-7- oiniater frota 1808 to 19C6, after leaving Belfast lectured at St. Fran¬ cis Xavior University, Antigonisb, for aorae years, Kis f iaid was Coltio languegs and literature* a subject on which he was regarded by aany at the time aa the greatest living authority, B9 alao received en Li.,3 3egre© £coa this institu-ticn.. ' i &o name of 2r» Sinclair was otill very fresh on the St. F.X , Campus whan the prooant 21shop of Charlottetown , iJoat Hov . i &lcolia ancKachton* attended thero from .1919 ■to 1925. las i &eellenoy, however, did not hatoa the opportunity of at¬ tending his classes, 'ifoe remains o£ lord Selkirk 's only daughter» Sary, later SSrs, Sailiday, zest in Balfaat ^nretery. £er posterity is still to "be found in that cocrcuniiy. She SacSavishes, Saroia and Baccy* fealoog to the fourth generation, and bancs would ho great-great grandsons of the BariU A stone's throw iroia tho church nay be found the Solly ifonumsnt'which cojoaooorates the arrival of ti^o first ship* and which to all Islsndars of Scottish blood i 3 the oobodixaent of all that i 3 good and worthwhile. It was erected in 1204. ThQ earliest Catholic pioneer in iSontague vteot (later lona) was Ibrtin 2aly of County \?oxfordf Ireland* who arrived in 1826. Bo also "JO owned the first horse in -too oorasunity, Ite> oettlod on the fawn, until recently owned by the late I&chael iEyons, and now in the pooces- oion of Joseph 3&3cnd3. It was at Daly's house that I&333 was colo- bratod prior to the building of the first church. Shis samd house, after 3ying vacant for a nun&er of years, was hauled in 1954 irom its A. 3, Burke, "iSlsoion of 3t, 8&chael.M