Saint Dunstan's college Prince -4- farm ef twenty acres and enough land for a large cen.etery were given to the parish by the last Donald -iacDonald of Glenaladale . Tracadie mission comprises portions of Townships thirty-five and thirty-six, extend¬ ing from Donaldston on the west to the boundary line between township thirty-six and thirty-seven on the east, and having Hillsborough as a southern, and as a Northern boundary. The first pastor of this mission was the Hev. James ..jacDonald, who died in 1785. Then came Father (afterwards Bishop rio&achern, then the Reverend John .»£cL»oandd and the Kev. Charles ..'.cDonell, who was succeeded by the Hev. James Brady . After thirteen years ministery, he was replaced by the Rev. Thomas Phelan who has been charged with Tracadie mission for thirty two years. Although of late, it has becox.e one of the most fashionable watering places in the province, there is not much in Tracadie to interest the average stranger, if we except the ra£nificeii't mansion of *lr. McDonald of Glenaladale , with its outbuildings which surpass everything of their kind in Canada . For the antiquary, however, Tracadie has a charm, the very name is matter for reflexion; Tracadie - whence comes it' Like -icadie, Rassamocadie, Shubenacadie, it is a name of the old Acadian days - but the origin of it is lost amid many speculations. The ancient ee-'etery at Scotch Fort is still the burying place of the McDonalds of Glenaladale . A magnificent cross of purest white marble, morticed into a block of Scotch pranite, tells the passer by, that: "Here lie deposited in the peace of Christ, awaiting the coming of the jud^e of the living and the dead, in the ;.ope of a glorious resurrection, and a happy immortality, the mortal remains of John .acUoLald of Glenaladale , i ^sq. a captain in His :&jesty»B