1 rooms. TH” °U-“DIA” °H4\Y~°'1"1‘B'1'°W1'. rumen imwaso return. rnsamoti 22. ....4 = ’= "1 ~ -,if e . == `_ gg, PORT ARTl'lUR’5 I I EARLY HISTORY ‘ Prtmlli., iipiiian , The New Scale Williams piano is winning many words of piaise from please purchasers all over Canada. It is universally conceded to he the most beautifully an carefully constructed and its tonal qualities and singing effects are iinequalled., The premier of the Prairie ` Province rlcently _purchased a Williams piano and his appreciation of its qualities are contained in the following letter. ow sits 1-1 have nn. iiesitsuon in saying that the Williams Piano that I have now is one of the finest and best we have ever iseen. I have not seen any other that l' like better. I am not a musi- cian myself but those who have used it are competent to say that it is excellent in every particular. lcertainiy recom- mend the Williams. Yours faithfully, R. P. Rbnuii. The New Scale Williams is a piano which has been constructed a ong Gtltire- ly new Jlines and possesses so `many advantages over other makes that it is well wo h while one's calling atthe local w rerooms to examine them. The \N,1liiamQ Piano Co., Oshawa, publish three booklets on the history and con- atniction of a piano, which can be had direct h tnaii on application or from the local agents of this celebrated piano; Miller Bros. ' SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENHONS- THE Dl'0Rrain of the Sunday School Oon ventiousvas at present arranged are O8 followsz- ' 0'Leary District, Springfield Methodist Church, Feb. 28rd. _ i ' Kensington District, Malpcque Presbyt- erian Church, Feb. 24th. p Eldon District, Chsrry Valley Metho dist Church, Feb 26th. We believe MINARD`S LINIMENT is the best. Hitthinl Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. Chas. Whooten, Muigrsve, N. S. Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N. S. Pierre Landry, senr., Pokernouche, N. B. Thomas Vi nsson, Sheiillld, N. B. TELEPHONE NOTICE ~ This being the last month of our financial year. all parties owing amounts to the company for rent- als or tolls will please remit the same without delay. _ We will be pleased to send our collectors for the same upon re- quests. Toll accounts are not entitled to the zo p. c. discount unless paid within five days from presentation of account. All parties having accounts against this company, will please render them monthly hereafter together with the order for all goods delivered. The Telephone Company of P. E. I. Per- W A- WINFIELII Gen. Manager. 1 i8 d ti 19 < Eastcni Steamship Cn, internationzd Division. Winter keduced Rates In effect to May ist, |904. St. John to Portland $J»°° ~ St. John to Bolton $3-S0 Gommencing December io, 19o_1,,iteamer ies‘ves Gt. John at 8 a. rn. (Atlantic Standard) Thurs- days for Lubec, Enltport, Portland and Boston Returning from Boston at 9 a.m.via. Portland, Baatport and Lubcc. Mondays. Passengers arriving at Bt.]ohn on evenings previous to morning laiiingscan go direct to gesipe; and take cabin berths or stateroom: for he trip. Wm. G. LEE. Agent, Bi. john, N. B- CALVIN AUSTIN, V. P. & Geifl MMIII"- A. H. HANBCOU, G. P. A T. A. General Oifires, Foater'| Wiiarl, Boston. Mus Ati. BMS! IidQ$!IidQ$i We have the best grain bags in the country. They are large enough to hold 4% bushel Oats, or 3 bushel potatoes. They are strong, clean, have hemmed tops, and are guaranteed to give satisfsction.Yon want some, how manl’ ? Reid & Creighton Wholesale dealers in Island pr0dI1C¢. Pitt Street, Sydney, C- B. A Q w xv DG ' ' rrn'iiniiIonruu' mllvllsr »l71iltai0\< \f. u`~i“so\v.u.v. 'T N£"Y"'. .,,~"fi‘i...... 1'.: EU; Description of its Harbor and . Natural Features First Exploited by an Englishman, Fortified by French Engineers, Captured by Japan, Leased by Russia. For hundreds of years Chinese coasting Janks, beating along the Yellow sea in the coastwise trade, hsd run into the land locked harbor of Lu Shun Kow. down at the extreme southern and of the Liaotuug peninsula. All along the shore great grafy cliffs ran up straight from the sea to ti height which varied from 300 to 1,500 feet. If fyoti came close enough in you could make out a slit in the moun- tains which gave entrance to s body of water within. This slit, was not more than 200 or 300 ysrds wide. Once you not through the passageway there was a wide stretch of water before you, hemmed in by cliffs on every side. At high tide the water was deepenough for the anchorage of a big ship, but when the tide wont out hundreds of acres of mud flats were ex~ posed to view. In the valleys between the cliffs were built some fifty or sixty miserable mud huts, and in them livsri 300 or 400 Chinese coolits. 'I‘hat was the situatioi up to 1800 in what is now Port Arthur. In that year three or fuur_ ships of the British navy came that way on s survey' ing expedition. One of these ships was the gunbont Algerine, commanded by Lieut. William Arthur. Llcut. Arthur darlngly ran his vessel in between the cliffs which guard the harbor, which was thereupon named Port. Arthur in honcr of his exploit. ' But. beyond the nam°, Port Arthur gained no new func for another twenty years. In 1881 it was still merely a con- venient harbor into which coasting junks could run for safety when great storms swept theseas outside. On the cliffs and in the valleys thsreabouts there still lived only a few hundred wretched Chinese coolies. Then the great Celestial empire began to wake up. Foreign engineers were sent along the coast to pick outa safe harbour which might be fortified and made the chief station for the new and modern navy of China. They settled on Port Arthur, and it was planned to trans' form the place into an immensely strong and completely fitted naval station. Plans were drawn for great dockyarris, workshops, dry docks, redtting basins and foundries, while above them on the commanding cliffs strong fortresses were to be erected. The contracts for all this work were let to French contractors, so that it was France which first among the nations had to do with this Gibraltar of the far east. French contractors, with the aid of swarms of Chinese cooiles, workiuglike slavesfor 15 or 20c a day, worked for years onthe works in and about Port Arthur. Not until 1891 was There is Pneumonia -on Every Hand. Three Ileatlis in One Family Rc- cently Arises From Neglected or Uncontrollable Colds. Rieumonia is secontl`only to consump- tion ln tha number of deaths which it causes and like consumption alwaYS hi” its beginning with a cold, At this season you can scarcely RIUDUC over a paper without seeing the record of several deaths from this dread disease. Cold in the head, fever and chills, a cough which gradually becomes dry and more painful in lhs chest, rapid difficult breathing, feellngs of exhaustion and de- pression-tiiese are symptoms of onw- moiiia. You can prevent and ourc pneumonia by the use of Dr' 0hase‘s S!\‘\iD °f Lin* seed and Turpentino. "I0 BFCHWHI' °f “ll treatments for the throat and lungs. The only safe WHY li I0 l'0Kl“i ¢V°i"Y cold as serious.'l`hink ofthe dreadful D08- nibiiititn which nwompsny "ery °°ld- Remsmhci' that pneumonia and consump- tion srs tho frrquent outcome, and Cllr!! tht- sold before it izets beyond YUUI' “Ulf” tml, By frequent doses of Dr. Chases Syrup of Itlussed and Turpentiue fn" ff \\’\ quickly break up the cold nun guard agiilnst dangerous developments. N 0 treatment was ever so successful for this purpose. Dr. Ohass's Syrup of Linseed and Tur- psntiiis, 25 cents n bottle, family ‘size (three times as much) Q) oent~, si till dsei- gi-s, or Edmanson, Babel & 00-. T°\'°“i-°- portrait and signature of Dr. A. W. Chase _fi the famooareosipt book author. are tm lever! botiio. _ Toprotootyoii against imitations the; tts place turned over to Chinn, ruqy for 0°¢\lDl\\°¥ as a irreat naval station. By that time Port Arthur-its mime- snke already forgotten-iisd become a fairly well built town, containing more than 1,000 houses and shops, outside of the government works. It than had a commercial population of 6,000, to say nothini! of the Chinese garrison of 7,000 or more soldiers. The forte were mounted with modern guns, and Chinese gunners were trained by German and other foreign experts in the use ofthe artillery. In 1804, during the month of November, the victorious Japanese army marched down one oi' the two narrow passes which lend through the surrounding mountains to the city of Port Arthur, captured the city, and put to tho sword many of the inhabitants, noncombatcmts as well as the members ofthe garrison. It was a bloody day, though the Japanese officers stopped the slaughter ss quickly as was possible. For a time then Port Arthur was ap- parently in the permanent possession of the Japanese, until the pressure of the allied powers forced her to give it back to the Chinese in January, 1806. Before they marciied out the Japanese destroyed u large part ofthe Chinese fortifications. In 1899 Port Arthur was "leased" to Rus-' sin, which immediately began to fortify it. with the intention of making it the strongest port in the eastern seas. Its importance to Russia is great. Vladivos- tok, the other great Russian port on the Japan sra is ice bound a large part of the year. The possession of Port Arthur, gives the navy of the czsr s port which is ncvcr frozen. Moreover, it is a port which commands the approach to Pekin, the Chinese capital. Never since the Russian occupancy has there been any cessation of activity in and about Port Arthur. In miserable hovelei on the hillsides swarm thousands of coolies, who at a word can be hired for 20 cents fi. diy to do any kind of hard and adventuresome work. Last year a Russian contractor at` Port Arthur ...Irma to but that witinnii init hour he could hire 10,000 men outside of his regu- lar large force. These regular forces are extreinsly large and are kept steadily at work both by land and sea. Any time within the last live or six years one could find in the outer harbor u ilaet of from 500 to 1,000 Chincsejunks, all loxdsd with railroad t.ies,iumber, and other building material. They, of course, aielall working for thc ltussian government. One important result of the Russian oc- cupancy of Port Arthur has been ti trem- endous incresseiiu thc import:-i from the United States. During isevcral weeks in 1902 American goods to the value of more than $2,000,000 weekly were landed ai. Port Arthur and the yearly commerce of the United States with that and the ad- jacent ports has been estimated at nearly $100,000,000. liut the Russian plan has been from the first to make Port Arthur a purely milit- ary and naval center. With that plan in view the Russians several years ago be- gan the construction of the wonderful city of Dalny, thirty miles north and ten miles east of Port Arthur, which they hope to make the commercial capital of the far east. The plan contemplates that all commercial ships shall be barred out of Port Arthur and sent to Dnlny and that the former fortress shall be barred to civilians, where, indeed, they are now allowed only on suffsrauoe, property being held on merely temporary leases. Dalny-or rather the site of the present city-was located on an open rondstesd, where the navies of all nations n‘lght ride. In order to make there a safe harbor, an immense brrskwater, costing millions, was built and is now completed, projecting into the sea for s great dis- tince andlim-losing n splendid anchorage. At. l)nlny,sl1io, creat adminstration bulld- lugs were erected and even-that rare thingin the far east-a first class and comfortablehotei. Eventually, as planned, Dnlny is to be the final terminus of the great. Siberian railroad by means of which Russia has tied together her widely scattered cm. pire. T0 RESCUE FROM PRISON. \VAsiinw1‘oN, Feb 15.-Friends of the Filipino insurgent lender, General Thomas Aquino, who was convicted of murdering American prisoners and who was given a life sentence, are bringing pressure to bear at the war department toobtnln his release. It is claimed that the prisoner was convicted onlns1Blcient evidence. GEORG ETOWN MARKETS Turnips, porbus........... ....012- Potatocs per hus..... 023- Csbbage,perdoz..... i7'1ps,perdos..... C sirens, per pair...... Apples,per pk....... ....0 Butter per ib..... Becta per bus... 0ats,pt~rhus......... - 0stmea.i,percwt..... Hides psrib . - Parsnipsperbus..... Bar1syperhus......... Wild ducks per pair. . .. Gecseper Turkaysperlb _ Herring por bb1..... . ..._ Hsyperwn »- SUMMERFIDE MAR.KE'l’S. tFarinen' Prices-Oori-acre Earle ,pez-has e ...... ueféarcasti ib.... gnEk“vrvhest..:;.u............ tgsiurfni in... . ....o Jn, . ....0 nffs."°§. nt::::':::'::..:_.:. Roller ills I°lour, per cwt lbs Island Flour, pei-|00 ibs....... .1 Oatmeal.;-cr fl) lbs..........R Unto) ‘i.~l. V nut' bushel . ....0 3 o.tt-i~».=- .,.-..- bushel. .o Wheat/ pei ' i.~ilir.i ‘Pork . . . . . .. _ P|tnto~‘~ ,wr bus. . . .. 9 'Q S " ‘Z sl, R 1 $ =©¢©©¢§¢53@©C-QQ QQ S2~55SSSS3%$§§$5S§’.S.‘ E3 X555' goes; zsgggise 'o'Qo. ,_,°_S 'Q9- '2g;.'ss-ssis'*sss;azs;= ggsssssgsssassssé ocoeaov-5-°f5O°C>¢`¢° 9 sassseasSsss=sse o >- .r 5° 3 Tarnip.i............_ -Stuarts Dyspcpsia There is nothing that will put you to the front so rapidly in the business nr sociai world as a cheerful disposition and a pleasant appearance. 0 her things be- ing equal people will go cut of their way to give a fellow n lift who always wears a cheerful countenance. The man or wo- man with a cranky disposition :ind a sour face will always meet. with an indifferent if note chilly reception. Tha commercial trnvellr, whois the rec:1gu‘z:d business barometer, appreciates better than any one the value of this rule and governs his actions accordingly. Dyspepsla destroys all the agreeable qualities that enter intoa man‘s or wo- msn's make-up. It is almost a human impossibility for any one with a severe case of dyspepsla to look pleasant. The continuous, miserable, cast-down feeling is bound to make itself shown in the ap- pearance snd conversation. Stuart/s Dyspepsia Tablets are the suf- ferer's certain cure. They are also recog- nized all over the world. The cures they have brought about and the happiness they have caused und the suffering Ithey have relieved have maria their name a household word lu all the English-speak ing world. The reason that Stuartfs Dyspepsia Tab- lets are a certain cure is that they are a natural cure. There is nothing to prevent them curing. Tney contain the essential ingredients of the digestive' fluids ofthe stomach and simply do the identical work ofthe stomach, relieving that weakened organ and permitxiiig it to rest and recup- erate. Could nnything be more simple or mituralf'I`hey are bound locure. They cannot help themselves. It is justilke pu ting a new stouincli into a man-if that were po -sible-niirl lettirigthe olti one go oil on is vacation. licst is what it needs. Nature will do ber own work of restoration, never fear. Stuartfs Dyspepsia 'l`abit-ts arc for sale by all diuggists at 50 cts a box. :All drug- gists means all drugglsts. They have be- come so neceisary to the people that the druggist. simply has to keep them any- way. There are other remedies that he can make much more money on if he could sell them, but he can`t. Ile will not take chances on losing his customers by not al- ways having on hand a supply of Sl\iart‘s Dyspepsln Tablets. MAKE PEACE WITH YOUR STOMACH You are Certain to Lose if You At- tempt the use of Force or Violence. You cannot force your stomach to do work that ltis unable and unwilling to do. It has been tried time and time again, always with the same result. The stomach isa good and faithful servant; but when pushed beyond the limit re- bels. Some stomachs will stand much more abuse than others,bu`t every stomach has its limit;snd when that limit is reach- ed it is a very dangerous and unwise pro- ceeding to attempt to forceit into doing further work. The sensible and reason- able courssls i/0 employ a substitute to cu-yy on the work of digestion and give the stomach an opportunity tn recupertite and regain its lost strength. Stuarts Dyspepiiia Tablets are the only perfect. substitute tn take up and carryton the work of tired, worn-out stomachs. They are natural and easy lu their work and cause no disturbance in the digestive organs. They conlnlunll the essential ele- ments thnt mtike up thc gas' ricjuicc and other digestive fluids and will digest. any food that tistrong, healthy stomach will and do it in the sumti time and in the same way. They work indepciidently of surrounding conditions, and the fact that the stomach is weak or dlrieasotl does not influence them at all in their useful and effective work. 'l`hey will digest food just as well lu a glass jar or bottle an they will in a stomach. You can see that for yourself by putting one of them into ti jar with n square meal and some water to enable it to work. SLuart's Dyspepsin Trtblels, by thus re- lieving ilio Stomach of its work, enable that organ to rest. nurl recuperatc and rc gain its health and strength. The practise is perfectly natural and plain. Nature will heal the stomach just as she heals ri wound or rt broken limb, if sho is not in~ terfered with, and is permitted to do her work in her own way. All interference is prevented bv Stuart`s llytipepsia Tablets. Stuart’s Dyspepsln Tablets are for sale hy drugglsts everywhere at 50 cents 1 box and if you are afflicted with dyspepsla, one hox will make you feel fifty times better. You will forget you have a stom- ach and rejoice in the forgstfulnsss. Na druizglst would be so short-sighted an to try to get along without Stuartfs Dyspep- Tablets, for they are so popular and are so well known for the good they have done and the happiness they have caused that any druggist caught without them would lose the oonfldence of his customers and beregnrded as below the standard. His business would sum.-r sl a result and his patrons woni-i go to othur stores and hny their other rlri.,;s thorn as well as thsir Stuart] Dyspnisia Tablets. DO NOT WEAR A LONG FACE It is a Great Handicap in All Busi- ness and Social Relations. ` The man who looks as if he had lost his N0 MAN OR WOMAN CAN HAVE DYSPEPSIA And Still B: Agrccablc, Attractive and Popular lablcts Arc a Cer- tain, Safc and Natural Curc. THEY WILL MAKE YOU LOOK PLEASANT. last friend is in no danger of being erush- gd by the _iam of the new ones unless he cheeera un." People are not going out °f \h°|\‘ WHY nowadays to associate with the man of mournful and melancholy sp- vsnrenve- They are afraid he will tell them his trouiilvs and they steer clear oi' him. as they in have nannies or their own. The most universil cause of the forlor n 'Ind h°DBl2SS appearance to-day is dyspep- sin. lt unflts a man for every duty of liis and causes him to become despondeut, and gloomy and necessarily his looks do not belle his feelings. He appears cast down and drjectefl and becomes a burden to himself and humanity In general. Stuart's Dyepepsia T»il»l» is are the dys- pL‘plc's certain relief. Tit _y do the work that his stomach is unani ' on do, and oy relieving that orgiin of its burdens permit it to regain its health and strength and again become active rind useful in its functions. They contain all the essential ingredients that enter into the digestive fluids and secretions of the stomach and they actually take no the work and do it just its n healthy, sound stomach would. BY this means as uiau can go right ahead with his work and eat enough to keep him in Pmiler working condition. His system is not deprived of its necessary nourishment as it is in the calc of the "starvation cure” or the employment of some of the first-class chicken foods now on the market. S'arvat.ion, even if it were a good thing, could not be continued |002 Efwilith to efl’er=t. a cure, for ii disord- ered find woruout stomach lsjnot going to become titrorffz and healthy in tivo or three days. Stuarifn Dyspopsie Tablets act nal urnl ly because they contain natural tligcst- ivcs. The principal component parts are Hfielltic pepsln, malt diiistuee and other in- gredients with like properties that do the work, regardless of the condition of the stomach. There is no unnatural or violent disturbance of thc tiigei~i;l\'e organs ns the result of their ac~ tion. In fact, the existence of the stoni- ach is cutirely ior1ot'.cii as soon tis they have had time to begin their opcraif They also pt>sfie~s very curntive and < t-t - l'1R Dl‘0D€rLlcs and assist, the stomucn in getting well, wliilerclic-.vlng it of its work. They perform the tlutlrs of bath nurse and physician. Stuarts Dyspc-pain Tnblets are for sale by all tlrunglsts at IO cents a box, and there is very little danger of any drtiggist trying to scli you something else in their place that is "just, its good". They are so well cstaiilliihed and have done so mucli good in the world that their name has become a household word; so the us- ual warning. “accept no .substitute," is unnecessary in the case of $tuart`s Dys- pepsia Talllets. L IS YOUR STOMACH ON A STRIKE ? There is Nothing to Prevent You lilmployiiig a Substitute to Do its \U0rk. There is such a thing ns forbearance ceasing to he is virluc even in the cane of oucls stomach. Thcre is no r|t1cs~ tion bui.thatS:>1nc will stnntl ti grunt dcni more wear and tent' nnrl nbuse Liian t:Lii- ers, hut they nil have their limit, tintl when that liniitis reached the sloinnch must be reckonctl with a~ sure n< f1\lt'. , The best wny nntl rctilly the only t-fi`cctlve‘ way to Lrcnt your stoinach wht-n ii. rciorls Iii to employ ti stilistlttite to do ir~ work. This will give the weakened :intl worn-out organ an opportunity to rest and rcgitin its strength and bt-nltii. Suiarfs Dyspep:-iia 'l`nblei,s iclicvv thc stomach of its work by taking up the work and doing il. just as one set nr shift of workmen relieves nnt1.her. Tliey ric- iunlly digest. the fooii in ,ii1.‘-it the siiriiv intinner anti just the some Llmc as thu di get-'tive fluids ofa sound stomach do. In ftict, when tiissolvcrl in the sloruacli they are diucstive fluids, for they tzaiiltiln ex- actly the saint: cnnstilttsnts and cif‘ii\enl.s as the gast1'|c_iuico rind other digestive fluids of the stomach. N0 nintter what the condition of the iromach is, their work is just the same. They work In their own natural way without regard to sur- rounding conditions. The stomach bcintz thusre‘ic~red by Stu- nrtfs Dyspepsin Tahlcts, is restored and renewed by Nature, and the real. of the hiiinnn body does not suffer in the leant by mason af its failure to perform its work. A Wisconsin man says: "I sulered the pangs of dyspepsln for ten years. I tried every known remedy with indifferent re- sults untii I wsu told of the remarkable cures of Stusrt.'s Dyspepsla Tablets. 1 bought n box. began taking them, nndifor- not I had a stomach.'i`hree boxes cured me completely. I have had no trouble what- ever for a year and have an nppm itc like a hnrvant hand ann can lat. anything that is set before nic vt lthout fear of ht-i re- suits." Stunrt’s llyspspsla 'I`ahlel.~ ar- .tn sale by all druqglsta ai. me a for ur :rug- gist never fails to have them ~. -lock lic- nnuse the demand for them i- ~o great and so pronounced that he cannot. afford to be without them, People who couli not get tiietn of one rlruggist, would goto another ami would get inthe habit of buy- inz their other idrutro .More as ivaii na ‘their Stuarifs Dysp~, -Li Tablets. #6 *E 5 0 In the Mldst of Plenty. That's what iwopie with pnnr utg.»_.,. tion arc dningt-\t~1i dn; lin-i. miin no appetite or iftl\1~i'- Lilo nr-4 tant \\ intl Ihr) it-»,|..ii- it tim-s them no gnlitl, lit-vaiise Un- ,,t..||,;,,|, does not tiiigeui it anti tim fvrini-iitiiiig lines of food bccoiuf-s a sn||1t>r~<»t iiis» ease, of headaches, slr»r~p||~.\»ii|-~.i\_ ianxilor and the timiisaml and one Wmpwml of disordered dig:-stioti. ##09 ...Stuart’s... Dyspepsia Tablets promptly relieve and cure all fnrins d iudlgeltion. They have dons it in thousands of crises and will tin it iu Nurs. The reason is simple. 'l`ltt-y digest the food whether tn. giuum.-|, works or not and thnt’s the whois looret. For sais by all drugglits. 50 olutlapscitags. Address, 00¢¢¢°¢4'§#¢'O» F. A. STUART C0., Marshall, Mich. for free book on stomach troubles, ¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢0'0°¢¢ IF YOU ONLY KNEW When your well stocked store with voing to burn down, you cciilt’. wait to insure until the Week be- fore, but When it is Destroyed You are too late. Remember the old adage, “There is no time like the present,” and no insiirance like ours. E. I-I. EEIIEIPK. Representing Phoenix of Hartford, Canadian. Quebec. ” We oflcr for tale properly kvirwri. ss “Esdalc Foundry.” This property was foriiirriy mvixeti nnfi cctiipisti by .\ir, '11 A, .\1.-1_»-nn mood titio gnnrnutesfi. Any information regarding min: cnii I1: iiiitl by cilllng iii our Ofllr' Rrucc Stewart & C0. Hnniitiers, Engineers, Marliinists and Boilsrmakerii, ritelm Navigation C01 Wharf, Charlottetown, M r. 1-5. isinnft, .oWhm mmBa Your physician has confidence in EL LIS. Bring to hiiii tliercrorc _'our nt-xt prescription. Remember the name. LLIS The Druggist. , Stores--L`l1’io\vii, .\Ioiit:i,.;x:a .mtl .\Itirrny River. Efiféwfflllliviil -1 ,s, » ,i » / I » .M. A.M. no 1.56 ].lq 7 4| ‘.1 . A 5: U-57 15 15 hid. 3 No.7 P.M. A.M. No 11.05 Iv .~`.‘»iide 11.5: Wellington iz Port Hill lv, Ch'lown Roynlvy tune. N. Willa ire Hunter River 7.50 1.14 Kensington ar. S'i.itle 3| u.m. 1.41 O'1.esry 2.41 Aiherton 3.35 trfrignini iv P.M 5.10 4-40 ‘.00 s'°s '5T"."E“ ~v~».. >-.- ...»., _-i»»”:=§ :._;,:_>_g-_ .. . Y' iran < »ti (}eo'town l‘.\l. r ll. Emerald .liinc. \ f\it..~'tevri\i jc. nr 'i ii 5,35 iv Emernl4 liinc at 6.25 ar ll. Trliverse lv Coiiitiisiiciiilg .\ian1lay lwiiutiry ith wr/.` trains of this railway will rnii tinil y is-in excepted) nii follows- Trnins Outwnrti Trmiir In Read down Stations. Rn. Nn. 5 Nn i. :vn f.. I' I’ ‘if fm ~ 1 0.31 '~1t, '-7.2 45* 430 Nu PM 4/wi 1 io rin ii; iz ii an \.M. ot: No.1; No.i1 No.1: No r.M. r.||. a.ll. iv. Ch'|~t- i. ar. rome Mt. St.--t iii ‘.55 ltirr' :i i M. -it c 'st P1 .27 mnfi 1 ' Sou - r. 7.00 l._. Nm. 't ri il\€ t-nys ward .1 nv. N0 1, A M. 11 Ss. -rn. -o_so 1140 ~<» ii 1:4" .U5 vnu; A.M. o.in F\_1f~ h.oB -xiii r _,T Y 33'; a I. ic lo fi ie . > > z.`;'-ss* Non. No is A N. S ic 7-3° A.\|. Q. A. N*lAlli“, _l Baperiutendent harintetowl. Dec. 31, loo; ""'\¥ii"‘~ *P Trains are run by /Eiaiitic Btsndaii rziiie. Il. POTTINFKR. Urn. M§1.'Gor|, Ilya. onctnn. N ‘Z