POSSIBLE CAUSES
(By Telegraph.—Press Association.)
AUCKLAND, This Day.
With reference to the cablegram regarding the Foreign Legion niutiny, an Auckland resident who was in the Legion sixteen years ago, said that the mutiny might have been caused by lack of water or food, too much continued active service, or, perhaps, the "caffard," the madness brought on by heat and monotony. It seemed to him that the niutiny report was exaggerated, for it was unlikely that a whole battalion would mutiny. Since the war there had been a large influx of Bussians and possibly Soviet propaganda had something to do with it.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 49, 26 August 1930, Page 9
Word Count
101POSSIBLE CAUSES Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 49, 26 August 1930, Page 9
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