PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. 3" in the fine new church eligibly located on high land and visible for many miles in every direction. Father Monaghan received a splen¬ did education, which he has supplemented by a liberal course of reading and a keen obser¬ vation of men and events, so that he is con¬ sidered a well informed man. Fraternally he is a member of the Catholic Mutual Bene¬ fit Association and the Knights of Columbus, serving now as chaplain of the last named or¬ ganization. He has taken an interest in ev¬ ery department of his church work, and be¬ cause of his fine personal qualities has en¬ deared himself to his parishioners. James M. McLeod , who occupies a high standing among the leading agriculturi-t- of Lot 20, Queens county, was born on his present place on the 13th of December, 1853. The father, John McLeod , was born at Southwest River , this Island, in 1819, and for many years was a sea-faring man, rising to the rank of captain, though later in life he retired from the sea and followed farming. In politics he was a Liberal, and an active member of the Presbyterian church. He mar¬ ried Miss Joanna McKay and they had two children. Christie, the deceased wife of Wil ¬ liam Campbell, and James M. of this review. The paternal grandfather of these, Kenneth McLeod , was a native of Sutherlandshire, Scotland , and came to Prince Edward Is ¬ land in 1815, settling on Capes, where he followed agricultural pursuits dur¬ ing the remainder of his life. After receiving a good district-school ed¬ ucation, the subject of this sketch entered upon the activities of farm life, in which he has been engaged ever since. He is the owner of one hundred and sixty-five acres of excellent land, one hundred and thirty of which are under the plow. He, as do many of his neighbors, carries on mixed farming, combining dairying with his regular farm¬ ing operations and sending the dairy prod¬ ucts to the cheese factory at Stanley Bridge . In 1903 he was president and salesman for the Co-operative Cheese Company, in which capacity he served efficiently. He has been successful in every line of effort to which lie has devoted his attention and is numbered among the leading agriculturists of his com¬ munity. In 1884 he was united m marriage to Miss Grace McKay , a daughter of Adam and Isabella (Sutherland) McKay. These parents were natives of Scotland and ac¬ companied their respective families to Prince Edward Island in 1815, settling at Stanley Bridge . To the subject and his wife have been born four children, namely: John, Annie, Duncan and Bell, Duncan being de¬ ceased. Mr. McLeod skives a hearty sup¬ port to the Liberal party, and fraternally be¬ longs to Lodge No. 1587, Canadian Order of I'"orester>. at Clifton. He is an active member of the Presbyterian church and has served efficiently as superintendent of the Sabbath school. A man of many fine quali¬ ties of character, he enjoys the good will of all who know him, his friends being in num¬ ber as are his acquaintances. James Moffatt , a well known and en¬ terprising farmer of Lot 23; Queens county, was born in Scotland on April 18, 1817, and is a son of William and Marion (Martin) Moffatt, both natives of Scotland . The sub¬ ject's paternal grandfather, James Moffatt , a native of Scotland , was a trader by vocation