TREASON CHARGE
AGAINST BRITISH JOURNALIST. ACTION IN GERMANY. SURPRISE AT TREATMENT. (United Press Association—By Electric Telegraph.—Copyright.) Received October 28, 8.10 a.m. LONDON, Oct. 27. A Berlin message states that the British Consul at Munich lias been permitted to see Mr Noel Ranter, the imprisoned correspondent of the’ Daily Telegraph. Mr Panter will be charged with high treason. • The Munich correspondent of the Times states that although Geimany is preaching peace, surprise is caused by the fact that foreign journalists are suffering from the same high-hand-edness as are Germans, especially in view of the fact that a member of the Bavarian Cabinet, Herr Esser, recently invited them to go everywhere with open eyes and ears, because “we have nothing to conceal.” A well-known German journalist, Herr Josef Ackermann, has been arrested in Bavaria. He is suspected of being one of the sources of information for the detained British correspondent, Mr Noel Panter.
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume LIII, Issue 284, 28 October 1933, Page 7
Word Count
151TREASON CHARGE Manawatu Standard, Volume LIII, Issue 284, 28 October 1933, Page 7
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