CHARLOTTETOWN 89 picture. The Basilica, too, is an impressive building as are all Catholic churches in the Province. There are few monuments of interest in Charlotte- town and most of them concern wars. The Great War Memorial has been described by one author as " poorly located and unaesthetic, the figures being out of proportion with the height of the pedestal. " To me it has a superb location at the foot of Great . It has one great advantage for a statue. It is so situated that it catches the eye of every passer-by. The monument is as well known in Charlottetown as Nelson's is in London. The other war memorial concerns the War. Three Islanders were killed in , and as Charlottetown really needed another statue, up it went. On the top is a soldier . . . which of the three, I wonder. Cartier 's landing is commemorated by a plaque. Then there is the little rock memorial to the memory of Francis Bain , the naturalist. In the Gardens is a gun with a history. It was sunk after the siege of Louisburg in 1758. Later, it was raised and transported to Charlottetown . There is one monument which should be here and is not. Instead, in a cemetery stands a small slab, marked "P.C." That and that alone tells of the life of His Majesty's first Attorney- General, Lieutenant - Colonel of Militia, and Speaker of the House of Assembly of Prince Edward Island . The Assembly meant well. They voted a sum and composed an epitaph, for a memorial. But the memorial was never erected. Philips Callbeck died at the early age of forty-six.