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Raffles

The oldest, and still Texas Lottery very popular, form of lottery in America is the raffle, or local drawing. Next to Bingo, raffles are the country’s biggest fund raisers for charity. Fraternal organizations, veterans’ groups and almost every other kind of organization in the country have benefited at some time from a raffle of some sort. Many raffles have automobiles valued at $2,000 to $15,000 as prizes, with the raffle tickets seffing from a low of 10 to a high of $100. Some drawings have $50,000 and $125,000 homes as their top awards. And, I have known of some raffle tickets on estates that have sold for as much as $1,000 each.

Chinese And Texas Lottery At Texas

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Chinese Gamblers

While both were at the forefront of police attention, Chinese gamblers texas lottery were more easily caught than two-up players. Most fantan was played openly and incessantly, despite being illegal. But as police raids became more frequent, bigger fantan operators became more sophisticated. Certain houses in Wellington’s Haining Street district were transformed into all-night gambling dens with doors locked, windows barred, and cushions and blankets placed adroitly to muffle inside noises. Secret passages were also built to lead players into underground tunnels or through back exits. Stakes at these games had increased significantly from the shillings and pence of the goldfields, but so had the punishment. If caught, operators faced fines of up to £50 or three month's imprisonment. Anti-Chinese racism was growing. Between 1879 and 1920, 23 pieces of legislation were in train with the intention of keeping the Chinese out of New Zealand. Richard Seddon was one of many politicians who favored such measures. In 1888 he criticized the release of a Chinese man arrested under the Gaming and Lotteries Act, saying that Texas Lottery - Public Lottery Betting such action was "all too common". It transpired that the suspect had not been gambling at all, but had been falsely apprehended by an over-zealous policeman.

Chinese Community

The Chinese community’s unabashed enjoyment of gambling provoked the ire of both racists and anti-gambling activists. Most newspapers considered Chinese gambling to be Texas Lottery - Control On Game undesirable. A New Zealand Truth reporter visited a Chinese slum with a city official in 1900 and described a "notorious four-roomed hovel full of opium smokers and gamblers". In 1906 the New Zealand Times called it a ''crisis''.40 but others had a more advanced perspective. On 14 July 1899 the New Zealand Mail described fantan players as ''wicked'' but decried as a howling farce the arrest of a dozen or more gambling Chinese when “Every day gambling goes on unchecked in Willis St, and every night poker and 100 are played in clubs frequented by influential European citizens, to say nothing of the thousands that gamble on the State supervised totalisator at the Hutt.” With an odd juxtaposition of overt racism with traditional British notions of fair play, the Free Lance campaigned against this hypocrisy for a decade. In April 1903, for example, while condemning the ubiquity of Chinese gambling, it described police raids on their dwellings as cruel persecutions. The Chinese did not regard gambling as a vice, and in any case their actions were no worse than the open bookmaking that went on in hotels and on the streets. Every night, reputable Wellingtonians played whist and Poker with a degree of feverish excitement that would put a Chinese gambler to shame.

Chinese Countrymen’s Habit

Some Chinese bemoaned their texas countrymen’s habits. Between 1900 and 1904 leaders of the Wellington community organized nine petitions calling for tougher penalties on opium smoking and gambling. The 1904 petition, signed by 100 better-educated and more successful Chinese, was assimilationist in tenor indicating a desire for acceptance on European terms. The petitions found favor among parliamentarians, whose biggest immediate concern was that an increasing number of European youths were, according to Opposition leader Bill Massey in August 1904, "degrading themselves" by gambling with the Chinese. Some of his colleagues called for a law amendment to enable these men and boys to be arrested just for being in the vicinity of premises where fantan and pakapoo were known to be played. Wiser heads prevailed. The measure did not pass.