大漢公報 : Chinese Times : [1918-11-14]

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Aide Vancouver, British Columbia : Tai Hon Kong Bo Ltd., 1918; 12 images avec recherche en texte intégral

Notice bibliographique du document

Titre
Chinese Times : [1918-11-14]
大漢公報 : [一九一八年十一月十四日]
Adresse bibliographique
Vancouver, British Columbia : Tai Hon Kong Bo Ltd., 1918
Identificateur
sfu.00001_19181114
00001_19181114
Sujet
Chinese Canadians--Newspapers
Chinese--Newspapers
Chinese Canadians--British Columbia--Vancouver--Newspapers
Chinese--British Columbia--Vancouver--Newspapers
British Columbia--Newspapers
Vancouver (B.C.)--Newspapers
華裔加拿大人--不列顛哥倫比亞--溫哥華--歷史--報紙
華人--不列顛哥倫比亞--溫哥華--歷史--報紙
中國--歷史--二十世紀--報紙
加拿大--歷史--二十世紀--報紙
不列顛哥倫比亞--歷史--二十世紀--報紙
溫哥華 (不列顛哥倫比亞)-- 歷史--二十世紀--報紙
Document original
University of British Columbia Library
Collection
Journaux
Publications en série : périodiques, publications annuelles et journaux
Langue
chinois
Description
December 14 P.2 1) Ambassador Yip announced on Dec. 13 that he had already acknowledged the Chinese community that they should give a report of their losses during the war-time period. However, the total loss reported by the Chinese community did not exceed $500,000. Yip thus hoped that any Chinese who wanted to claim indemnity should report to the Embassy before Dec. 20 for assessment. P.2-3 2) The policemen's Committee held a meeting whereby the chairman was the mayor ( ). There was a report that recently, a Chinese had sent a letter to the mayor about his gambling joint in Chinatown. The Chinese asserted that he had given protection fee for his business. The mayor thus assumed that there was bribery in the Chinatown area. The mayor then added that the department issued no license to clubs which offered gambling, and to prevent further gmabling, a 29-man inspection team was set up to check the clubs. (There were about 1000 Chinese gamblers arrested in 1918). P.3 3) News from Victoria: On Dec. 13 (at 9 p.m.), 13 Chinese stores and organizations in Victoria were being searched by the police. The New Republic Newspaper was being searched, too, and those workers who were still in the agency were searched first. When the police discovered that there were some illegal military stocks, they confiscated the stuff, and saved it. The police even intended to take away the sign of the newapaper agency.
URL pérenne
https://n2t.net/ark:/69429/m0h98z897j2b