Six weeks after his arrival in Adelaide he and a young man named Bruce rode the 120 miles (190 km) to Canowie Station with horses and cattle.
Other work involved hunting for horses that had strayed from Canowie, and were found as far south as Anlaby Station (near Kapunda) and Shea-oak Log, 60 or 70 miles (100 or 110 km) away.
During the great drought of 1865 Goode reared a fine bull at Canowie, which won the Champion prize at Adelaide, Melbourne, and Sydney shows.
[20] He was musically talented and composed at least one song, "Ready", published 1914 to critical indifference[21] by Cawthorne and Co.[22] He was House Surgeon at Adelaide Hospital in 1895.
[23] One of his last public mentions in connection with Adelaide Hospital was in December 1895 as chief witness at the inquest of a man who died under anaesthetic.
[25] and was elected town councillor in April[26] In December 1897 he was convicted of acts of gross indecency and sentenced to four years' jail.
An attack of bronchial catarrh followed by chronic bronchitis necessitated his return to England in May 1918, and he was appointed as one of the medical officers at Horseferry Road.
In March 1919 he was repatriated to South Australia and resumed practice at Peterborough, where he took a prominent part in the installation of its Soldiers' Memorial Hospital.
[36] and a follow-up in 1913, The Childhood of Helen[37] Her political activities included support for single tax, as espoused by A. T. Saunders,[38] prison reform,[39] and abolition of capital punishment[40] She married Crawford Vaughan on 8 June 1906 and continued her involvement with politics, and, being a speaker of fluency and brilliant style, was frequently called on to address public meetings.
During the war years, she involved herself in recruiting, and inaugurated a well-known system of window badges, where crosses indicated the number of volunteers from that particular dwelling.
She accompanied her husband to America and subsequently entertained various societies with graphic accounts of conditions social, political, and industrial prevailing in the United States.
[41] She died at Thornleigh, New South Wales on 2 November 1927 after a long illness, leaving her husband and one daughter, of 18 years of age.