10 Many Projects At other times monies were procured in the following ways: strawberry festival on the tennis courts with the 82nd Regiment Band in attendance; food sales at Moore & .IcLeod'sj candy sales at Prince of Wales College and Prince Edward Theatre ; lectures and entertainments in the church hall. For a time the amateur theatre of the Kirk was asked to repeat their plays in various centres of the Island. Fortunately within the membership of the Guild and the congregation could be found playwrights and poets, singers, orators, dramatists, comedians, clowns and jokers, story tellers, elocutionists, and so on ad infinitum. On many occasions, with the help of husbands and other men, fun evenings were held. Members of St. Jarnes and outside friends attended in good numbers and usually received their money's worth. By 1935, enthusiasm among this apparently active group began to wane. The membership dropped to fifteen. The annual report states that the Guild is "in recess." Minutes of a meeting on January 16, 1937, reveal that the Session of of the Kirk sponsored a dinner at the Charlo-tetown Hotel for the women of the church. Mr. J.R. Burnett presided. Enthusiasm ran highJ Before the meeting adjourned, officers were elected for the year. The name selected for the group was "The Guild of St. James= " These officers were asked to prepare a Constitution and By-