University. He was a son of the first couple married in the present Kirk, and a grandson of its architect. Further to the right we have two windows to the memory of Mr. J. R. Burnett, long an Elder of this Congregation, and the Editor of the "Charlottetown-Guardian". The first window is St. Ninian, 360- 432 A.D., the first Apostle of Scotland, and in the panel below is seen the little Church at Whithorn, the first stone sanctuary in Britain. The second window has the figure of St. Columba, the 6th Century founder of the great Iona mission, and the Apostle of the Picts and Scots in the Highlands. In the panel below a little coracle bearing the mis- sionary and his monks makes its way across the sea from Ireland. The musician’s lyre and the Boy Scout fleur-de-lis, in opposite corners of these windows, bear record of Mr. Burnett’s generous sponsorship of our Boy’s Choir and Scout Troop. In the gallery on the East wall is the large window of the Resur- rection, a beautiful tribute by Archibald Kennedy to his wife Mary Crawford who was born in the year this congreation was founded and who died in 1899. Mr. Kennedy, an Elder and Sunday School Super- intendant, laid the cornerstone for the Hall in 1895. The two other windows in this memorial are filled with seraphs and angels in glory and sacramental symbols — the trefoil repre- senting the Trinity, the intricate representation of the Dove — the Holy Spirit; and the anchor — “the hope we have as an anchor of the soul both sure and steadfast and which entereth into that within the veil”. The small, lovely window in the upper left corner of the balcony is the interpretation of Revelations 3:20 — “Behold I stand at the door and knock”. Under the gallery on this East wall are two windows portraying St. Mark the Evangelist with his distinctive symbol of the Lion, and St. Luke “the beloved physician” with Ox symbol. The former is in memory of Mrs. Augusta Gill and her three daughters, the gift of her son-in-law and grandsons, the Monteith family. The St. Luke window is the tribute to her husband of Mrs. H. A. Stetson who left a generous portion of her modest estate to the treasury of this church which she loved so dearly. High on the South wall is the massive and colourful portrayal of the Good Shepherd with adjoining panels carrying the scrolls of prophet and evangelist. This window is the gift of the Honourable J .C. Pope and William Welch. On the South Wall are three groups of windows, each with its peculiar meaning. On the left are panels portraying the two great figures of the Old Testament, Moses and Isaiah. representing the Law and the Prophets. Moses holds the tablets of the Ten Command- —6—