大漢公報 : Chinese Times : [1919-03-26]
This digital collection contains images of historical texts. Alternative text is not available for these images.
There was an error retrieving this image.
For help and additional download options, please see our documentation
Help
Vancouver, British Columbia : Tai Hon Kong Bo Ltd., 1919; 12 images with full-text search
Document Record
- Title
-
Chinese Times : [1919-03-26]
大漢公報 : [一九一九年三月二十六日] - Published
- Vancouver, British Columbia : Tai Hon Kong Bo Ltd., 1919
- Identifier
-
sfu.00001_19190326
00001_19190326 - Subject
-
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 source
- University of British Columbia Library
- Collection
-
Newspapers
Serials: Periodicals, Annuals and Newspapers - Language
- Chinese
- Description
- March 26, Wednesday P.2-3 1. A report of the court hearing of . The court » hearing was complicated due to the problem of a good interpreter and translator. The constitution of the Kuomintang was translated which showed that the association in Vancouver was the headquarters for the U.S.A. and Canada. There were Kuomintang branch offices in Calgary, Toronto, Lethbridge, Edmonton, Regina, and Winnipeg. The constitution stated that: i. if any member was being persecuted, the other members had to extend help. ii. if any member denounced or rejected the party, the party would deal with those particular members. iii. those who supported the party could be admitted as members even though they had committed serious crimes. iv. every overseas member had to pay a certain amount of National Salvation donation. The party had previously tried to help their members to find jobs or to teach the members, however, the result was unsatisfactory. It had once tried to invite a V.I.P. from China to a speech tour in Canada to preach the ideology of the Kuomintang. P.3 2. The white restaurant owners in Manitoba were jealous of the Chinese restaurnat owners. They thus proposed to the City Council to stop issuing restaurant licences to Chinese. The Chinese immediately appealed to Ambassador Yeung who negotiated the case with the Manitoba government. Yeung was successful in abolishing the restrictive law.
- Persistent URL
- https://n2t.net/ark:/69429/m0t72794662g