SOUVENIR-CHARTERS TOWERS, 1872 TO JULY, 1950 Page 11 FORTY YEARS AGO A Saturday night on Charters Towers, some forty years ago, To move along in that happy throng, with those I used to know, Down Mosman Street with shuffling feet, past. shops all open wide, Like waves half-stilled in a sluggish sea, on went the moving tide. We walked tthe paths, we walked the road, we walked where we liked at will, For the cab and bus were stopped those nights, from Mosman and from Gill, From the Royal down to the Sportsman's Arms from Daking's up the way, To Gill Street's hill at the old Cremorne where the buses had to stay. The barmaids worked at fevered pace, the squash shops just as well, The shooting gallery blazed away, to ring the little bell, Draper shops were bright and gay, jeweller shops ashine, But the butchers, and the grocers, closed their doors at nine. Folk brushed by with parcels high, and bulging bags of meat, To tethered buckboards down the way in a quiet little street Or pushed their way to the A.N.A. to dance till roosters crowed; It mattered not if they lived close by, or out on New Queen Road. Flower-boys sold their button-holes in front of the old Exchange, To beaus ,vho came from Ruby Ridge, or in from the RRifle Range, So we chatted and laughed and moved along, or stood at the Army ring Deciding then on the Theatre Royal, to see the "Silver King." When the show was over and the people all streamed out, The street awakened once chorussed driver's shout, lt was "Millchester" and "Wellington," and "Bluff Road" there as well; And others too from different parts, as Mos­ man Park could tell. Then "Cambridge Street" and "Waterworks," would rise above the din, And "a few more here for Black Jack Road" as they piled the people in; Thus Saturday night was over, and the laughter and the song Were memories horses jogged But it was Christmas Eve I remember well, and it fell on a Saturday night, The buildings all, both large and small, blazed with their fiercest light, There was a human dam to the Methodist Church and on balconies over the way, When the "Curlews" sang "Abide with Me"­ I heard the great crowd pray. For Faith was strong in that sea of souls, though in many a different key, All asked of Him on that goodwill night, `'Please God Abide With Me." And "Guard oh God over boys below" went many a heartfelt prayer, As the "Curlews" lovely voices died, softly on the air. A grand old town with the grandest folk, though they paid for their hard won gold, For Laughter and Fear were neighbours near, as the gravestones there have told, They won the wealth of a princely throne, now taken far and wide, By men who never mined an ounce, while those who did have died. The town gave me none of its fortune-I gave to it nothilng of fame, Tho' I share with its sons and daughters, the glory that made it a name. But it did give me somethinlg that lingers-the sweetest memories I know When I walked with her crowds on Saturday nights-Some Forty Years Ago. "Eagle," 16/9/1899.-The fish in Millchester Creek and' the various other riveulets round and about the Towers ought to rejoice. The Charters Towers Fish Protection Society and Anglers Club held a meeting during the week. Talking of fish. sharks abound very much on the Towers and especially at the seaport of Millchester. These are of various kinds. Law sharks, land sharks, share sharks, religious sharks, political sharks and last, but not least, beer sharks.