Steel, Secretary, are grouped on one side, and the Rev. D. H. Lodge , Assistant Pastor of the First Church, Rev. George M . Campbell, the Pastor, and W. J. Kirby , the Grace Church Minister are grouped on the other side of Dr. Carmen . The Conference Committee, J. A. Moore , James Paton , (with his plaid pinned to his shoulder), Lt. Col. F. S. Moore , Chairman, and Henry Smith , Secretary, and W. W. Wellner , A. S. Johnson , G. H. Haszard and W. W. Stanley are also pictured. The frontispiece is a splendid picture of John Wesley and on the following page there is a view of the whole waterfront, including at . On the next page is the Court House, surrounded by garden plots, with the steeple of St. Paul's in the rear and with a glimpse of the old, wooden tower of Zion Church on . This booklet which is entitled "Methodism on Prince Edward Island " also has a short sketch of the Wesleyan Methodist School now known as the Kindergarten, and School of Music. There is also in this booklet a short sketch of the Rev. William Black who was one of John Wesley 's converts. A fine picture of the Church and parsonage on the corner is shown. The entire front of this large, square, brick home—all three stories__ is entirely covered with a thick growth of Virginia creeper. In the previous year, 1897, a Toronto firm, Burke and Horwood, were engaged to make some necessary renovations to the church. A wooden ceiling was installed and the choir was changed to seat several times its then membership, bringing it up to fifty. The two vestries on either side of the organ were furnished to be used for Adult Bible Classes, in addition to their use for the choir on Sundays. The church membership was, at that time, 430, and the congregation large and enthusiastic. The organizations included: the Epworth League , the Junior League , the Women's Missionary Society, the Ladies' Aid Society, the King's Daughters, the Dorcas Society, and the Central Relief Committee. During the pastorate of the Rev. George M . Young which ended in 1904, and whose death occurred last season, the idea of a new Sunday School building became a real issue among the women of the church. At that time the affairs of the church were in a most flour¬ ishing and active state with a membership of four hundred and eighty. The Sunday School was also flourishing under the fine leader¬ ship of the two superintendents, Mr. W. W. Stanley and Mr. Arthur E. Smith . There were forty-eight Officers and Teachers. It is recalled that the Sunday School pupils vied with each other in raising — 34 —