priests. The bishop preached an able and eloquent sermon. Burial was in the parish cemetery. 12 HENRY JOSEPH O ' LEARY Henry, the third son of Henry and Mary O'Leary , was born in Richibucto on March 13, 1879. He attended the Grammar School there and later St. Joseph's College in Memramcook from which he graduated with a B.A . degree at age eighteen. He pursued theolog¬ ical studies at the Grand Seminary of Montreal and was ordained a priest, with dispensation due to age, in his parish church at Richibucto on September 21, 1901 by Bishop Thomas Barry of Chatham. Following ordination he was sent to Rome where he remained four years, obtaining doctorates in Theology, Philosophy and Canon Law. During that period he also studied French Literature at the Sorbonne in Paris and travelled quite extensively in Europe and the Holy Land. Upon returning to Canada in 1905 he was assistant priest at Bathurst for a few months and then became pastor at . In 1907 he was named pastor of Sacred Heart Parish, Bathurst and the following year he became Vicar General of the Diocese of Chatham. 13 Bishop of In January, 1913, Dr. O'Leary was named bishop of Charlottetown following the death of Bishop James Charles MacDonald who died the previous month but who had been ill and generally inactive for the last three years. Not long after his appointment to Dr. O'Leary received the sad news that the new and beautiful Cathedral had burned to the ground. Because of this, his episcopal consecration on May 22, 1913 took place in Sacred Heart Church, Bathurst, of which he was at the time pastor. At age 34, he was the youngest bishop in the British Empire, if not in the world. Over 160 members of the cler¬ gy, including many from Prince Edward Island , were present for the consecration which was presided over by the papal delegate, Archbishop Stagni of Ottawa. Archbishop Neil McNeil of Toronto