96 TlMEHRl. 
Indians, with their huts and in their daily habit as they 
live, would prove a great attraction. There were Chi- 
nese at the "Fisheries" who were much examined and ad- 
mired, and crowds were attracted by the comely faces 
and quaint dresses of the fisherwomen from various coun- 
tries. So, I am sure, that a bevy of our aboriginal dam- 
sels dispensing pepper-pot or paiwarri would outshine all 
others and eclipse the most fascinating ladies of the re- 
freshment contractor's staff. 
In conclusion, I would appeal to all interested in 
this most interesting colony as their birth-place or their 
home, or the source from which they derive their means, 
to use every effort to cause British Guiana to be so re- 
presented at the Colonial Exhibition in 1886 as to show 
the world that, among the many colonies of which Great 
Britain's Empire is composed, our colony has not been 
unduly termed the Magnificent Province. 
