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According to a German magazine published in Stockholm, the Russians are operating the new eastern trans-Siberian railway, which they are using for the transport of British and American supplies to Chin?, arms excepted. The railway is stated to branch from the main trans-Siberian railway at Taishet, about IGOO miles cast of Moscow. It runs east to, the Lena river, north of Lake Baikal, and thence to a coastal point (probably Blagoveshchensk), 500 miles north of Vladivostok,—-London) April 6.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430408.2.53.3.1

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23917, 8 April 1943, Page 5

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78

According to a German magazine published in Stockholm, the Russians are operating the new eastern trans-Siberian railway, which they are using for the transport of British and American supplies to Chin?, arms excepted. The railway is stated to branch from the main trans-Siberian railway at Taishet, about IGOO miles cast of Moscow. It runs east to, the Lena river, north of Lake Baikal, and thence to a coastal point (probably Blagoveshchensk), 500 miles north of Vladivostok,—-London) April 6. Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23917, 8 April 1943, Page 5

According to a German magazine published in Stockholm, the Russians are operating the new eastern trans-Siberian railway, which they are using for the transport of British and American supplies to Chin?, arms excepted. The railway is stated to branch from the main trans-Siberian railway at Taishet, about IGOO miles cast of Moscow. It runs east to, the Lena river, north of Lake Baikal, and thence to a coastal point (probably Blagoveshchensk), 500 miles north of Vladivostok,—-London) April 6. Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23917, 8 April 1943, Page 5