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Post by NZBC on Mar 5, 2011 20:56:46 GMT 12
TO LEAVE COUNTRY ORDER AGAINST CHINAMAN
(City Telegraph.—Press Association.)
INVERCARGILL, This Day
A Chinese, Lee Wong, arrested on warrant from Auckland, and charged with being a prohibited immigrant, was fined £10 and ordered to be deported within thirty days. Counsel for the defence said that the defendant was in partnership with another Chinese in a .market garden, and had an interest in cauliflowers worth between £3000 and £4000. Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 121, 24 May 1930, Page 10
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Post by NZBC on Mar 5, 2011 21:52:47 GMT 12
CHINESE BANKRUPT FOURTEEN CRIMINAL CHARGES (By Telegraph.) (Special to "The Evening Post.") DUNEDIN, This Day. -.In the Polieo Court a long list of | charges was answered by a Chinese, business wan, Jinn Toon Lee, who appeared as :t bankrupt before the Official Assignee in April. After the evidence had been taken in the Bankruptcy Lourt it wus decided that the matter should be handed to the Crown Prosecutor to consider prosecution. Counsel intimated that the accused would stand his trial on all fourteen charges, which included obtaining money by valueless cheques and breaches of the .Bankruptcy Act. W. Y. K. Chan, a market gardener, or! Invercargill, father of the accused, said that ho told tho accused that if ho behaved himself he would give him his gardens. His son had been educated at Dunodiu, Auckland, and some other place outside New Zealand. Evening Post, Volume CVIII, Issue 20, 23 July 1929, Page 6 paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=EP19290723.2.32&cl=search&srpos=80&e=-------100--1----0chinese+market+garden--&st=1
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