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BRITISH PRISONERS

MARCHED THROUGH STREETS OP CONSTANTINOPLE A VICE-CONSUL TO BE COURT* MARTIALLED. (Received May 5. 10 a.m.) ATHENS, 4th May. A message from Constantinople states (hat British prisoners from the submarine UJS that went aground in the Dardanelles and was later blown up by tho British were marched through Constanti- | nople, wearing fezsies, and finally taken, to Izmid. The British -Vice-Consul. Mr C. E. P Palmer, has been detained for [ court-martial. He is charged with acting as a spy aboard the submarine. WAS THE ATTACK TIMELY? MR. CHURCHILL QUESTIONED. (Received May 5. 9 a.m.) LONDON, 4th May. Mr. Winston Churchill, First Lord of tho Admiralty, in reply to a question in tho House of Commons, said he had coil suited Lord Fisher, First Sea Lord of the Admiralty, on the attack on tho Dardanelles. Lord Fisher did not express tho viow that 'tho attack should not be made in March.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19150505.2.86

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXIX, Issue 105, 5 May 1915, Page 7

Word Count
151

BRITISH PRISONERS Evening Post, Volume LXXXIX, Issue 105, 5 May 1915, Page 7

BRITISH PRISONERS Evening Post, Volume LXXXIX, Issue 105, 5 May 1915, Page 7