Alternative title: The Morning Bulletin; The Bulletin (Rockhampton)
Date: 1870-1871
Date: 1861-1870
Issue Details: First known date: 1861... 1861 The Rockhampton Bulletin and Central Queensland Advertiser
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

First known date: 1861
Notes:
Digitised issues available for the period 9 July 1961 to 30 December 1871. This date span includes digitised issues for The Rockhampton Bulletin for the period 14 January 1871 30 December 1871. (Correct as of 18 December 2013.)

Works about this Work

'The Northern Argus' 1926 single work column
— Appears in: The Morning Bulletin , 10 May 1926 1926; (p. 14)
'The Northern Argus' 1926 single work column
— Appears in: The Morning Bulletin , 10 May 1926 1926; (p. 14)

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

ISSN: 1837-3798
Frequency:
Weekly ; twice weekly from 2 July 1862 ; thrice weekly 30 June 1863
Range:
9 July 1861 - [13] January 1871
Continued by:
Supplement:
The Rockhampton Bulletin Supplement
Price:
6p
Note:
Publication suspended 13 August - 6 September 1862 due to a fire which damaged premises

Has serialised

The House of Reckoning, Isabel Grant , single work novel
Wilderness Orphan : The Life and Adventures of Chut the Kangaroo, Dorothy Cottrell , single work children's fiction children's
Chut, an orphan Joey, is raised by Tom Henton and his wife and Tom teaches him to box. Drought strikes and in desperate need of money Tom is forced to sell Chut to a circus owner whose cruelty results in tragedy. After killing his trainer in a boxing match, Chut returns to the wild and starts a family.
Fools' Harvest, Erle Cox , single work novel

'Think of enemy troops stealing through the night on Fremantle without a formal declaration of war;

'Think of their ships, under the guard of destroyers, landing soldiers at Cottesloe and Fremantle;

'Think of an enemy raking St. George's Terrace with machine gun fire, charging down Barrack-street at the double with fixed bayonets;

'Think of Western Australian women at the mercy of the invaders;

'THINK OF GREAT AUSTRALIAN CITIES BEING POUNDED TO DESTRUCTION BY BOMBERS AND BATTLE-CRUISERS, INCENDIARY BOMBS AND HIGH EXPLOSIVE SHELLS BRINGING DEATH TO THOUSANDS AS THEY FLEE PANIC-STRICKEN FROM THE DOOMED BUILDINGS.

'Think of all this vividly pictured in one of the most sensational books you have ever read, and you will have just a faint idea of the gripping narrative of "Fools' Harvest," by Erie Cox. In this startlingly dramatic story the author grimly pictures a surprise invasion of Australia, reveals with convincing clarity the horrors of bombardment and occupation, and finally the loss of all the freedom in which Australians exulted, and their reduction to a state of slavery.

'"Fools' Harvest" is a story that is amazingly well told and it will be all the more interesting to readers in this State because chapters deal with the invasion of Western Australia.'

Source: Advertising blurb for the forthcoming serialisation in Perth's The Mirror (The Mirror, 28 January 1939, p.14).

Last amended 9 Jan 2014 12:54:00
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