Susan Davida , wife of J. Verner Moore . Eric Edmund , who resides on the homestead. Henrietta Alice , wife of the late Max Burgess , now resident in Charlottetown . In 1925, Eric married Rhoda Cameron . To them came five sons: Ralph Edmund , Assistant Manager, Dominion Auto Transit Com¬ pany, in Chatham, Ontario , married Doris Waddell . John Cornelius , a partner in a firm of Heating Contractors in Chatham, Ontario . Norman Cameron , on the home farm, married Gladys Lolita Gamble in 1951. Their son, Everett Leigh , is the sixth genera¬ tion of the Lowther family to reside in Crapaud . David Thomas , training for Submarine duty in Royal Canadian Navy , Porthmouth, England . Eric Lionel in Alberta. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Lowther have in their possession a very old Prayer Book, the property of the first David Lowther , who settled in Crapaud . This book has been handed down from one generation to another. It was given to his namesake, David T., in 1952, by his grandmother. This book is a copy of the Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England, It contains the Order of three services no longer in use: — Thanksgiving for Deliverance from the Gunpowder Plot. Commemoration of the Martyrdom of King Charles I . Thanksgiving for the Restoration of the Monarchy. In the Prayer for the Royal Family , the following are remembered: Queen Victoria, Prince Albert , and Adelaide the Dowager Queen Mother. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were married in 1840; this book was- given to David Lowther by the Countess of Westmoreland in 1843, placing the printing of the book between the two dates. The Dowager Queen Adelaide was the wife of William IV ; she died in 1849. The original settlers, Mr. and Mrs, William Lowther , were honoured in October 1839, when the Countess of Westmoreland and her daughter, the Lady Cecily Jane Georgiana Fane , were guests at their home during their visit to Crapaud . When they were leaving, Mrs. Lowther presented them with a fleece of wool, shorn from a sheep on the Lowther Farm . And their return to England , the fleece was carded, spun, and woven into cloth, from which material a coat was made for Her Ladyship. She was photographed wearing this coat, and sent a copy of the photo to Mrs. Lowther , who prized it very highly. This photo is now in possession of Mrs. George Myers , a granddaughter of the original settlers. -4 48 ^