HYDE’S CASE.
DEPORTED FROM CANADA. AT OWN REQUEST. VANCOUVER, Tuesday. Mr A. E. Skinner, Immigration Commissioner here, stated that Francis Raymond Hyde was deported at his own request. Every possible aid was given him. He had no money and was desirous of getting to New Zealand, where his only relatives resided. Had he remained in Canada he would have become a public charge. The deportation order enabled him to get transportation home free. Every kindness was extended to him. He was sent to tlic ship on a water bed loaned by the hospital, and the bed was taken aboard for his use until he arrived at his destination. He -was taken under the care of the ship’s physician and given special attention by him.
The accident which resulted so seriously to .Hyde occurred about a month after he arrived from New Zealand. — United Service.
(Francis Hyde, a young Gisborne farm labourer, arrived at Auckland on Sunday on the Aorangi, and his story appeared to cast some reflection on Canada’s treatment of him after he had met with an accident ‘in which his spinal cord was severed.)
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Wairarapa Daily Times, 23 May 1928, Page 5
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186HYDE’S CASE. Wairarapa Daily Times, 23 May 1928, Page 5
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