A WHITE AUSTRALIA
MR KINGSTON’S SWEEPING ASSERTIONS. Press Association—By Telegraph—Copyright. BRISBANE, April 17. (Received April 17, at 9.58 a.m.) Kingston, speaking at Gairns after a visit to Caulfield, said that he had no sympathy with the kanakas. He never had, and he never would. Could not the gentlemen employed in the sugar industry do it as well as any nigger in the world? “Yes,” he said, “and much better. What sort of descendants of the British were they if they could not?” He told them that sooner than submit to encourage the yellow agony or the black curse, if there was any industry which required the countenancing of that agony or curse, then, he ■ said, sweep it off the face of Australia. ! Let us no longer allow them to contain!- : nate this land, which was a white man’s land, and should for ever be preserved as such.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 11863, 17 April 1903, Page 6
Word Count
147A WHITE AUSTRALIA Evening Star, Issue 11863, 17 April 1903, Page 6
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