="2673"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—60—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1696" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="154" t="134" r="1552" b="2206"><region><rect l="154" t="134" r="1552" b="2206"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="178" t="143" r="1533" b="187"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cow gave sufficient cream for the table with enough over to</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="187" r="1535" b="227"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">make seven pounds of butter each week. The butter was for</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="232" r="1533" b="276"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the most part used on the Muncey table where hearty appetities</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="277" r="1533" b="315"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of healthy children left little to be taken in trade at the store</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="321" r="723" b="360"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for butter at 20c a pound.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="269" t="391" r="1534" b="433"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The healthy children grew up to make their way in the</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="435" r="1534" b="475"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">world. One son, Singleton Wyndham, known in Carleton as</formatting></line>
<line l="179" t="479" r="1530" b="520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Sing&quot; enlisted for the Boer War in Winnipeg in 1899 nda served</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="524" r="1534" b="567"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">as Sergeant with the E. Battery, Royal Canadian Field Artillery.</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="569" r="1535" b="609"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">At the end of the formal fighting he joined Howard&apos;s Scouts in</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="613" r="1534" b="655"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a mopping-up action against the guerilla fighters and in February</formatting></line>
<line l="178" t="658" r="1533" b="698"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of 1901 was wounded in the shoulder. The severing nerves which</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="702" r="1534" b="742"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">paralized his arm resulted in his convalescence in England for a</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="747" r="1534" b="786"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">year where his disability was partially overcome. In 1928 when</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="791" r="1535" b="830"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Empire Parliamentary Association came to Canada, one of</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="836" r="1535" b="869"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">its members Colonel Collins an Irishman who had commanded a</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="880" r="1535" b="920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Boer unit in the war told newspaper men that he owed a pair</formatting></line>
<line l="175" t="924" r="1530" b="962"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of boots to S. W. Muncy from whom he had looted them with</formatting></line>
<line l="176" t="969" r="1532" b="1007"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">other personal belongings after wounding him in a skirmish on</formatting></line>
<line l="175" t="1013" r="1534" b="1052"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Veldt. Collins knew Sing&apos;s name from a letter which he took</formatting></line>
<line l="174" t="1057" r="911" b="1090"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;at the time and had mailed for him.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="269" t="1128" r="1534" b="1167"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1916 as a lieutenant in the 188th Battalion, Sing Muncey</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="2" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="176" t="1172" r="1533" b="1210"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sailed Overseas, served in France with the 5th Battalion and was</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="174" t="1216" r="1534" b="1255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">with the Army of Occupation in Germany.    Following General</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="176" t="1260" r="1534" b="1299"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Demobilization in 1919 he resided in Vancouver, until his death in</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Right" rightIndent="1248" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="187" t="1306" r="287" b="1337"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1945.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="116" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="291" t="1383" r="1533" b="1416"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He was married in 1904 to Elma Lovnetta Schuman. Their</formatting></line>
<line l="175" t="1428" r="1528" b="1467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter Doris (now Mrs. Reginald T. Haslam of Springfield)</formatting></line>
<line l="175" t="1472" r="1535" b="1511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">taught school at Carleton for a year. His second wife was Alma</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="1517" r="1532" b="1556"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion Aylward and their son Wyndharn A., lives in Portland</formatting></line>
<line l="174" t="1562" r="327" b="1600"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Oregon.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="266" t="1641" r="1532" b="1678"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">His wife the former Lola Archibald and their dugahter</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="1686" r="1535" b="1724"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Neenah (Mrs. Eric Humphreys) live in Vancouver. Their only</formatting></line>
<line l="177" t="1731" r="688" b="1768"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son is in Cranbrook, B.C.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="85" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="266" t="1809" r="1534" b="1848"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Other members of the T. C. Muncey family included, Sue</formatting></line>
<line l="181" t="1854" r="1535" b="1892"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(later Mrs. Leigh Lowther) who is a nursing graduate of Worces¬</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="1898" r="1534" b="1937"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter General Hospital, Worcester, Mass. Frank who began his</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="1943" r="1533" b="1981"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">career as an operator in the P.E.I. Railway at the time of his</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="1987" r="1535" b="2026"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">death in 1932 was Superintendent of the C.N.R. from Vancouver</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="2032" r="1535" b="2071"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Kamloops. Neenah, (1884 - 1908) married one of the Carle¬</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="2076" r="1533" b="2115"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton school masters, Wyman Yeo and lived in Lloydminster, Sask.</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="2120" r="1534" b="2162"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Nan, the youngest daughter, married Dr. E. T. Tanton of Sum-</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="2168" r="337" b="2200"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">merside.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="152" t="2236" r="1550" b="2648"><region><rect l="152" t="2236" r="1550" b="2648"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="263" t="2244" r="1534" b="2283"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Tanton&apos;s were parents of three medical doctors, Ben¬</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="2288" r="1533" b="2331"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">jamin of Vancouver, B.C., Claire of Montreal and Muncey of</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="2332" r="1531" b="2374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Woodstock, N.B. Their daughter Sybil, Mrs. Fred Rutherford,</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="2377" r="1531" b="2418"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lives in Waterloo, Ont. Pat D. Muncy was a brakesman with the</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="2422" r="1532" b="2463"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">C.N.R. and was killed accidentally on the Borden pier in January</formatting></line>
<line l="168" t="2467" r="1532" b="2509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of 1922. Mrs. Muncey (Harriet Muttart) died in the old home</formatting></line>
<line l="168" t="2517" r="327" b="2550"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1934.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="609">
<line l="777" t="2612" r="916" b="2644"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—61—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1768" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="288" t="166" r="1506" b="874"><region><rect l="288" t="166" r="1506" b="874"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="540" t="902" r="798" b="938"><region><rect l="540" t="902" r="798" b="938"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="554" t="907" r="782" b="934"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MUNCY   HOME</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="846" t="896" r="1262" b="934"><region><rect l="846" t="896" r="1262" b="934"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="862" t="902" r="1245" b="930"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">OVER   100   YEARS   OLD</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="198" t="946" r="1602" b="1644"><region><rect l="198" t="946" r="1602" b="1644"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="311" t="958" r="1582" b="1010"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Muncey house, much altered in 1903 by the addition of</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1003" r="1580" b="1060"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bay windows was erected probably about 1852-56. The original</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1049" r="1583" b="1100"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">front door faced on the road with a fan light over the front door</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1092" r="1583" b="1151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">porch The house was built by William Brow who was married</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1138" r="1583" b="1189"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1853 to Elizabeth Ann, the eldest daughter of John Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1182" r="1584" b="1234"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Elizabeth Bell, early residents of Carleton. William Brow</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1227" r="1583" b="1283"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bought the corner property from John D. Muttart and built his</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="1271" r="1585" b="1327"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">store apparently as a part of the house. It is believed it was later</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1314" r="1586" b="1369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved back to become the Muncey barn. William Brow s first</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="1362" r="1587" b="1413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife died after sixteen days of measles on April 29th 1859, leav¬</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="1405" r="1587" b="1463"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing him with not only the store to keep but the post off ice and</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="1450" r="1586" b="1503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">three small children. He married again in January of 1860 to</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="1504" r="1107" b="1552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret Jelly of St. Eleanor&apos;s.                  .</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="316" t="1536" r="1588" b="1593"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">His son, the late E. R. Brow, well known insurance broker of</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="1587" r="1151" b="1637"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charlottetown was Carleton-born and raised.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="202" t="1698" r="1610" b="2668"><region><rect l="202" t="1698" r="1610" b="2668"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="303">
<line l="525" t="1707" r="1286" b="1753"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE MUTTART&apos;S OF CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="316" t="1773" r="1589" b="1829"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first Muttart&apos;s came to Carleton in the year 1831 when</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="1820" r="1583" b="1876"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Muttart (1810-1889) married Elizabeth Bell (1813-1886)</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1863" r="1590" b="1920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and settled near her folks, the Bells, on land that skirted the</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1909" r="1590" b="1964"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">main road of what later became known as Doull s Corner. John</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1956" r="1591" b="2010"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart has dropped from the community memory and only a</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="1999" r="1591" b="2054"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">verv few of the oldsters will remember that he ever existed. He</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2042" r="1592" b="2099"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">should be remembered however as the father of an interesting</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="2088" r="1590" b="2148"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family who will be mentioned later and the descendant of one ot</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="2143" r="1067" b="2192"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the very earliest of the Lot 28 Pioneers.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="319" t="2210" r="1592" b="2266"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Muttart was born at Cape Traverse, the son of George</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2256" r="1594" b="2312"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart and Elizabeth Morley, and the grandson of Balthazar</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2298" r="1594" b="2360"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart, the soldier. This first Muttart, after fighting under</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2343" r="1594" b="2402"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wolfe at Quebec, came to the Island with Surveyor Holland and</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="2387" r="1594" b="2450"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had a part in the Island survey of 1764-1765, later settling his</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="2434" r="1594" b="2492"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family at Tryon where his farm was north of the United Church</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="2478" r="1592" b="2538"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of today. He was drowned in 1782 and his oldest son, George,</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="2523" r="1594" b="2583"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved to Cape Traverse in the early part of the next century,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="618">
<line l="840" t="2632" r="978" b="2664"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—62—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1685" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="148" t="116" r="1546" b="2664"><region><rect l="148" t="116" r="1546" b="2664"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="10" rightIndent="3" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="174" t="126" r="1527" b="166"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">settling on the farm which in 1960 would be owned and occupied</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="170" r="1240" b="210"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by his great-great-great grandson, Wallace Muttart.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="265" t="240" r="1529" b="281"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Muttart had eight children. His daughters, including</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="283" r="1528" b="323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two Emilys who died young, are remembered as Elizabeth Ann</formatting></line>
<line l="180" t="327" r="1530" b="369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(1833-1859) who married William Brow, an early merchant of</formatting></line>
<line l="174" t="371" r="1528" b="413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton, and Mary Jane and Sophia who married respectively</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="415" r="1529" b="457"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Artemas Leard of Bedeque and Charles S. Leard of Sea</formatting></line>
<line l="173" t="459" r="1528" b="501"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cow Head in a double ceremony in 1862. The three daughters</formatting></line>
<line l="174" t="504" r="884" b="544"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who married all had large families.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="265" t="574" r="1526" b="614"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The three sons were school teachers. The eldest, George Mor-</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="619" r="1528" b="659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ley Muttart (1836-1871) taught for a time in Carleton School.</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="662" r="1528" b="698"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He married Minnie M. Weatherbie and was the father of three</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="707" r="1529" b="748"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children. The second son, Ephraim Bell Muttart, after teaching</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="751" r="1527" b="790"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for several years, went on to Harvard where he received his M.D.</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="796" r="1529" b="836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1860, (not many country districts had Harvard graduates at</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="840" r="1528" b="881"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">that time) and later spent forty years as physician and surgeon</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="884" r="1525" b="925"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Souris, with time out for several years as King&apos;s County Mem¬</formatting></line>
<line l="172" t="929" r="1529" b="964"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ber in the House of Commons. Dr. Muttart was married to Han¬</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="974" r="1527" b="1014"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nah MacDonald and had several children, including Dr. George</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="1018" r="1528" b="1058"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart of Boston, Mass. The youngest son of the John Mut¬</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="1062" r="1527" b="1102"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tart family, Norman L., (1858-1875) died before he made his</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="1107" r="559" b="1140"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mark in the world.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="262" t="1177" r="1528" b="1210"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">None of the John Muttart and Elizabeth Bell descendants re¬</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="1221" r="1529" b="1261"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side in Carleton, in fact only a few remain on the Island any¬</formatting></line>
<line l="169" t="1266" r="1527" b="1305"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">where and none with the Muttart name survive, but long before</formatting></line>
<line l="171" t="1310" r="1527" b="1350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the family had been dispersed a nephew of John Muttart came to</formatting></line>
<line l="170" t="1354" r="1527" b="1393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton to make a more enduring mark on the countryside and</formatting></line>
<line l="168" t="1398" r="1278" b="1438"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to keep the name alive in the succeeding generations.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="260" t="1468" r="1527" b="1508"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He was John Duncan Muttart (1829-1904) the, son of George</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1513" r="1527" b="1552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart (1806-1863) and his wife, Ann Duncan (1804-1896) who</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1557" r="1527" b="1597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lived in Augustine Cove on the present Vernon Webster Farm.</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1602" r="1528" b="1641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">His friends expressed mild concern for his welfare in 1857 when</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1647" r="1528" b="1683"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he went to Carleton to live near his uncle John Muttart and</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="1691" r="1528" b="1732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">among the Bells. However, they need not have worried. John</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1736" r="1529" b="1776"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">D. Muttart who at this time married Mary Jane Leard (1838-</formatting></line>
<line l="168" t="1780" r="1528" b="1820"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1904) did very nicely on the farm bought from his uncle John</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="1825" r="1528" b="1865"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which is now the Hedley and Harold Muttart property. From</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="1870" r="1526" b="1910"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his mother&apos;s people, the Duncans, he inherited a Scotch strain</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="1914" r="1528" b="1953"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of thrift, which combined with the English and Irish energy of</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="1958" r="1525" b="1999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Morleys, and the stolid perseverance of his Muttart grand¬</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="2003" r="1526" b="2043"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">father, to make a very successful farmer. His grandfather,</formatting></line>
<line l="166" t="2048" r="1527" b="2088"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George Muttart, who started with only an axe and a hoe, was</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="2092" r="1527" b="2132"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">credited with acquiring and helping clear six farms for his sons.</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="2136" r="1526" b="2178"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John D., starting with a little more, did similarly well for his</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="2184" r="367" b="2216"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">four sons.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="257" t="2251" r="1527" b="2291"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John D. Muttart lived first in a log house which his uncle</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="2296" r="1527" b="2335"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">had erected on the east side of the road leading from Carleton</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="2340" r="1526" b="2383"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Cape Traverse, near the site of Mrs. Leigh Lowther&apos;s garden.</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="2387" r="1528" b="2427"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The second house, on the John D. Muttart farm was put up in</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="2432" r="1525" b="2472"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1864. It was built on a style advocated by an American named</formatting></line>
<line l="163" t="2477" r="1528" b="2518"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Rankin. The walls, were of battens one by three solid lumber</formatting></line>
<line l="167" t="2523" r="649" b="2562"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">built in log house style.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="630">
<line l="793" t="2626" r="902" b="2659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-63-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1768" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="194" t="124" r="1624" b="2666"><region><rect l="194" t="124" r="1624" b="2666"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="34" startIndent="45" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="256" t="142" r="1568" b="191"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The house that was built in 1864 and moved across the road</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="187" r="1569" b="237"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in 1882 was the one that most of the nine children were born in.</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="232" r="1570" b="282"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It remained there until March 1890 then moved to Cape Traverse.</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="275" r="1571" b="326"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The writer was a lad of ten it was a memorable day to see 80</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="320" r="1573" b="370"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">horses harnessed together to haul the house a distance of two</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="364" r="1572" b="415"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">miles the farmers came as far distant as Fernwood, Serletown,</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="407" r="1571" b="464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Albany, Tryon, Augustine Cove and Cape Traverse. When the</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="453" r="1576" b="508"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">word go was given the 80 horses all started together and never</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="508" r="864" b="549"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">halted until it was on the spot.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="28" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="310" t="566" r="1579" b="618"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The idea was that there was no need of lathing the house</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="609" r="1567" b="666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">because the plaster could be put on directly over the wood surface</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="656" r="1579" b="711"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">However, the plaster did not stay very well and John D., erected</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="699" r="1581" b="754"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a two story frame dwelling in 1882 which still stands, the resid¬</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="741" r="1579" b="798"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ence of Hedley and Harold Muttart. The beautiful elms which</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="786" r="1582" b="842"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">shade the house were planted (little whips of things) shortly af¬</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="829" r="1582" b="886"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter the house was built. The batten house was moved across the</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="877" r="1582" b="930"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">road and later sold and moved away and it too still stands in I960,</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="925" r="1295" b="975"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the residence of Harry Crossman in Cape Traverse.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" rightIndent="17" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="315" t="986" r="1587" b="1044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John D. Muttart&apos;s wife, Mary Jane Leard of Tryon, was the</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="1031" r="1565" b="1095"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter of John Leard and Margaret Muttart of the Creek</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="1074" r="1591" b="1138"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Trvon, and a first cousin to her husband. They had nine child¬</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1120" r="1591" b="1185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ren, the eldest, William S. (1860-1951) married Ada Lowther</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1169" r="1591" b="1229"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(1864-1938) and settled on a previously purchased farm in the</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1208" r="1589" b="1273"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lot 28 part of Carleton. They had one daughter, Hannah Blanche</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="1256" r="1593" b="1315"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart who married Ernest Harper. He died in 1930, leaving</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1298" r="1593" b="1358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one son Allison W. S. Muttart sold his farm to John Haslam</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1345" r="1593" b="1406"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to 1931&apos;and retired to Summerside, where he stayed three years</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1401" r="1034" b="1450"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">before moving back to North Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="109" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="320" t="1455" r="1596" b="1517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The eldest daughter in the John D. Muttart family was Ada</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="20" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="231" t="1510" r="1595" b="1561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ann (1862-1946) who maried Wallace Lowther (.„..........) oi</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" rightIndent="7" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="228" t="1542" r="1599" b="1610"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">North Carleton where they lived all their lives The only&gt;**tof</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="1593" r="1599" b="1649"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this marriaee Hedley M. Lowther, married Mary M. Muttart</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1625" r="1600" b="1699"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Tw Hies £ Carieton on the property formerly ownedL by</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1676" r="1600" b="1739"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Th- Marvin Bell The second daughter of the John D.,.family</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1709" r="1601" b="1799"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was ShS Adelaide who was born Feb. 2nd 1864 and died^un¬</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1768" r="1599" b="1843"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">marriedfat the age of 30. Her sister, Amanda, J-86™4) resid¬</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1815" r="1598" b="1878"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed at North Tryon where she was married to George H. Callbeck.</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1858" r="1598" b="1919"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">twv bad a family of four, Laura, Mrs. Hedley Weeks of Char-</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1893" r="1600" b="1971"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">SSown and Sbert Callbeck and Dr. L. M. Callbeck of Summer-</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="1956" r="1603" b="2025"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">side  Hedley age 29 deceased 1928.   Another sister, Laura Ger-</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="24">
<line l="235" t="2011" r="1602" b="2078"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">t ude was married to Samuel Stavert (................), North Bedeque</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="24" rightIndent="11" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="234" t="2062" r="1599" b="2132"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on December 25, 1899 and died on Dec. 26 1900 aged (27 years).</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="2118" r="1318" b="2182"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had one son, William Stavert, now of Bedeque.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="34" rightIndent="4" startIndent="84" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="329" t="2179" r="1605" b="2242"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The second son in the John D. Muttart family was Albert L.</formatting></line>
<line l="245" t="2212" r="1606" b="2297"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(187ll956) wL was a lifelong resident of the district    He was</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="28" lineSpacing="52">
<line l="239" t="2417" r="1597" b="2533"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">p^pSS fwhlch wa^t&quot; A^fraswell farm) for 47 .ears</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="2496" r="1610" b="2568"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">selling out in 1945 and retiring to the Marvin Bell home where</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2559" r="922" b="2612"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his daughter, Mary, now resides.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="644">
<line l="855" t="2627" r="996" b="2661"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—64—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1686" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="134" t="130" r="1534" b="2652"><region><rect l="134" t="130" r="1534" b="2652"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="251" t="140" r="1515" b="180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John D. Muttart&apos;s third son, Frank (1877-1960) lived and</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="184" r="1516" b="223"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farmed on the pioneer Muttart acres of his uncle John. He mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="229" r="1514" b="268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Helen B. Ferguson and had three sons and two daughters.</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="274" r="1517" b="313"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">These are — Dorothy, Mrs. Lloyd Waugh of Wilmot Valley; Ken¬</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="318" r="1514" b="358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">neth of Searletown; Vernon of Cape Traverse; Morley who is</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="352" r="1511" b="400"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married on the homestead to Alice Jewel and has UWfc/daubhteiifl,</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="407" r="1515" b="447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Susan, and Mildred, Mrs. Wendell MacWilliams, of Carleton, who</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="452" r="769" b="490"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has two sons, Earle and Eric.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="4" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="248" t="522" r="1513" b="560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The youngest daughter in the John D. Muttart family, was</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="567" r="1512" b="604"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie Maude who married James Stavert of North Bedeque.</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="611" r="1512" b="649"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They now reside in Charlottetown where their only son, Stanley,</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="656" r="353" b="688"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">also lives.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="247" t="716" r="1510" b="756"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hedley L. Muttart, fourth son and youngest of the family,</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="761" r="1511" b="799"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was born in 1880 and is still living. He settled in the old home</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="805" r="1513" b="838"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and farmed the fields that his father had cleared. He was mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="849" r="1511" b="888"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried first in 1902 to Mildred F. Ferguson who died Feb. 22, 1922.</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="893" r="1514" b="932"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">He is the father of nine sons and daughters. He married the</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="938" r="1262" b="975"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">second time in 1930 to the former Cecelia J. Waugh.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="4" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="248" t="1000" r="1510" b="1040"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the family of Hedley L. Muttart and Mildred F. Ferguson,</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="1043" r="1513" b="1083"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Edna Ethel is the eldest. She married Boyd Lowther of Carle-</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1088" r="1511" b="1129"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton, with one daughter, Mildred. The second daughter, Amanda,</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="1132" r="1513" b="1173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">now of Boston, Mass., married George H. Newsome and has one</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1176" r="1512" b="1218"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">son, Richard. Evelyn, living at North Try on, is married to</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="1220" r="1512" b="1263"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sterling Lord and has two sons - Donald and Roger. Jennie, Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1264" r="1510" b="1306"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Jardine of Wilmot Valley has one daughter, Beulah. Areta,</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="1309" r="1512" b="1348"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who married Jack Annear of Lower Montague, has three sons</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1353" r="1419" b="1396"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and two daughters; Ralph, Eileen, Morley, Harry and Ruth.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="247" t="1414" r="1511" b="1457"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The four sons in the Hedley Muttart family include: John A.,</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1458" r="1513" b="1503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Albany who married Adelaide Pooley and has three sons and</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1503" r="1513" b="1547"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one daughter, James Hedley, Louis, Hillard and Dale. George</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1548" r="1513" b="1593"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">H., of Tryon married to Florence Dixon, has two sons and one</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1592" r="1515" b="1637"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter, Robert, Wendell and Louise. Harold, married to Nor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1637" r="1512" b="1682"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ma Small, lives in the old home with four children: Lloyd, Dawna,</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1681" r="1512" b="1727"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ralph and Jeanne. Wallace Muttart, married to Jennie Brown,</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1725" r="1513" b="1771"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has a son, Douglas, and daughters, Linda and Connie. They live</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="1771" r="1512" b="1810"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">on the former Louis H. Muttart homestead at Cape Traverse,</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="1814" r="1513" b="1859"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which has ben farmed exclusively by Muttart&apos;s for over one hun¬</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="1866" r="586" b="1904"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">dred and fifty years.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="479">
<line l="629" t="1953" r="1030" b="1987"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MYER&apos;S HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="3" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="244" t="2018" r="1514" b="2063"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas Myers came over from England with a large party</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2062" r="1514" b="2109"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of immigrants in 1825 at the age of twenty-two (22) years. He</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2106" r="1514" b="2152"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was born in 1803. Later &quot;Thomas Myers&quot; married &quot;Mary Ann</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2150" r="1506" b="2199"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hutcheson&quot;, (who also came out with the people from England)</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2197" r="1507" b="2245"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">making their home in Hampton. To them were born seven (7)</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="2243" r="1511" b="2290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sons, namely, Thomas Jr., Abraham, Isaac, Wesley, Robert, Jacob</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="2288" r="1514" b="2335"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and George. Two of the sons moved away, &quot;one&quot; to Western Can¬</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2333" r="1514" b="2375"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ada and &quot;one&quot; to the States. The only other son&apos;s destination</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2378" r="1514" b="2422"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">that we know is, &quot;Thomas Jr.&quot; who married &quot;Mary Jane Trows-</formatting></line>
<line l="152" t="2423" r="1511" b="2471"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">dale,&quot; from Hampton and settled there, a few years later they</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2468" r="1505" b="2511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved to Carleton buying two hundred and seventy-five (275)</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="2514" r="1509" b="2557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">acres of land. &quot;Thomas Jr.&quot; passed away in 1896 and his wife in</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="608">
<line l="758" t="2615" r="896" b="2647"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—65—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1764" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="200" t="146" r="1634" b="2690"><region><rect l="200" t="146" r="1634" b="2690"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="34" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="219" t="162" r="1573" b="217"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1908 The old home place is now owned by Mrs. John Stewart. The</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="208" r="1573" b="268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">adjoining land one hundred (100) acres now owned by Thomas Jr.</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="256" r="1572" b="309"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Myers&apos;s grandson, Heber Myers, also the next one hundred (100)</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="296" r="1579" b="354"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">acres being given to Thomas Jr. Myers&apos;s sons, Hermas Myers</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="340" r="1581" b="401"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(who lived there until he passed away in 1947), is now owned</formatting></line>
<line l="220" t="384" r="1582" b="444"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by Wendell Myers, great grandson of Thomas Jr. Myers. There</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="429" r="1581" b="484"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was born to this union ten (10) children, namely, Laura, Amy,</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="474" r="1577" b="533"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Robert, Gertrude, Eva, Ada, Wallace, Ella, Wesley and Herman.</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="523" r="1585" b="577"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Three (3) passed away during the epidemic of Diphtheria in</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="586" r="325" b="618"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1876.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="104" rightIndent="556" lineSpacing="69">
<line l="319" t="642" r="1010" b="690"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Laura&quot;, Feb. 2nd. two years old.</formatting></line>
<line l="321" t="712" r="990" b="761"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Amy&quot;, Feb. 8th eight years old.</formatting></line>
<line l="322" t="780" r="1063" b="829"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Robert&quot;, March 1st, five years old.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="25" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="323" t="838" r="1593" b="897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Gertrude Myers&quot;, who married Avard Bell farmer of Carle-</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="884" r="1590" b="944"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton and settled there for a while, later moving to Victoria and</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="926" r="1594" b="993"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse. To them were born two (2) children Cora and</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="996" r="429" b="1032"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Russell&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" rightIndent="24" startIndent="96" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="326" t="1042" r="1594" b="1103"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Eva Myers&quot;, who married Donald Bell a farmer of Tryon,</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1086" r="1590" b="1147"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to them were born seven (7) children namely, &apos; Kriburn., Ever¬</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1130" r="1595" b="1196"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ett&quot;, &quot;Morley&quot;, &quot;Walter&quot;, &quot;Harrison&quot;, &quot;Wmnifred and Mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1201" r="410" b="1242"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">guerite&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" rightIndent="16" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="329" t="1243" r="1601" b="1308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Morley Bell&quot; was a M.L.A. for six (6) years and also a, law¬</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1286" r="1601" b="1349"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">yer in Summerside. &quot;Everett Bell&quot; interrupted his Medical Stud-</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1329" r="1601" b="1397"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">fes to serve four (4) years in the First World War, then he re-</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="1375" r="1595" b="1441"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lurned to MacGill University and completed his course in two (2)</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1418" r="1597" b="1488"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">yea?s wmn ng the &quot;Ward Medal&quot;, symbol of the highest standing</formatting></line>
<line l="237" t="1459" r="1603" b="1531"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for meS students on graduation year. When he returned home</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="1518" r="1340" b="1581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he practiced medicine in Cape Traverse and Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="21" rightIndent="10" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="332" t="1578" r="1606" b="1642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Ada Myers&quot; born Jan. 5th 1873, married &quot;George MacMic-</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="1625" r="1605" b="1688"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ken&quot; a farmer of Carleton. To them were born three (3) boys</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="1661" r="1605" b="1736"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">anS one (T)gTrl namely, &quot;Stewart&quot;, &quot;Thomas&quot;,. &quot;ArthurV&apos;Hazel;</formatting></line>
<line l="240" t="1714" r="1582" b="1778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and &quot;Wesley&quot;. &quot;Arthur&quot; passed away early in life. Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="1757" r="1600" b="1824"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">foined 1914-1918 World War. He settled in Western Canada.</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="1802" r="1606" b="1867"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Ada&quot; Passed away May 11th., 1941 and her husband May 14th.,</formatting></line>
<line l="243" t="1837" r="1609" b="1915"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">19\4atP Cape Traverse where they had moved after selling their</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="1919" r="671" b="1966"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">property in Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="26" rightIndent="8" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="337" t="1970" r="1608" b="2035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Wallace Myers&quot; was married to Mary Ellen Ward and settled</formatting></line>
<line l="243" t="2016" r="1611" b="2083"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Elnora then called Arthurville, Alberta. Three 3) children</formatting></line>
<line l="243" t="2054" r="1611" b="2127"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were born JJ them, namely, &quot;Wilbert&quot;, &quot;Ruby&quot; and &quot;Josephine .</formatting></line>
<line l="246" t="2123" r="1051" b="2174"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The latter passed away at an early age.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="29" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="340" t="2186" r="1614" b="2251"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Ella Myers&quot; married W. T. Bowness, General Merchant at</formatting></line>
<line l="246" t="2229" r="1614" b="2298"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bedeque To them were born four (4) children, namely, Wal¬</formatting></line>
<line l="246" t="2286" r="1153" b="2346"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ter&quot;, &quot;Hammond&quot;, &quot;Helen&quot; and &quot;Florence&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="31" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="343" t="2355" r="1613" b="2421"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Wesley Myers&quot; married &quot;Maye Waugh&quot; from Wilmot Valley</formatting></line>
<line l="248" t="2399" r="1616" b="2467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and stayed on the home place a short time, (the farm being left</formatting></line>
<line l="248" t="2436" r="1616" b="2514"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2 by his father, &quot;Thomas Jr. Myers&quot;). Wesley sold his place</formatting></line>
<line l="248" t="2479" r="1617" b="2555"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">S™ homas MacBride, then he and his wife moved to Bedeque and</formatting></line>
<line l="249" t="2539" r="1619" b="2603"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">went in partnership with his brother-in-law, W. T. Bowness tor</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="667">
<line l="884" t="2653" r="993" b="2686"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-66-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1643" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="106" t="100" r="1512" b="2622"><region><rect l="106" t="100" r="1512" b="2622"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="15" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="124" t="107" r="1478" b="148"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a short time. From there they moved to Calgary, Alberta,</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="153" r="1480" b="190"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">where he became interested in oil and became manager and direct¬</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="196" r="1480" b="238"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">or of an Oil Company in Montana, U.S.A. Two (2) children were</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="242" r="1059" b="282"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born to them, namely, &quot;Myrtle&quot; and &quot;Jean&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="12" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="217" t="319" r="1480" b="360"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Hermas Myers&quot; married &quot;Edith Weeks&quot; of Fredericton,</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="362" r="1482" b="402"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.E.I. He farmed in Carleton and for seventeen (17) years each</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="406" r="1481" b="447"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">winter he served on the ice-boat crew between Cape Traverse and</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="451" r="1481" b="496"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Tormentine. He was born Oct. 16th, 1877 and passed away</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="494" r="1483" b="540"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Aug. 20th., 1947. .His wife was born May 7th., 1877 and passed</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="539" r="1480" b="585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">away March 4th., 1955. Five (5) children were born to them,</formatting></line>
<line l="124" t="583" r="1483" b="629"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">three (3) of whom are living, namely, &quot;Heber&quot;, &quot;Selina&quot; and</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="630" r="1131" b="673"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;John&quot;.   Two (2) girls passed away early in life.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="12" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="219" t="705" r="1483" b="752"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Bertha Myers&quot; born Dec. 13th., 1901 and passed away March</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="760" r="349" b="798"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">21st, 1916.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="11" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="219" t="828" r="1484" b="876"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Ruby Myers&quot; born Feb. 23rd., 1911 and passed away Oct.</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="883" r="360" b="921"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">16th., 1911.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="9" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="220" t="952" r="1483" b="998"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Heber Myers&quot; was born on Jan. 23rd., 1905. On June 22nd.,</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="996" r="1485" b="1040"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1927 he married &quot;Edna Campbell&quot;, a music teacher from Chelton</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1040" r="1485" b="1083"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and farmed in North Carleton for nineteen (19) years. He then</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="1083" r="1486" b="1133"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bought the property of Robert Carruthers in 1946, being one of</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1129" r="1484" b="1175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the one hundred (100) acres of land belonging to Heber&apos;s grand¬</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="1174" r="1484" b="1223"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">father, the late &quot;Thomas Jr. Myers&quot;. His wife was born on Feb.</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1217" r="1483" b="1268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">9th, 1904. To them were born four (4) children, namely &quot;Freda&quot;,</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1268" r="885" b="1311"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Wendell&quot;, &quot;Gordon&quot; and &quot;Jeanette&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="7" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="220" t="1341" r="1486" b="1389"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Freda Myers&quot; was born on Nov. 25th., 1929. She complet¬</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1384" r="1485" b="1433"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed her stenographic course and was employed in the office of</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1429" r="1486" b="1478"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">M. F. Schurman Co., Summerside, P.E.I., for five (5) years. She</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1475" r="1485" b="1522"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">then worked for one (1) year in Toronto, Ontario and on May 9th,</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1518" r="1486" b="1564"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1953 married &quot;Bannerman Coughlin&quot; of Cascumpec, P.E.I. He</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1563" r="1488" b="1613"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was born on July 22nd, 1932. They now reside in Carleton operat¬</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1609" r="1487" b="1659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing an Imperial Esso Service Station. To them were born two</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="1658" r="957" b="1704"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(2) sons, namely, &quot;Ralph&quot; and &quot;David&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="5" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="220" t="1731" r="1489" b="1781"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Wendell Myers&quot; was born on June 27th, 1932. He married</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1776" r="1488" b="1827"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Audrey Coles&quot;, a school teacher from Milton, P.E.I, on June 27th,</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1821" r="1489" b="1869"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1956 and is farming the one hundred (100) acres of land which</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="1865" r="1490" b="1917"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he bought from John Myers, being the farm of his great grand¬</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1910" r="1490" b="1957"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">father. His wife was born on May 14th, 1932. To them was born</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1965" r="616" b="2008"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">one (1) .son &quot;Kenneth&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="3" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="220" t="2035" r="1492" b="2085"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Gordon Myers&quot; was born July 4th, 1938. He attended Vo¬</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="2079" r="1491" b="2126"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">cational School at Charlottetown in 1955. He married &quot;Carol</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="2124" r="1492" b="2172"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Clark&quot; of Linkletter on June 20th, 1959 and is farming on t h e</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="2169" r="1492" b="2222"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">home-place with his father. His wife was born June 4th, 1940.</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="2215" r="1308" b="2262"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">To them was born two (2) children, &quot;Linda&quot;, &quot;Brenda&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="223" t="2295" r="1495" b="2344"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Jeanette Myers&quot; was born on July 11th, 1941. She com¬</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="2338" r="1495" b="2392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">pleted her stenographic course in 1959 and was employed as Cash¬</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2386" r="1494" b="2431"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ier for R. T. Holman Ltd., Summerside, P.E.I, for nearly a year.</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2428" r="1494" b="2479"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Now she is employed with the Island Telephone Co., Summerside,</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2487" r="242" b="2520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.E.I.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="621">
<line l="744" t="2585" r="853" b="2618"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-67-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1766" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="190" t="124" r="1622" b="2678"><region><rect l="190" t="124" r="1622" b="2678"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="34" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="303" t="142" r="1570" b="189"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Selina Myers&quot; was born Feb. 22nd, 1908. On June 23rd,</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="187" r="1571" b="233"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1934 she married &quot;Ralph MacCaull&quot; a farmer of North Bedeque.</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="231" r="1572" b="274"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1947 he sold the farm and moved to Carleton Siding where he</formatting></line>
<line l="210" t="274" r="1575" b="319"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was General Merchant for eleven (11) years. He is now study¬</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="319" r="1573" b="369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing for the Ministry at Pine Hill, Halifax, N.S. His birthday is</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="363" r="1574" b="413"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Oct. 17th, 1909. To them were born two (2) daughters, namely,</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="407" r="1574" b="455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Elizabeth&quot; born Aug. 26th, 1943 and &quot;Edith&quot; born Oct. 2nd,</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="452" r="1487" b="502"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1947.   Both girls are attending High School in Halifax, N.S.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="27" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="309" t="522" r="1579" b="572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;John Myers&quot; was born April 27th, 1913 married &quot;Priscilla</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="567" r="1579" b="613"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacLeod&quot; of Victoria West on Oct. 26th, 1940. He farmed on</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="611" r="1582" b="660"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his Fathers farm, then became Inspector of Certified Seed Pota¬</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="654" r="1581" b="703"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">toes and sold the farm to Wendell Myers, son of Heber Myers in</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="701" r="1582" b="747"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1952. Then John and his wife moved to Carleton Siding where</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="744" r="1581" b="793"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he now resides as Inspector of seed potatoes for this district. His</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="799" r="917" b="836"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wife was born on June 25th, 1921.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="486">
<line l="696" t="910" r="1104" b="946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">WEEK&apos;S HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" rightIndent="17" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="315" t="974" r="1587" b="1020"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Albert Weeks son of Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks of Frederic-</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="1020" r="1587" b="1072"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton, P.E.I, was born on Aug. 30th, 1875. He bought property in</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1063" r="1586" b="1114"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton in 1900, formerly owned by John William Howatt. In</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1108" r="1589" b="1156"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1901 he settled on the farm and in 1903 he married &quot;Harriet Ann</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1152" r="1592" b="1201"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Muttart&quot;. He farmed there until May 1944 when he sold the</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1197" r="1591" b="1254"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">place to Neil Mclsaac and moved to Bedeque where he bought</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1242" r="1592" b="1294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the house formerly owned by Mrs. Louis Holland. He is still liv¬</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1286" r="1592" b="1343"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing there but his wife passed away on Dec. 29th, 1950. When</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1332" r="1592" b="1388"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">they resided in Carleton to them were born two (2) girls, namely,</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1390" r="702" b="1427"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Marion&quot; and &quot;Verna&quot;.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="18" rightIndent="10" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="321" t="1455" r="1595" b="1505"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Marion&quot; was born on January 19th, 1905. She attended</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1503" r="1597" b="1552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.W.C. Charlottetown and taught for a few years, then she mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="1545" r="1595" b="1597"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried &quot;William Stavert&quot;, a farmer from Lower Bedeque in 1927,</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="1590" r="1599" b="1646"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">farming there until 1955 when they sold their property and set¬</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1636" r="1597" b="1690"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tled in Bedeque where they built a new home. No children were</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="1695" r="618" b="1732"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born to this union.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="22" rightIndent="8" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="327" t="1760" r="1601" b="1811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Verna&quot; born May 15th, 1908 attended P.W.C, Charlottetown</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="1802" r="1599" b="1860"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and taught for a few years, then married &quot;Sterling Gillespie&quot; of</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="1849" r="1599" b="1901"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Summerside. They lived there for a number of years where he</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="1893" r="1601" b="1946"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">worked in the Dairy. Then they sold their place and moved to</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1939" r="1596" b="1992"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Souris where they have a restaurant. To them was born one (1)</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1986" r="1491" b="2041"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">girl, namely, &quot;Ann&quot; who is attending P.W.C, Charlottetown.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="352">
<line l="562" t="2076" r="1279" b="2119"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">HECTOR CAMPBELL&apos;S FAMILY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="26" rightIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="328" t="2140" r="1605" b="2197"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hector Campbell was born in Searletown and married Eunice</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="2186" r="1605" b="2244"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MacQuarrie of Carleton Point. He moved to Borden and owned</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="2236" r="1582" b="2289"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the store part of the farm now owned by John E. Read &amp; bons.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="28" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="330" t="2309" r="1607" b="2369"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had nine children, 1 son and 8 daughters. 1. Donald</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="2357" r="1607" b="2412"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">died when a young man he was never married. 2. Flora married</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="2403" r="1608" b="2457"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Gillespie. They lived many years on the farm now own¬</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2447" r="1608" b="2503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed by Frank Noonan, they later moved to West Royalty. 3. Mary</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="2489" r="1608" b="2550"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Margaret who never married. 4. Euphemia who never married.</formatting></line>
<line l="240" t="2534" r="1609" b="2590"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5. Annabelle married in U.S.A.   6. Hannah married Alfred Cook.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="644">
<line l="854" t="2642" r="994" b="2674"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—68—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1664" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="112" t="122" r="1514" b="1692"><region><rect l="112" t="122" r="1514" b="1692"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="141" t="132" r="1497" b="175"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">7. Eunice never married. 8. Catherine lived in U.S.A. 9. Eliza</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="176" r="1496" b="226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lived in U.S.A., for many years and just last year passed away</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="220" r="1291" b="262"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in Charlottetown where she had resided for some time.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="409">
<line l="537" t="312" r="1093" b="348"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE  HOWATT HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="2" startIndent="88" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="230" t="380" r="1494" b="428"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The late James Cook Howatt son of James Adam Howatt,</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="423" r="1493" b="471"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cape Traverse and his wife the former Edna Campbell, daughter</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="468" r="1495" b="512"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the late Robert Campbell, Cape Traverse moved to Carleton in</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="514" r="1495" b="557"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1921 after living for 5 years in Cape Traverse. From this mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="557" r="1492" b="605"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">riage there were three sons and one daughter, Frank, Fenton,</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="602" r="524" b="641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stanley and Grace.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="2" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="228" t="666" r="1493" b="709"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank married Mildred Clark, Cape Traverse in 1928 and to</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="709" r="1495" b="753"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">them were born Catherine, Gertrude, Cooke, Elva and Julie. Of</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="754" r="1493" b="797"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">this family all are married except Elva and Julie. Catherine</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="799" r="1492" b="843"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Dean Bell son of Nathan Bell, Carleton Siding from which</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="842" r="1493" b="884"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carol, Nancy, Peter, Gary and David were Bom. Gertrude mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="887" r="1491" b="932"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Windsor Campbell son of Heath Campbell, Long River. To</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="932" r="1193" b="975"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">them were born Sandra, Brian, Barry and Valerie.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="14" startIndent="87" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="222" t="994" r="1483" b="1039"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cooke married Frances Craig, daughter of Walter Craig.</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="1038" r="696" b="1076"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They have one child David.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="5" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="224" t="1092" r="1492" b="1135"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fenton married June MacKenzie daughter of William Mac-</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="1136" r="1491" b="1180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Kenzie, French River in 1945. Three sons and one daughter were</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="1180" r="1491" b="1225"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">born from this marriage, Ronald, Donald, Douglas and Joy. None</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="1224" r="744" b="1261"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of these children are married.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="224" t="1278" r="1492" b="1320"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Stanley married Mary Cheverie daughter of Wilfred Chev-</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="1323" r="1488" b="1368"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">erie, Souris in 1947. To them were born Jacqueline, Stanley,</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="1367" r="1489" b="1410"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Glen (died in drowning accident Aug. 7, 1961) Jill and twins Jan</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1412" r="739" b="1446"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Jane.   All are unmarried.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="7" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="222" t="1473" r="1489" b="1515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Grace first married Arthur Chilcott, Regina and later mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1518" r="1490" b="1558"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried John Haskins, Chicago. There were no children from either</formatting></line>
<line l="129" t="1564" r="322" b="1601"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">marriage.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="257">
<line l="385" t="1654" r="1228" b="1688"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE MICHAEL McCARVILL FAMILY</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="200" t="1726" r="758" b="2458"><region><rect l="200" t="1726" r="758" b="2458"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="854" t="1726" r="1416" b="2464"><region><rect l="854" t="1726" r="1416" b="2464"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="262" t="2476" r="686" b="2558"><region><rect l="262" t="2476" r="686" b="2558"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="30" startIndent="-30" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="277" t="2480" r="670" b="2504"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MARGARET   McCARVlLLE</formatting></line>
<line l="307" t="2531" r="641" b="2554"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">SISTER   MARY   RENE</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="942" t="2478" r="1318" b="2564"><region><rect l="942" t="2478" r="1318" b="2564"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="94" startIndent="-94" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="958" t="2484" r="1302" b="2509"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">TERESA   McCARVlLLE</formatting></line>
<line l="1052" t="2536" r="1208" b="2560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">WAR   VET</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="720" t="2618" r="892" b="2662"><region><rect l="720" t="2618" r="892" b="2662"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="736" t="2625" r="875" b="2658"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—69—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1787" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="196" t="98" r="1636" b="2660"><region><rect l="196" t="98" r="1636" b="2660"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="46" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="54">
<line l="305" t="130" r="1576" b="192"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Michael McCarvill of Kinkora, purchased the Gordon McFar-</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="191" r="897" b="239"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lane Homestead in the year 1905.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="43" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="308" t="243" r="1577" b="301"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mirhael McCarvill was born in Kinkora the son of Patrick</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="274" r="1579" b="353"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MccSland his w fe the former Susan Rooney both of whom</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="322" r="1578" b="399"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">clme to ffinkora with their respective parents sometime previous</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="409" r="379" b="443"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to 1830.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="38" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="312" t="445" r="1583" b="507"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Michael McCarvill was married to the former Annie Cahill</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="479" r="1584" b="560"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of B^deque who wis the daughter of John Cahill and his wife</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="525" r="1584" b="616"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1forSer&apos;Ellen Murphy both of whom came to the^Island with</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="586" r="1445" b="648"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their respective parents sometime during the early 1830s.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" rightIndent="31" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="318" t="648" r="1575" b="715"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Michael McCarvill had a family   of six children,   Leonard</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="694" r="1589" b="762"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Irene   Mrs  William Trainor), Mary (Teacher and Nurse)   Helen</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="736" r="1591" b="813"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">(Teacher), Margaret (Teacher) Now Sister Mary Rene R.S.M. of</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12">
<line l="227" t="820" r="1503" b="894"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">PrOVThee&apos;farmis presently being operated by Mark McCarvill.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="246">
<line l="461" t="921" r="1361" b="978"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE FAMILY OF THOMAS McCARVILL</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" rightIndent="26" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="53">
<line l="325" t="990" r="1596" b="1053"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas McCarvill in 1908 purchased the John Manson prop¬</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1044" r="1112" b="1106"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">erty and moved to Carleton from Kinkora.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="19" rightIndent="22" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="47">
<line l="327" t="1097" r="1599" b="1162"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas McCarvill was born in Kinkora the son of Patrick</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="1137" r="1600" b="1217"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MccJrvTand His Wife the former Susan Rooney both of whom</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="1191" r="1336" b="1264"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nnmSrated from Ireland to this Country about 1830.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="24" rightIndent="20" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="64">
<line l="329" t="1257" r="1602" b="1328"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas McCarvill was married to the former Lillian Kelly</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="1340" r="472" b="1376"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Kinkora.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="117">
<line l="332" t="1374" r="1599" b="1436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thnmas McCarvill had a family of ten children, as follows:</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="27">
<line l="242" t="1549" r="1562" b="1582"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Teresa.                                                                                            .</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="28" rightIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="61">
<line l="336" t="1574" r="1609" b="1652"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Roy who now lives on the Homestead at Carleton is married</formatting></line>
<line l="243" t="1644" r="820" b="1696"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to the former Teresa Ward.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="30" rightIndent="13" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="62">
<line l="337" t="1691" r="1609" b="1766"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They have a family of four children, as follows: William,</formatting></line>
<line l="245" t="1764" r="701" b="1812"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Doreen, Susan, Kevin.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="554">
<line l="769" t="1839" r="1087" b="1883"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MACQUARRIE</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="125" lineSpacing="97">
<line l="340" t="1894" r="1616" b="2014"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">f&amp;53??s-&quot;s a ■ -carver a s</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="35">
<line l="250" t="1972" r="1616" b="2064"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sm^eKf LriSown    They had six children, two sons and</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="35">
<line l="250" t="2065" r="569" b="2105"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">four daughters.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="38" rightIndent="3" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="66">
<line l="348" t="2099" r="1619" b="2180"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1.  Donald married Lucy Bears from Brooklyn, they^had two</formatting></line>
<line l="253" t="2167" r="1619" b="2232"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children.   Annie who married                       Bramhall of Carleton,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="39">
<line l="254" t="2284" r="1622" b="2398"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tS&apos;o^eaS WT^fnTSefrfaUaSU.%°eLe in Moncton,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="39">
<line l="254" t="2411" r="344" b="2444"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">N.B.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="133">
<line l="352" t="2445" r="1428" b="2511"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2.  John married Katie Forbes and lived in Carleton.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="133">
<line l="351" t="2528" r="966" b="2582"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3.  Flora married James Cook.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="680">
<line l="895" t="2623" r="1004" b="2655"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-70-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1673" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="122" t="128" r="1516" b="1554"><region><rect l="122" t="128" r="1516" b="1554"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="90">
<line l="227" t="136" r="1178" b="173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">4.  Mary Jane married a Mr. Bears from East.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="90">
<line l="232" t="205" r="906" b="243"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">5.  Euphemia who never married.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="4" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="229" t="274" r="1491" b="317"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">6.  Another daughter married a Mr. Compton from East and</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="319" r="1492" b="361"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their daughter Margaret married Rev. James MacDougall who</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="363" r="1492" b="407"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was Church of Scotland, Minister in Cape Traverse for many</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="407" r="1494" b="449"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">years. They had four children George, Emma, James and Ada.</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="451" r="1494" b="493"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George and Emma both married but both died young. Ada mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="496" r="1495" b="537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Alfred Cleveland and live in Vancounver, B.C. James mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="540" r="1494" b="581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried a Miss MacLean and he and his family now reside in Sum-</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="584" r="303" b="616"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">merside.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="138">
<line l="275" t="698" r="1354" b="734"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE FRANK NOONAN FAMILY OF CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="232" t="768" r="1497" b="811"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Abraham Noonan of Albany in the year 1905 purchased the</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="812" r="1383" b="851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Gillespie Farm at Carleton Point for his son Frank.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="882" r="1498" b="925"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Abraham Noonan was the son of Thomas Noonan Sr., of Al¬</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="926" r="1386" b="968"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bany and his wife the former Margaret Ready of Irishtown.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="232" t="997" r="1498" b="1040"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Abraham Noonan was married to the former Lavenia Camp¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1041" r="1496" b="1084"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bell, they had a famiiy of eight children as follows: Thomas,</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1085" r="1274" b="1126"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank, Abraham, Austin, Amby, May, Lillian, Blanche.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="6" rightIndent="2" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="234" t="1155" r="1497" b="1194"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Noonan, Abraham Noonan&apos;s second son settled on the</formatting></line>
<line l="143" t="1199" r="1098" b="1238"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gillespie Homestead in 1911 at Carleton Point.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="233" t="1270" r="1499" b="1312"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Noonan is married to the former Josephine Murphy of</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1314" r="1497" b="1356"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Augustine Cove, they have a family of six sons and five daught¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1358" r="1497" b="1401"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ers, as follows: Helen, Loretta, Raymond, Milo, Doris, Velda,</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1403" r="987" b="1442"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Pauline, Earl, St. Clair, Marion, Leonard.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="232" t="1473" r="1498" b="1515"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Farm is being presently operated by Mrs. Josephine</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1517" r="301" b="1549"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Noonan.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="122" t="1626" r="1516" b="2650"><region><rect l="122" t="1626" r="1516" b="2650"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="116">
<line l="253" t="1633" r="1383" b="1667"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">THE WILLIAM NOONAN FAMILY OF CARLETON</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="2" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="231" t="1703" r="1499" b="1742"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Noonan Sr., of Albany in 1912 purchased the John</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="1748" r="1200" b="1781"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Crockett farm at Carleton for his Son William Jr.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="2" rightIndent="1" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="230" t="1818" r="1500" b="1857"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Noonan Sr., of Albany was married, to the former</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="1862" r="1500" b="1902"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Caroline Creemer of South Melvile. They had a family of seven</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="1906" r="1499" b="1947"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children.   James, Jerimah, William, Thomas, Eliza, Lillian, Jenny.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="230" t="1976" r="1501" b="2015"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Noonan Sr., of Albany was the son of Thomas Noon¬</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="2022" r="1501" b="2061"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">an of Albany, Thomas Noonan was married to the former Mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="2066" r="1499" b="2106"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">garet Ready of Irishtown, they had a family of seven children.</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="2110" r="1365" b="2151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Abraham, William, John, Emma, Eliza, Lillian, Mary Ellen.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="1" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="229" t="2180" r="1499" b="2220"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">William Jr., who now lives on the John Crockett Homestead</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="2225" r="1500" b="2265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at Carleton is married to the former Gertrude Murphy of Augus¬</formatting></line>
<line l="140" t="2269" r="1498" b="2311"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tine Cove. They have a family of seven children, as follows: Leo,</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="2314" r="1053" b="2357"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ralph, Joseph, Kevin, Evelyn, Teresa, Pearl.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="230" t="2384" r="1500" b="2422"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Leo Noonan the eldest son of William Noonan Jr., who now</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="2429" r="1501" b="2467"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lives on the Homestead is married to the former Catherine Mc-</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="2474" r="1498" b="2517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Innis, they have a family of eight children, as follows: Darryl,</formatting></line>
<line l="137" t="2518" r="1408" b="2561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Barbara, Sharon, .Heather, Desmond, Paul, Terence, Marleen.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="628">
<line l="765" t="2614" r="869" b="2646"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-71-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1727" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="212" t="134" r="1620" b="2512"><region><rect l="212" t="134" r="1620" b="2512"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="433">
<line l="660" t="141" r="1150" b="173"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">TRENHOLM HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="13" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="320" t="210" r="1589" b="249"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Theodore Trenholm his wife and family came and settled on</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="255" r="1590" b="294"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">part of the Henry Crockett property in 1903. Their family con¬</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="299" r="1587" b="338"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sisted of Maud, Lemuel, Joseph, Eatta, James, Bertha who died</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="344" r="1582" b="383"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">early in life, Ruby and Lilliam (twins), Bessie and Mae (twins)</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="389" r="1588" b="426"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Rosella. After the death of Mr. and Mrs. Trenholm, Lemuel</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="434" r="1589" b="466"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">carried on the farm for a time then sold it to Murdock Dawson</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="478" r="1591" b="517"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Lloyd MacWilliams now owns the property. The remainder</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="522" r="1591" b="561"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the Henry Crockett place was bought by Avard Bell and later</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="565" r="1584" b="605"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">by James Bell. Later on Mrs. Bridget McCabe and her two (2)</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="609" r="1589" b="649"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">children, Eugene and Lena bought it then sold it to Leo Keough.</formatting></line>
<line l="231" t="654" r="1591" b="694"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mr. Keough than sold it to Stewart McMicken and the land is now</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="698" r="1355" b="739"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by Arnold Murray and the House by Frank Bell.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="9" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="324" t="767" r="1592" b="810"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The adjoining property was owned by Donald Campbell. His</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="811" r="1593" b="853"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">family were, William, who was a preacher, Georgie and Mrs.</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="856" r="1593" b="897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">George Doull and lived in Carleton until her death and Willie who</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="900" r="1591" b="941"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">died. The Bramhall family consisted of three (3) children, Mabel,</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="944" r="1594" b="985"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bessie and Bertha. This property was later bought by Aden Mc-</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="988" r="1594" b="1025"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carville then sold to Arthur Carruthers. Stewart McMicken</formatting></line>
<line l="233" t="1032" r="1595" b="1075"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">then bought the property and it is now owned by James O&apos;Con-</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="1083" r="312" b="1114"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nell.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="463">
<line l="690" t="1193" r="1133" b="1226"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MCBRIDE HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="7" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="325" t="1261" r="1596" b="1303"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thomas McBride, wife and family lived on the old Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="1305" r="1597" b="1350"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Myers place for a number of years. There son Joseph married</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1351" r="1189" b="1393"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alice McGinnis, and lived there for some time.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="497">
<line l="724" t="1466" r="1102" b="1501"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">SMITH HISTORY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="8" rightIndent="3" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="327" t="1533" r="1599" b="1576"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Smith, wife and family came to the property formerly</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1577" r="1600" b="1623"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">owned by James Silliker in 1915. The family consisted of Celes-</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1622" r="1599" b="1668"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tine, James, Linus, Ada, Joseph, Earnest and Francis. Celestine</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1667" r="1601" b="1707"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married Rose McCormick and remained on the farm for a num¬</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="1711" r="1598" b="1758"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ber of years. His father bought the William Gillespie place and</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1757" r="1601" b="1797"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">remained there till he died. Celestine had six (6) children, name¬</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="1802" r="1601" b="1849"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ly, Hazel, Ivan, Leo, Ada, Patricia and Wilbur. They later mov¬</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="1846" r="1599" b="1887"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed to Summerside. Now there is a restaurant and a body shop on</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="1900" r="502" b="1938"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the property.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="502">
<line l="729" t="1984" r="1105" b="2017"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">DICKIE FAMILY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="1" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="329" t="2050" r="1603" b="2092"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Dickie and wife came from Union Corner and bought</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="2096" r="1601" b="2143"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the property owned by Dan Mclnnis and built the house over.</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="2139" r="1602" b="2185"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Thev had a family of four (4) and three (3) more were born in</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="2182" r="1603" b="2228"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton. Arita Pearl died in early girlhood and Amy Grace died</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="2228" r="1601" b="2276"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in infancy. Robert grew to young manhood and enlisted in the</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="2277" r="1356" b="2319"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Airforce and was killed in an airplane crash overseas.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="52">
<line l="329" t="2343" r="1604" b="2387"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Aletha is married to Leith Cameron and still reside in Carle¬</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="2402" r="308" b="2433"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ton.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="100">
<line l="327" t="2461" r="1420" b="2507"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Marion, Denona and Thomas have moved elsewhere.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="878" t="2598" r="1002" b="2642"><region><rect l="878" t="2598" r="1002" b="2642"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="879" t="2606" r="986" b="2638"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-72—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1661" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="116" t="108" r="1508" b="1264"><region><rect l="116" t="108" r="1508" b="1264"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="573">
<line l="705" t="112" r="914" b="149"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">QUIGLEY</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="1" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="226" t="178" r="1491" b="221"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank Quigley, son of James and Mary Ann Quigley mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="223" r="1491" b="265"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Francis Ann Eiley, daughter of Joseph and Maria Riley of</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="267" r="929" b="308"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Travellers Rest on February 8th, 1917.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="2" startIndent="90" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="226" t="329" r="1489" b="367"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They moved from Victoria to Carleton in 1924 when Frank</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="374" r="1490" b="414"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">went to work with W. S. Muttart on the farm now owned by</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="418" r="1490" b="459"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Haslam. They moved to their present location in 1927.</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="462" r="1490" b="503"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They had five children - Thelma, Grace,, John, Nathaniel and</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="506" r="1490" b="547"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mary Jane.    Two boys died in infancy.    Frank is   retired   now.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="226" t="561" r="1492" b="600"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Mrs. Quigley died March 11th, 1959. Thelma married Wil-</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="605" r="1491" b="643"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ber John Cairns, son of John and Ella Mae Cairns of California</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="650" r="1491" b="689"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and later Tryon and they had four children - Margaret Ann, Ray¬</formatting></line>
<line l="135" t="695" r="1489" b="733"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">mond Victor and John Franklin. Their oldest son died in infancy.</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="738" r="1488" b="777"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wilber works as Transportation Laborer with C. N. R. at Bor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="783" r="1490" b="822"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">den. John Quigley married Hazel Gunning, daughter of John</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="828" r="1491" b="866"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Gladys Gunning of Travellers Rest. They had six children -</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="872" r="1490" b="910"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Enid Gail, Carol Ann, Brenda Jean, Eric Bruce, Leona Ruth and</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="916" r="1489" b="955"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lauretta Dale, Mrs. Gunning lives with John and Hazel now.</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="960" r="1489" b="999"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John works on M.V. Abegweit. Mary Quigley married James</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="1005" r="1487" b="1044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Matheson from Halifax. They have four children - Gary Wayne,</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="1049" r="1488" b="1088"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Garth Erie, Beulah Jane and Glen Earnest. They live in Tor¬</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="1094" r="1489" b="1133"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">onto, Ontario where James works at Carpenter and Construction</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="1140" r="241" b="1172"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">work.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="611">
<line l="743" t="1227" r="872" b="1260"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">READ</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="130" t="1302" r="712" b="1750"><region><rect l="130" t="1302" r="712" b="1750"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="310" t="1792" r="518" b="1858"><region><rect l="310" t="1792" r="518" b="1858"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="326" t="1812" r="500" b="1851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">*\P***?!7***</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="250" t="1892" r="308" b="1972"><region><rect l="250" t="1892" r="308" b="1972"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="76">
<line l="262" t="1894" r="308" b="1970"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="264" t="1966" r="354" b="2068"><region><rect l="264" t="1966" r="354" b="2068"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="94">
<line l="274" t="1968" r="354" b="2062"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="886" t="1298" r="1494" b="2206"><region><rect l="886" t="1298" r="1494" b="2206"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="114" t="2228" r="1508" b="2646"><region><rect l="114" t="2228" r="1508" b="2646"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="112">
<line l="242" t="2232" r="1308" b="2259"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ELIZABETH    READ   R. T.                                                       CAPTAIN    READ</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="223" t="2288" r="1491" b="2328"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In November of 1917 Captain John Lefurgey Read was given</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="2333" r="1492" b="2372"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">command of the S.S. &quot;Prince Edward Island&quot; to prove the feasi¬</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2376" r="1491" b="2418"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">bility of providing daily communication with the Mainland by</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2422" r="1492" b="2462"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">operating an Ice-breaking train ferry between Carleton Point n</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="2466" r="1492" b="2507"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Prince Edward Island and Cape Tormentine, New Brunswick. He</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="2512" r="1191" b="2552"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was the eighth generation of the Re.ads in America.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="608">
<line l="738" t="2610" r="876" b="2642"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—73—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1789" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="236" t="92" r="1644" b="2644"><region><rect l="236" t="92" r="1644" b="2644"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="15" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="364" t="109" r="1627" b="156"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1918 he brought his wife and family to settle on the old</formatting></line>
<line l="271" t="152" r="1628" b="204"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carruthers homestead where his mother, Sarah Carruthers, had</formatting></line>
<line l="269" t="196" r="1625" b="250"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">been born and brought up. The read children: Georgie, Nellie,</formatting></line>
<line l="270" t="240" r="1626" b="293"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sadie, Adele and Jack attended Carleton School where they re¬</formatting></line>
<line l="269" t="286" r="1554" b="333"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ceived instruction from Adelaide Mulligan and Celia Howatt.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="11" rightIndent="2" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="361" t="356" r="1624" b="409"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The first John Read in America, John Read of Rheobth,</formatting></line>
<line l="269" t="402" r="1624" b="452"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">came out from England in 1630 and settled in Rheoboth, Mass¬</formatting></line>
<line l="268" t="444" r="1626" b="499"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">achusetts. It was not until the fourth generation of his family</formatting></line>
<line l="268" t="488" r="1626" b="537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in America that Eliphalet Read left the American Colonies and</formatting></line>
<line l="268" t="533" r="1623" b="581"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved northward. He fought with Wolfe at Quebec in 1759 and</formatting></line>
<line l="267" t="576" r="1625" b="629"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">finally settled in Sackville, N.B. Benjamin, his son, settled in</formatting></line>
<line l="267" t="620" r="1624" b="673"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Baie de Verte, N.B. Ephraim, the eldest son of Benjamin and</formatting></line>
<line l="266" t="665" r="1624" b="716"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jane, was a sea captain. He married Rosara Chappell and came</formatting></line>
<line l="266" t="710" r="1623" b="759"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Prince Edward Island where they settled at Read&apos;s Corner.</formatting></line>
<line l="265" t="754" r="1424" b="800"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ephraim died of yellow fever in South America in 1864.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="10" rightIndent="4" startIndent="92" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="358" t="824" r="1623" b="873"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Joseph Read, son of Ephraim and Rosara, was born at Read&apos;s</formatting></line>
<line l="266" t="867" r="1622" b="923"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Corner in 1846. He married Sarah Carruthers of Carleton Point,</formatting></line>
<line l="266" t="912" r="1622" b="965"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter of Samuel Carruthers and Sophia Muttart, and grand¬</formatting></line>
<line l="265" t="957" r="1624" b="1010"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">daughter of Thomas Carruthers and Isabella Tait, who immigrat¬</formatting></line>
<line l="264" t="1001" r="1624" b="1051"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ed from Dumfries Shire Parish, Scotland in 1820 and settled at</formatting></line>
<line l="264" t="1045" r="569" b="1081"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Carleton Point.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="5" rightIndent="4" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="357" t="1116" r="1621" b="1171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Like his father, Joseph Read was a sea captain, and his wife,</formatting></line>
<line l="263" t="1159" r="1622" b="1213"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah, sailed all over the world with him. Captain Jo., as he</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1206" r="1623" b="1253"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was affectionately called, claimed that she was one of the best</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1252" r="1624" b="1303"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">navigators he had ever known and often depended on her judge¬</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1295" r="1621" b="1348"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ment in these matters. After many years of seafaring Joseph</formatting></line>
<line l="260" t="1339" r="1621" b="1386"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Sarah settled in Summerside where he founded the Jos.</formatting></line>
<line l="260" t="1382" r="1622" b="1431"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Read export and import business. Sarah died in Charlottetown</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1429" r="1622" b="1481"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">m 1915, and Joseph died of influenza in 1919 while attending a</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1472" r="1624" b="1519"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">session of Parliament in Ottawa where he served as a member of</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1516" r="1622" b="1564"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Federal Government. Joseph and Sarah had two sons: John</formatting></line>
<line l="261" t="1560" r="1622" b="1608"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Lefurgey and George Carruthers a medical doctor who moved to</formatting></line>
<line l="260" t="1604" r="1623" b="1658"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">British Columbia where he was drowned in 1822 while making</formatting></line>
<line l="259" t="1649" r="743" b="1690"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his calls by motor boat.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="4" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="353" t="1720" r="1624" b="1772"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Lefurgey Read, eldest son of Joseph and Sarah, mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="259" t="1765" r="1623" b="1814"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Nellie Davidson Hillson of Wilmot. They first settled in</formatting></line>
<line l="260" t="1810" r="1622" b="1860"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Summerside where Captain Jack comanded many of his father&apos;s</formatting></line>
<line l="258" t="1857" r="1622" b="1907"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">vessels. He sailed to many parts of the world, having won his</formatting></line>
<line l="257" t="1900" r="1623" b="1951"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Master Mariners Deep Sea Certificate at Liverpool, England at</formatting></line>
<line l="258" t="1947" r="769" b="1989"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">twenty-one years of age.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="3" rightIndent="5" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="352" t="2017" r="1623" b="2061"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In September 1909 he entered the Marine Service command¬</formatting></line>
<line l="258" t="2062" r="1622" b="2112"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ing the ice-breakers &quot;Earl Gray, Minto and Stanley. In 1910 he</formatting></line>
<line l="257" t="2108" r="940" b="2151"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">moved his family to Pictou, N.S.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="4" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="351" t="2171" r="1623" b="2214"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In 1916 he was loaned by the Marine Service to the Domin¬</formatting></line>
<line l="256" t="2215" r="1624" b="2259"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ion Government. His mission was to deliver the ice-breaker</formatting></line>
<line l="258" t="2260" r="1623" b="2305"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&quot;Minto&quot; to Russia, then an ally in the First World War. In 1917</formatting></line>
<line l="255" t="2306" r="1622" b="2353"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he made a second trip to Russia when he conveyed the &quot;J. D.</formatting></line>
<line l="255" t="2351" r="1083" b="2392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hazen&quot; to Archangel on the White Sea.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="5" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="348" t="2417" r="1623" b="2462"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">During his first stay in Russia Captain Read was accorded</formatting></line>
<line l="255" t="2462" r="1623" b="2506"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the greatest deference and respect, but in 1917 the mood of the</formatting></line>
<line l="254" t="2508" r="1623" b="2553"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">country had greatly changed and even though he was in charge</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="632">
<line l="886" t="2606" r="996" b="2640"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-74-</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1647" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="40" t="106" r="1464" b="2580"><region><rect l="40" t="106" r="1464" b="2580"></rect></region>
<text>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="1" rightIndent="32" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="61" t="124" r="1415" b="174"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the entire Russian Fleet in the White Sea, his great resemb¬</formatting></line>
<line l="62" t="169" r="1416" b="219"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lance to the Grand Duke Nicholas caused him many uncomfort¬</formatting></line>
<line l="62" t="212" r="1415" b="268"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">able experiences. While he was still in Russia. The Revolution</formatting></line>
<line l="64" t="257" r="1416" b="311"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">broke out, and upon one occasion a revolutionary spat in his face.</formatting></line>
<line l="65" t="301" r="1418" b="355"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The doughty captain retaliated with a punch in the jaw. He was</formatting></line>
<line l="65" t="346" r="1419" b="397"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">arrested and it required the offices of the British Consulate to</formatting></line>
<line l="67" t="400" r="617" b="448"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">get him released from jail.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="24" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="160" t="469" r="1422" b="520"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It was with great difficulty that he was able to get his crew</formatting></line>
<line l="69" t="511" r="1421" b="565"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and himself home again via Siberia and Japan. After being held</formatting></line>
<line l="68" t="557" r="1421" b="610"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for six weeks with nothing to eat but black unleavened bread and</formatting></line>
<line l="68" t="600" r="1422" b="656"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sour cabbage soup, Captain Read was given permission to take</formatting></line>
<line l="68" t="645" r="1423" b="698"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his Canadian crew and leave the country. While crossing Siberia</formatting></line>
<line l="71" t="691" r="1424" b="745"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">thev had to get off the train and chop down trees to fuel the en¬</formatting></line>
<line l="70" t="733" r="1426" b="792"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gine as far as the railroad extended. They completed the rest</formatting></line>
<line l="71" t="779" r="1426" b="833"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the crossing by means of small Siberian ponies hitched to</formatting></line>
<line l="72" t="822" r="1427" b="877"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sleds. Like many sea captains, Capt. Jack was an inveterate</formatting></line>
<line l="73" t="865" r="1427" b="927"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">story-teller and. upon his return he entertained Islanders with</formatting></line>
<line l="73" t="926" r="709" b="972"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">many a tale of his adventures.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="12" rightIndent="19" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="164" t="987" r="1428" b="1044"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Once back in Canada Captain Read rejoined the Marine Ser¬</formatting></line>
<line l="73" t="1033" r="1431" b="1091"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">vice but was shortly transferred to the Canadian National Rail¬</formatting></line>
<line l="74" t="1077" r="1431" b="1141"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">way to take command of the S.S. &quot;Prince Edward Island In</formatting></line>
<line l="77" t="1123" r="1432" b="1181"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1918 he bought the little farm where his mother had lived as a</formatting></line>
<line l="75" t="1172" r="1187" b="1231"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">girl.   John Lefurgey Read died of pneumonia in 1950.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="14" rightIndent="12" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="170" t="1253" r="1433" b="1312"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Earl Read, youngest child and only son of John L., and</formatting></line>
<line l="75" t="1297" r="1431" b="1358"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Nellie married Hazel Nelson Embree of Port Hawksbury N.S.</formatting></line>
<line l="80" t="1345" r="1436" b="1403"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and lives on the old Carruthers homestead now known as Ferry-</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="1387" r="1435" b="1449"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ewFarm, where his sons operate a large dairy. They have</formatting></line>
<line l="78" t="1431" r="1435" b="1493"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">three children: George Embree Read; John Lefurgey Read Jr.,</formatting></line>
<line l="79" t="1479" r="1437" b="1537"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">who married Anne Jenkins of Summerside and has one son John</formatting></line>
<line l="80" t="1512" r="1438" b="1585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LefuSey Read III; and Hazel Elizabeth Read, R.T., a graduate of</formatting></line>
<line l="79" t="1557" r="1439" b="1628"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the pShological Institute of Halifax. Elizabeth is continuing</formatting></line>
<line l="80" t="1629" r="665" b="1672"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">her work with the Institute.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="22" rightIndent="4" startIndent="91" lineSpacing="46">
<line l="175" t="1700" r="1438" b="1760"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Georgie Beryl Read, eldest daughter, married George Thomas</formatting></line>
<line l="84" t="1746" r="1442" b="1801"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Barton of Yonkers, N.Y. They have one son George Thomas Bar-</formatting></line>
<line l="83" t="1787" r="1441" b="1850"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to,IIwhcT is presently attending the University of Maine and</formatting></line>
<line l="83" t="1833" r="1440" b="1897"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">has just been designated as an alternate nominee to West Point,</formatting></line>
<line l="84" t="1877" r="1444" b="1940"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the United States Military Academy. Georgie is an outstanding</formatting></line>
<line l="83" t="1921" r="1444" b="1988"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">painter. Her keen interest in art was first encouraged and de-</formatting></line>
<line l="83" t="1961" r="1445" b="2032"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sped by Mary Allison Doull of Cape Traverse After graduat-</formatting></line>
<line l="85" t="2005" r="1445" b="2080"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nTg Som Mount Allison School of Fine Arts Georgie continued</formatting></line>
<line l="84" t="2055" r="1446" b="2119"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">her studies at the Art Students League of New York under</formatting></line>
<line l="86" t="2092" r="1446" b="2164"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Frank vSent Dumond. She has exhibited paintings at the Roy¬</formatting></line>
<line l="87" t="2138" r="1447" b="2209"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">al CanadSn Academy, National Arts Club, American Artists Pro-</formatting></line>
<line l="87" t="2178" r="1447" b="2255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">jLsionaTLeague, Hudson Valley Art Association and many other</formatting></line>
<line l="88" t="2264" r="318" b="2300"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">exhibitions.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="28" startIndent="93" lineSpacing="45">
<line l="182" t="2321" r="1448" b="2380"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">qhP has received several awards, among them the Julian F.</formatting></line>
<line l="89" t="2367" r="1449" b="2432"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Detmer Award for the best landscape in oil; bronze medal from</formatting></line>
<line l="89" t="2399" r="1450" b="2494"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">b£S£3 Business Machines fttf &quot;Nobble ^but^to the</formatting></line>
<line l="95" t="2464" r="1448" b="2519"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">art of the world&quot;; and at a recent show of the Hudson Valley Art</formatting></line>
<line l="91" t="2500" r="1451" b="2567"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Ssociation she Was awarded the gold ribbon for &quot;best m show .</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="686" t="2608" r="856" b="2652"><region><rect l="686" t="2608" r="856" b="2652"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="701" t="2615" r="839" b="2648"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">—75—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1810" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="254" t="146" r="316" b="176"><region><rect l="254" t="146" r="316" b="176"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="278" t="152" r="308" b="171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">y ^</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="952" t="218" r="1442" b="288"><region><rect l="952" t="218" r="1442" b="278"></rect><rect l="974" t="278" r="1200" b="288"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1600" t="170" r="1778" b="292"><region><rect l="1600" t="170" r="1778" b="292"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="78">
<line l="1600" t="196" r="1760" b="272"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">l»Kff</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="5">
<line l="1605" t="275" r="1753" b="292"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-Vi-   ....     ...</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="242" t="244" r="1756" b="1556"><region><rect l="242" t="244" r="952" b="278"></rect><rect l="242" t="278" r="972" b="280"></rect><rect l="242" t="280" r="974" b="288"></rect><rect l="242" t="288" r="1600" b="292"></rect><rect l="242" t="292" r="1756" b="1556"></rect></region>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="282" t="1560" r="1696" b="2504"><region><rect l="282" t="1560" r="1696" b="2504"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="253">
<line l="551" t="1565" r="1447" b="1601"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">MISS   GEORGIE   READ   WITH   PAINTING   &quot;RED   CLIFFS&quot;</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="13" startIndent="94" lineSpacing="43">
<line l="409" t="1617" r="1679" b="1666"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">She is an officer of the Board of Directors of the Hudson</formatting></line>
<line l="315" t="1661" r="1679" b="1711"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Valley Art Association, a Director of the National Board of the</formatting></line>
<line l="312" t="1705" r="1677" b="1756"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">American Artists Professional League, and has been elected one</formatting></line>
<line l="312" t="1751" r="1678" b="1800"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the Fifty American Artists. She returns each summer to</formatting></line>
<line l="311" t="1796" r="829" b="1834"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">paint her beloved Island.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="7" rightIndent="1" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="44">
<line l="404" t="1867" r="1678" b="1916"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Nellie , Theresa Read, second daughter, married Arthur</formatting></line>
<line l="309" t="1911" r="1673" b="1964"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Howatt of Tryon. There are four children by this marriage:</formatting></line>
<line l="309" t="1956" r="1677" b="2004"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John Read, Norma Lee, Verne Ross and Marion Clare. All are</formatting></line>
<line l="308" t="2001" r="1674" b="2051"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married and living in Ontario with the exception of Norma who</formatting></line>
<line l="308" t="2046" r="1673" b="2100"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">married John Ducan Darrach and still resides in Carleton. They</formatting></line>
<line l="306" t="2090" r="1674" b="2138"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">have three children, Linda, David and Donald. Nellie later mar¬</formatting></line>
<line l="305" t="2136" r="1087" b="2181"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ried Glenn Waddell of Cape Traverse.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" leftIndent="4" rightIndent="12" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="41">
<line l="397" t="2207" r="1667" b="2260"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sarah Josephine Read married John Wilbert Dickie of Cape</formatting></line>
<line l="302" t="2251" r="990" b="2295"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Traverse where they still reside.</formatting></line></par>
<par align="Justified" rightIndent="11" startIndent="95" lineSpacing="42">
<line l="395" t="2323" r="1668" b="2375"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Gladys Adele Read, fourth and youngest daughter, married</formatting></line>
<line l="300" t="2367" r="1666" b="2421"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Clarence Hugh Cameron of Sydney, N.S. Their son John Hugh</formatting></line>
<line l="299" t="2412" r="1665" b="2464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Cameron is a student in the Faculty of Engineering at Dalhousie</formatting></line>
<line l="298" t="2458" r="521" b="2499"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">University.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="942" t="2618" r="1064" b="2662"><region><rect l="942" t="2618" r="1064" b="2662"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="943" t="2625" r="1048" b="2657"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-76—</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1342" t="2582" r="1434" b="2634"><region><rect l="1342" t="2582" r="1434" b="2634"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1655" height="2723" resolution="300">
</page>
<page width="1766" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="6" t="0" r="56" b="28"><region><rect l="6" t="0" r="56" b="28"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="20" t="4" r="40" b="27"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">1</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="506" t="622" r="1300" b="1002"><region><rect l="506" t="622" r="1300" b="1002"></rect></region>
<text>
<par rightIndent="24" lineSpacing="80">
<line l="530" t="656" r="1240" b="748"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.E.I. COLLECTION</formatting></line>
<line l="522" t="740" r="1262" b="828"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">L 3RARY OF U.F&apos;E.l.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="90">
<line l="612" t="890" r="1286" b="994"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LIBRARY USE ONLY</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1639" height="2723" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1598" t="2666" r="1639" b="2716"><region><rect l="1598" t="2666" r="1639" b="2716"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
<page width="1602" height="2635" resolution="300">
<block blockType="Picture" blockName="" l="0" t="0" r="1602" b="2635"><region><rect l="0" t="0" r="1602" b="2635"></rect></region>
</block>
</page>
</document>
