parish and whose remains lie under the sanctuary side by side tith those of the
venerable Bishop.
Very fair and smiling is the landscape viewed from the windows of the commodious and hospitable presbytery of St. Andrews; the river sweeping round in many a graceful curve flows through the verdant marshes as of yore. but the shriek
of the iron horse is now heard in the forest and valley where the good Bishop
so often wearily trod his snow shoe march or draws in the quaint sleigh of his own fashioning. In the old cemetery lie many who were his contemporaries and who with him assisted in keeping the light of Faith burning in the Catholic homes of our Island province. Down at the foot of thehill bubbles the spring that supplied water for the first housekeeping in the old log cabin of the Burns estate.
The stately church bearing the name of Scotlands patron saint is worthy of being the place of sepulture of the grand old Bishop. It is perfect in its appoint- ments and in faultless taste. The altar with its delicate adornment of white and gold and its dainty'gfiatuéttogls surmounted by an exceedingly rich stained glass window representing the marriage of the Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph
the offering of the young men of the parish. At the entrance to the side
chapels are small shrimes. one to Our Lady, the other to St. Joaeph, both containgng life size statues cast in metal and of rare artistic beauty. The face of St. JOseph as there portrayed is so winning as to inspire devotion to the patron of the Catholic church. The stations of the cross are handsome.
the ancient oil painting of our Lord, befiore Pilate and the new one of St. Andrew placed above the entrance to the side chapels are of average merit. On the eastern wall of the side chapel of the Blessed Virgin is an ancient mural tablet to the memory. of Bishop McEachem containing a long Latin Panygeri'et on the virtues of that prelate. This was erected at the time of the Bishops death. the inscription was composed by a Mr. Slattery of the college of St. Andrew. Another and more modern tablet to the memory of the Bishop adorns the wall of the
sanctuary at the epistle side of the altar, while at the gospel side a similar