RUSSIA.
THE EXCHANGE OP PRISONERS. By Telegraph—Press Assn.—Copyright. London, Jan. 3. Mr. O'Grady has gone to Copenhagen to resume negotiations with Litvinoff.— Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn. GREAT BOLSHEVIK GAINS. London, Jan. 2. Further great Bolshevik gains are reported, making General Denikin's position worse, the capture of the Don basin depriving him of the only railway running across the front.
The Russo-Esthonian armistice fixes the frontiers with a neutral zone on the east bank on the Narova. and the neutralisation of the Gulf of Finland. Russia renounces forever her pretensions against Esthonia.
The Daily Mail describes the agreement as a great victory for the "Bolsheviks and adds that'the Allies are looking to Japan to stop Bolshevik advance. When her troops occupy a great area of Eastern Siberia she will 'have jrainecl a new place in the world, rivalling the status of the great Western Powers—United Service.
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Taranaki Daily News, 6 January 1920, Page 5
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144RUSSIA. Taranaki Daily News, 6 January 1920, Page 5
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