BRITISH AND FOREIGN
Press Association—By Telegraph—Copyright LONDON, May 28. Sir James Allen, representing the War Graves Commission, will open on June 4 a cemetery at Venders, "where several New Zealanders as well as British troops are buried.—A. and N.Z. Cable. (LONDON, May 39 (Received May 30, at 0.10 a.m.) As the result of the inquiry into the Wembley Park crushing, the Football Association is refunding £4IOO entrant money.—A. and Cable. The Times Labour correspondent writes that a result of the Labour-Socialist Conference in Hamburg has been the establishment of a new International, under British leadership, based on London, and directly opposed to the Moscow International. Bolshevism lias been repudiated, and the International is open to all bodies forswearing the Bolshevist policy. The committee includes Megsrs Ramsay Macdonald, Arthur Henderson, and J. H. Thomas, members of the House of Commons. —Times.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 18875, 30 May 1923, Page 8
Word Count
140BRITISH AND FOREIGN Otago Daily Times, Issue 18875, 30 May 1923, Page 8
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