Lục Tỉnh Tân Văn
Vietnamese newspaper / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Lục Tỉnh Tân Văn (1907, lit. 'Six Provinces News'; chữ Hán: 六省新聞) was a Vietnamese newspaper published in Saigon.[1] Although the title was Sino-Vietnamese, the newspaper was one of the first non-Catholic papers to use the Latin quốc ngữ script.
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ed/L%E1%BB%A5c_T%E1%BB%89nh_T%C3%A2n_V%C4%83n_s%E1%BB%91_223%2C_s%E1%BB%91_243%2C_s%E1%BB%91_320%2C_s%E1%BB%91_665_-_Nghi%C3%AAn_C%E1%BB%A9u_L%E1%BB%8Bch_S%E1%BB%AD.jpg/640px-L%E1%BB%A5c_T%E1%BB%89nh_T%C3%A2n_V%C4%83n_s%E1%BB%91_223%2C_s%E1%BB%91_243%2C_s%E1%BB%91_320%2C_s%E1%BB%91_665_-_Nghi%C3%AAn_C%E1%BB%A9u_L%E1%BB%8Bch_S%E1%BB%AD.jpg)
The paper was technically owned by François-Henri Schneider, since only a Frenchman could obtain a license to publish a newspaper,[2] but behind him stood the industrialist Gilbert Trần Chánh Chiếu,[3] in 1908 arrested as a secret backer and organizer of the independence movement.[4][5]