PLENTY OF FOOD
IMPRISONED ENG INKERS. United Press Assn.—By Electric Telegraph—CopvrightEONDON. April 2. Sir Esmond Ovey, British Ambassador to Russia, arrived in London to-day. He will report "to the subcommittee of Cabinet to-morrow, after which the full Cabinet will be summoned to deal with the situation at Moscow. Meanwhile an official of the British Embassy is allowed to cot.verse with the imprisoned engineers in the presence of the Prosecutor, M. Visliiusky. All the arrestees assured the Prosecutor that they were receiving plenty of food and exercise ; but Gregory made a typically British complaint—that he was impatient to return to the rolling-mill that be had been erecting at Djerjinsky, ••before the Russians mess it up.” BUSY AT MOSCOW. BRITISH EMBASSY STAFF PACKING. LONDON. April 3. The Daily Mail says while Sir Esmond Ovey is conferring with Nlr E«msay MacDonald and Sir John Simon, most of the British Embassy staff at Moscow are occupied with packing.
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Bibliographic details
Pahiatua Herald, Volume XL, Issue 12312, 4 April 1933, Page 5
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154PLENTY OF FOOD Pahiatua Herald, Volume XL, Issue 12312, 4 April 1933, Page 5
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