WAR PROFITS AND THE SECOND DIVISION
Sir,—Your correspondent Thirty-six has so deliberately misrepresented both tho league and myself that his letter carries its own condemnation. In these days we have snrely enough to do without answering attacks by individuals who have not the courage to fight in the open and over their own names. Your correspondent soourges us for asking tor adequate pensions and allowances for our dependants, and implies that he and others "are prepared to take their places in the fighting ranks at the same rate, of pay and allowances as the First I'msion received." Well, what is he waiting for? The voluntary system is still open, to him, and he could then deliver his message (the one bright spot in his, letter) to the troops at the front in person.—l am, etc., R. A. ARMSTRONG, President Wellington Second Division- ' League.
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Dominion, Volume 10, Issue 3139, 18 July 1917, Page 6
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143WAR PROFITS AND THE SECOND DIVISION Dominion, Volume 10, Issue 3139, 18 July 1917, Page 6
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