Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

PERTH'S COUNT

SELLS CIGARS OX WHARVES. FINE POLICE COURT MANNERS. PERTH, June 24. "The Marquis Bonanate, Prince Dacaia, Duke of Piacensa, etc., etc." He sells cigars on the Perth waterfront, and the police know him. Periodically Western Australians are reminded of the fact that another tiny mouth will be required' to be fed by the State charitable departments. The reminder is contained in the birth column of Perth newspapers and appears at regular yearly intervals, announcing that the wife of "the Marquis Bonanate" has given birth to another child. The notice appeared for the sixth time last week as follows:—Bonanate, on May 9, 1928, at the KinsEdward Hospital, Subiaco, to, Anne, wife of his royal highness, the Marquis Bonanate, Prince Dacaia, Duke of Piacensa, Doge of Venice, Count of Moya, illustrious family, 1377 A-D-, sixth child (Pauline Anne Isabella Diana Dolores).

PUBLIC NUISANCE. When the notice first appeared some six years ago, Perth sat up and wondered how a real live scion o f Italian nobility could have reached these • shores unheralded and unsung. The police dispelled their wonderment- by ■ stating that the illustrious father wa&no less a pershonage than a grubby individual known as 'i'hei Count," ' who sold cigars - hi the street, and made a public nuisance of himself by getting drunk. For years the count has passed himself off; as a man of royal blood, but officials in the Italian Consulate smile expansivley when the subject is mentioned. The official book of Italian nobility contains no reference to the Bonanate family. "The Count" himself is a picturesque figure, who, often has been hauled rudely to gaol by the police on no less than 5 occasions during the past few years. He has appeared- before the magistrates-in the Perth Police Court on charges arising out of excessive drinking. He invariably "greets the magistrate effusively with such address as "Good morning, my noble lord,* and his bow would turn a Spanish grandee blue with Snvy. | Last year the Count was discovered by child welfare officials living with his wife, an Australian woman, and five children, in a house which was. described in court as a. pig-sty. The children were charged with being neglected, and were handed over to the State Children's Department, . ;

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19280706.2.56

Bibliographic details

Stratford Evening Post, Issue 86, 6 July 1928, Page 8

Word Count
372

PERTH'S COUNT Stratford Evening Post, Issue 86, 6 July 1928, Page 8

PERTH'S COUNT Stratford Evening Post, Issue 86, 6 July 1928, Page 8