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The Guardian is a daily newspaper published five days a week in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada. The paper was originally launched in the 1870s as The Presbyterian and Evangelical Protestant Union, owned by Presbyterian minister Stephen G. Lawson. It adopted its current name in 1887.
In February 2007, Canada Now was scrapped. The same day, the Prince Edward Island newscast was expanded to a full hour, with local news in the first 30 minutes and national & international news in the second half-hour – albeit, produced and presented locally. The title of the program was also changed back to the original Compass.
Ici Radio-Canada Première: news/talk: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: French: FM 88.9 CBAX-FM-1: Ici Musique: public music Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: French: FM 90.3 CIMN-FM: campus radio: University of Prince Edward Island: not currently broadcasting FM 91.3 CIOG-FM: Christian radio: International Harvesters for Christ Evangelistic ...
This is a list of broadcast television stations serving cities in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island. [1 ... Lists of television stations in Atlantic Canada;
Robinson is vice-president of the World Farmers' Organisation and managing partner of the Robinsion Group of Companies, a sixth-generation farm and agribusiness based in Albany, Prince Edward Island. In 2019, she became the first Prince Edward Islander and the first woman to be elected president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. [3]
The 68th Prince Edward Island general election is the next general election to be held in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island (PEI), to elect the 68th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island. It is tentatively scheduled for the fixed election date of October 4, 2027, but may be held earlier under certain circumstances.
Charlottetown City Hall is the seat of City Council in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada.It is located at 199 Queen Street at the corner of Kent Street. It was designed by architects John Lemuel Phillips and Charles Benjamin Chappell in the Romanesque Revival style. [3]
The chain's namesake product is a line of fried dough pastries, individually hand-stretched to resemble a beaver's tail. The chain began in Ottawa and now has franchises and licensees in six countries: Canada (Atlantic Canada, Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, British Columbia and Quebec), the United States, Japan, France, U.A.E., and Mexico.