PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. 433 district schools during his boyhood days and was reared under the parental roof. He was early inured to the severe labour inci¬ dent to farming life and has followed this vocation during the subsequent years. He is the owner of ninety-five acres of splendid land, eighty of which are in cultivation, and has made many substantial and permanent improvements on the place on which he has resided for over sixty years. He carries on mixed farming, giving due attention to kindred lines, feeding cattle and dairying to a considerable extent. He gives an intel¬ ligent direction to all his efforts and has been successful to a high degree. Mr. Whitehead was united in marriage to Miss Elizabeth Harding , a daughter of Charles and Mary (Calder) Harding, the father a native of Prince Edward Island and a farmer by vocation. To this union have been bom nine children: Chalmers and William, in the Northwest; Josephina, wife of Edward Mayhew , of Denver, Colo¬ rado ; Foster, of Cleveland,. Ohio ; John A., at home; Mary, Carrie and an infant, deceased. Mr. Whitehead takes a deep inter¬ est in all questions affecting the welfare of the people, but is not bound by any party ties, preferring to cast his vote for such men and measures as most nearly meet his appro¬ bation. George F. Found , a successful fanner and miller in Lot 20, Queens county, was born where he now resides, on September 20, 1865, and is a son of Richard and Anna (McLeod) Found, the former'born in Eng¬ land, in 1826, and the latter in Scotland , in 1839. They were the parents of nine chil¬ dren, namely: William R., deceased; George F .; Nettie; Ambrose B.; Harlan P.; William A.; Minnie J.; Walter S.; Richard, who died in early youth. Richard Found was a miller by trade and many years ago bought the mill now operated by the subject of this sketch. George Found attended the neighbor¬ hood schools during his youth and under his father's instruction was taught the trade of milling, as well as the secrets of success¬ ful husbandry. He owned one hundred acres of land, all of which are under the plow, and on which he carried on mixed farming and dairying, but has recently dis¬ posed of seventy acres of his holdings in order that he may give closer attention to the operation of the grist and saw mills previously owned by his father, not, how¬ ever, altogether relinquishing his farming operations. He occupies a prominent posi¬ tion in the community and since 1895 has served capably as postmaster of postofBce. In 1898 Mr. Found married Miss Edith E. Ross , a daughter of Daniel and Elizabeth (Rogers) Ross, the father a native of this Island and a son of Scottish parents. For many years he conducted a fishing business, but later in life followed farming. To the subject and his wife have been born one child, Louis R. In politics Mr. Found is a Liberal and takes an active interest in all public questions affecting the local welfare. He is a member of the Presbyterian church and takes an active part in all the interests of that body. He is a public spirited and progressive citizen and enjoys the high regard of all who know him. Angus Nicholson , an enterprising and practical farmer in Lot 22, Queens county, has lived all his life in his present home, hav-