Commandments, and in the hands of Isaiah is the scroll foretelling the birth of the promised Messiah. These windows are a memorial to Mr. and Mrs. J. E. B. Macready. On the right are panels por- traying the two great figures of the New Testament, S. Peter, the Apostle to the Jews, and S. Paul, the Apostle to the Gentiles. S. Peter holds the Keys of the Kingdom, and S. Paul the Sword of the Spirit. These two are erected in loving tribute to Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hyndman. In the centre of the south wall are three windows which constitute the Congregation’s memorial to those who gave their lives in the Second World War. The figures of S. Stephen, S. John, and S. Timothy portray the heroism and sacrifice of all who died in national service for the cause of honour and freedom. In the upper reaches of these windows are found the coats of arms of the Dominion of Canada, the Province of Prince Edward Island, and the City of Charlottetown. At the base of each in turn is the crest of the Navy, the Army and the Air Force against a background of Canadian Maple leaves. These windows were unveiled by Mrs. Melville Andrew and Mrs. Lorne Stewart, mothers of boys whose lives were given in our defence, and dedicated by the Minister, the Reverend T. H. B. Somers, on November 13th, 1949. The lighting of these windows is the gift of their former chums in the Third Charlottetown Rover Sea Scouts. The memorial to the men of the Kirk who gave their lives in the First World War takes the form of a bronze tablet placed on the south wall to the right of these three windows. High up on the far corners of the West Wall are two smaller, jewel-like windows of S. Andrew, the patron saint of Scotland, on the left, and S. Nicholas, the patron saint of Aberdeen, on the right. Below the S. Nicholas Window is one portraying the figure of Hope. These three constitute a memorial to Mrs. J. R. Burnett, a dear lady of Scotland, a native of Aberdeen, whose Christian name was Hope. To the right of the Hope Window is a set of two in tribute to a former Minister of the Kirk (1893-1921) and his beloved wife, the Reverend Doctor and Mrs. Thomas Fraser Fullerton. The first panel shows S. Kentigern, the patron saint of Glasgow, the city of Dr. Fullerton’s birth and education. The Cathedral of the western metropolis is shown in process of erection in the lower light of this window. It is in the crypt of this Cathedral that the shrine of S. Kentigern (S. Mungo) is located now. The adjoining Window portrays Margaret, Scottish Saint and Queen, a memorial to Mrs. Fullerton, whose Christian name was Margaret. In the upper portion of this window may be seen the ramparts of the Castle in Edinburgh, the centre of Saint Margaret’s great work in the restoration and extension of the Church in Scotland in the 11th Century.