y separately published work icon The Queenslander newspaper issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 1937... 3 June 1937 of The Queenslander est. 1866 The Queenslander
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 1937 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Quit Not Until Quitsi"I have never been aggressive, I confess -", Den , single work poetry (p. 3)
Jardine Brothers and Cape York : Succeed in Most Hazardous Exploit Ever Undertaken, Bernard Cronin , single work column
This, the tenth in a series on pioneer and explorers, tells of the exploration of Cape York in 1864 by brothers Francis Lascelles Jardine and Alexander William Jardine. Their father John Jardine arranged with the Queensland Governor, Sir George Bowen, for the brothers to explore the land on the way to Somerset. The Indigenous Australians harried them on their journey, poisoning and stealing their horses, setting their provisions on fire and attacking them. Finally the brothers frightened them off and then had to deal with torrential rains and later insects that made the journey more difficult. At last they arrived at their destination. Aboriginal Australians were reported to believe that Frank Jardine's ghost still haunts the beaches of Cape York.
(p. 3,36)
It's a Topsy-Turvey Old World : Usually We Don't Follow Our Own Advice, Taurus (fl. 1936) , single work column

A train traveller listens in on a conversation between a commercial traveller and a farmer. The farmer wants to buy cows that give five percent butter fat and the salesman says that, in order to keep the breed pure, choose either Illawarras or Jerseys but not to mix the breeds. The train traveller is later amused to see the salesman get off the train to join his Japanese wife on the platform.

(p. 41)
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