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MISS A. R. QUAYLE, secretary to the Auckland branch of the Overseas League. The branch recently established a clubroom in the Art Society Building, in Kitchener Street, which is the first clubroom to be opened by the Overseas League in New Zealand. Vernon House, the well-known London headquarters of the League was erected in 1921 as a memorial to the soldiers from overseas who fell in the Great War, and is one of the few residential clubs in London, admitting both men and women members. The League will attain its majority in August and members of this worldwide movement are making a special effort to reach the 50,000 membership mark by that time. —Tornquist Studios

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19300315.2.196.4.1

Bibliographic details

Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 922, 15 March 1930, Page 20

Word Count
115

MISS A. R. QUAYLE, secretary to the Auckland branch of the Overseas League. The branch recently established a clubroom in the Art Society Building, in Kitchener Street, which is the first clubroom to be opened by the Overseas League in New Zealand. Vernon House, the well-known London headquarters of the League was erected in 1921 as a memorial to the soldiers from overseas who fell in the Great War, and is one of the few residential clubs in London, admitting both men and women members. The League will attain its majority in August and members of this worldwide movement are making a special effort to reach the 50,000 membership mark by that time. —Tornquist Studios Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 922, 15 March 1930, Page 20

MISS A. R. QUAYLE, secretary to the Auckland branch of the Overseas League. The branch recently established a clubroom in the Art Society Building, in Kitchener Street, which is the first clubroom to be opened by the Overseas League in New Zealand. Vernon House, the well-known London headquarters of the League was erected in 1921 as a memorial to the soldiers from overseas who fell in the Great War, and is one of the few residential clubs in London, admitting both men and women members. The League will attain its majority in August and members of this worldwide movement are making a special effort to reach the 50,000 membership mark by that time. —Tornquist Studios Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 922, 15 March 1930, Page 20

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