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| Northern Territory News : Cleaners cavorted within . | 
By Peter Simon 
Duncan got the job at the News by audacity. He called on the editor one day, looked about his messy office and , in a pukka accent, said : " You need a cleaner , old chap . " Apart from being the cleaner at the News , Duncan also took the morning tea and luncheon orders and pedalled off on a bike, pipe in mouth , to nearby shops. Returning, he then removed his glasses , placed the order list, on a scrap of paper , several inches from his poppy eyes and tried to work out who got what.
At times he lurched  into evening
 parties  held  in the primitive sleeping
quarters  at  the News  and , after imbibing  more  fluid 
which   results in Dutch  courage, would  give a damsel a  continental 
pinch on the  derrier.    This 
habit of  pinching  ladies  resulted in  him
being  locked in a wardrobe  one night.  Office staff 
the next morning heard  odd noises
 coming from  the wardrobe, cautiously  opened the door  and out slumped  a  very
limp  Dapper Don.  Naturally, Donald  put the  bite on Jim for  money  from  time  to  time.  
 DUNCAN  INSPIRES  AUSTRALIAN YOUTH
Dapper Donald was an ardent and critical reader of the News. He would peruse each edition from cover to cover and pick out spelling errors and misuse of grammar. Then he would march into Bowditch and tell him he would have to do something to prevent butchering the Queen’s English. These lectures from the head of the cleaning department were delivered late in the day when the editor was keen to get up the road for a drink , and often resulted in Dapper Donald being politely told to bugger off.
Dapper Donald was an ardent and critical reader of the News. He would peruse each edition from cover to cover and pick out spelling errors and misuse of grammar. Then he would march into Bowditch and tell him he would have to do something to prevent butchering the Queen’s English. These lectures from the head of the cleaning department were delivered late in the day when the editor was keen to get up the road for a drink , and often resulted in Dapper Donald being politely told to bugger off.
One of his  many court
appearances  was  notable for the fact that  he  wore two left foot sandals. On one appearance the magistrate ,  shaking his head , asked  Duncan  what he should do with him. A seeming  bush lawyer , Duncan replied that  the  magistrate  had  never  given  him  a suspended sentence  and  it would be rather nice if he did so ; his  honour told Duncan he was becoming cheeky .
Duncan had been educated at one of
England’s   great public schools and  came from  a 
well to do  family . When the  writer  of this
biography  went to  Portuguese 
Timor for the News  aboard  the  MV
Malita , which ran supplies to an American  oil drilling team,  Duncan got the urge  to do a similar trip.  He wondered 
if  the  skipper  of 
the  supply  boat 
might  take  him on 
as   cook.   Duncan was 
told to  go  to  the
wharf  and  speak 
to  the  skipper, 
Bert Cummins . Soon after, filled  above  the  Plimsoll 
line ,  Duncan  made his
way to the  wharf  at  night
and  fell into the  harbour . 
He pulled and kicked off  his
clothes, floated  on his back and  called  for help.  All night he drifted  backwards and forwards with the tide.  Early 
in the morning,  a young girl , on
the wharf  with  her father who was  fishing,  happened  to look over the side and  spotted 
Duncan floating by .  He croaked
out a cry for help.  She  raised the alarm , and later said  she knew he was  not just 
swimming   because  he did not have any  clothes on , except for a  sock . 
Hauled out, Duncan was taken to hospital and became the centre of media attention , having survived a night drifting about “ crocodile and shark infested ” waters . He was photographed sitting up in bed with his pipe, the girl who had spotted him drifting by like a newborn baby , smiling at him , and he was quoted as saying he survived the ordeal because he had been taught at school that when ever you got into a difficult situation you should relax and not panic. The story got nationwide coverage and an Adelaide paper ran an editorial saying Mr Duncan was an inspiration to the youth of the country with his advice that you should not panic in a difficult situation. Thus one of Darwin’s most prominent drunks was held up as a shining example to the nation’s youth . Duncan had that editorial mounted and pointed at it with pride , laughing in his distinctive fashion as he did so .
He was delighted when  a
gold cigarette case and  lighter were
sent to him from his  family in
England.  Proudly, he showed  them 
about  at   the News and that night went to the  Workers’ Club,  got 
drunk, was arrested and  when he
sobered up  found the items were  missing. 
For several years  Dapper Donald
had a room in a boarding house  run  by  Mrs
Julie Papandonakis  who felt sorry   for him , even though he used to  help himself to her salami  and 
cheese  kept in  a downstairs 
frig. 
A vivacious woman with a well - built  husband 
,  Tony  , 
who  was  in the excavation
business, Mrs Papandonakis had a long association  with 
Bowditch  and the NT News.  A 
number of  News  staff 
boarded  at her residence
including this  writer.   When she  yelled ,"Righto, you boys!" , you knew
that  you were in trouble with the
landlady . 
She  gave Bowditch  a tongue lashing  over 
an item he wrote in the  News. In the early days , when she and her
husband were battling , Tony had a compressor 
but   could not afford  a 
truck  to tow it to job sites,
relying on  a friend to do so.  At times , he and a  workmate  would 
carry  jack  hammers 
and  other equipment which could
be stolen if left overnight  on  an 
excavation site .  One  morning , Bowditch saw  them trudging along with  the equipment and  wrote a paragraph   for True North which went something like
this: No wonder  the Greeks  have so much money, they  are so mean 
they  carry  their jackhammers  to a job rather than  use a truck . 
On reading this, Julie  flew into
a rage , drove to the News and " got stuck 
into " Bowditch.  When she
explained the reason for her  rage , he apologised. 
What had upset her most  was that
her  husband was  described as Greek  when 
he  had  only recently become naturalised and  was proud to be Australian.
During the time  Dapper
Donald  resided at her place , Bowditch
would regularly ring up and ask  if the
missing  cleaner  was  there
. Invariably, she replied that he was 
sleeping it  off  after a
bender  . 
Her mother  often said to get rid
of "that drunk",  and despite   reading the riot act to  Duncan 
from time to time  about his
drinking,   she  could 
not bring herself to  throw him
out on the street. Duncan 
repeatedly   told  staff at the News that  Julie was a "good sport" and  he always knew his  room at her
establishment  was waiting for  him when he got out of  Fannie Bay  Jail  after a  short 
spell.  
NAKED  IRISHMAN ,  STINGRAY   AND    BASHER   TED 
When  Duncan was  drying out 
in Fannie Bay  his place at the
News oft  was filled 
by another  thirsty cleaner.   He was a tall Irishman   who  got
about in thongs , his shirt  unbuttoned ,
a wild look in  his  eyes . 
Police  picked  him up one night
sitting naked on the footpath  outside
the Catholic girls’ hostel , his clothes 
folded neatly  beside him .  When
asked  what he was  doing there , he told the  police 
he  liked fresh  air. 
He  and  his  clothing  were  bundled  into  the  paddy wagon .  
For a short time there was 
an ex-naval man,  with bloodshot
eyes , who   joined the list  of 
News  cleaners.  His  peculiarity was  using  the 
pot  in which metal slugs  from  the linotype machines were melted down  to  cook 
his  meals.  Staff  would 
arrive at work to find  a piece
of  tin 
across  the  pot upon which  were remnants
of  sausage . Apart from  having  an unusual frying pan  and 
imbibing heavily , he also 
liked  gambling ; he was  fired after it was discovered he  had been using  the NT 
News phone  early on  Saturday mornings  to ring  up  all
over Australia to get the  latest good 
oil  on  nags. It was suggested  he  eventually died  from 
lead  poisoning   caused 
by  cooking  his  snags on  the  News  metal  melting  pot . 
At long last , it looked as if the  News 
had a  sober, reliable
cleaner-Ted  Maloney-who took up
residence  on the premises  in a room at the  back of  the paper, along with  his  
cockatoo  and  two   dogs. 
Drinking , he  said , was for  fools , and admitted he had once been
a  heavy drinker , but had seen the
light  and given it up  years 
previously .  Coming across
members of the staff  drinking on the premises
at night , a frequent occurrence ,  he
would shake his  head  and 
scornfully  tell  them what fools they were . 
Maloney, who boasted that he  was
   Red Ted Maloney, a
notorious  Melbourne knuckle man ,  had a 
fish  trap  in the 
shape  of  a V-shaped fence  meeting 
in  a  box where 
the  fish were trapped.  The catch had to  be 
emptied  at  low tide 
and  he was spiked in  the  hand 
by  the  barb  in  a
stingray’s tail.   The pain from such
stings is said to be  excruciating ,
and  for a long time after  the victim  supposedly 
feels  agonising   pain  with  each  tidal
 change. 
Poor Red Ted  once  more turned to grog  to  try
and ease the  pain.  In the grip of booze , he would ring  Bowditch at home  and threaten to bash him . During these calls
, often  late  at night or  early  in  the morning, he would remind Bowditch
that  he was the  notorious 
Melbourne  pug.  Jim 
just laughed  off  the threats 
and  on arrival at  work would find  Ted 
snoring ,   his  pets  nearby,  the  cleaner 
unable to  carry out  out  his 
threat  to  do violence  upon  the  person  of  the  editor . 
However , Bowditch was himself suffering from a hangover when he took an early morning call from Red Ted once more threatening to bash him when he arrived at the office. Bowditch responded by saying he was coming to the office straight away . Bowditch sped to the office , strode into Ted’s room and said in view of the fact that the cleaner often boasted to be a mean fighter, let’s see just how good you are. The cleaner broke down and admitted he was not the said Red Ted , merely a relative. Maloney departed soon after and set up a rough camp near the back of the racecourse . He died following a fall from a cliff … Bowditch paid for his burial .
 ATTEMPT   TO   CREMATE  DAPPER  DONALD    
However , Bowditch was himself suffering from a hangover when he took an early morning call from Red Ted once more threatening to bash him when he arrived at the office. Bowditch responded by saying he was coming to the office straight away . Bowditch sped to the office , strode into Ted’s room and said in view of the fact that the cleaner often boasted to be a mean fighter, let’s see just how good you are. The cleaner broke down and admitted he was not the said Red Ted , merely a relative. Maloney departed soon after and set up a rough camp near the back of the racecourse . He died following a fall from a cliff … Bowditch paid for his burial .
Once  more , Dapper
Donald  found himself  gainfully  employed as cleaner  and protector 
of  the Queen’s  English at the News ... "It’s not  good enough, old chap ".  He also remonstrated with stone hands in  the factory who threw paper galley proofs  and
 other litter  on the floor.  They  responded
by  telling  Dapper Don in no uncertain terms  that they  were making work for him  and to pull his head in or stick  it somewhere else .  
Taking himself  on  a 
holiday  by  ship  to  Perth, 
Dapper Don  was killed when a  car driven by 
a friendly  lady  on  a
scenic tour  ran off  the road 
at  a  port 
of  call  on  his
way  back to Darwin .  Bowditch  was contacted  in the capacity almost as  next of  kin  and 
asked  for  burial
instructions.   West 
Australian  police were  shocked when 
Bowditch asked  if   Dapper
Don   could  be cremated in  the bush and  his  ashes 
sent  to Darwin  for  forwarding to  his relatives, contacted by Jim  in 
England . 
The possibility of 
placing  the  body in a box 
marked natural  history
specimen  and  flying it to Perth for cremation was  also  
canvassed.   Dapper Don , however, was  eventually buried in WA.   Bowditch understood  that a memorial  plaque  to Donald  was  placed  in  his family’s church .  Police came and took away all 
of   Duncan’s meagre  possessions  from  his room at the Papadonakis  boarding house .  Bowditch 
told  Julie  that 
Duncan’s relatives  would  probably 
send  her  something 
as a reward for having been so 
good to him , but  nothing eventuated. NEXT: The  naughty vicar 
flashes  his  crown jewels !       
 
