MOSCOW REVOLT
REPORTS GREATLY EXAGGERATED. (?C3LI3BCB IN TSI TIKiS.) (Received November 8, 10 a.m,) LONDON, 6th November. The last axithentic news from Russia discounts the stories of the. counterrevolution as greatly exaggerated. Madame Nadot, widow of a Moscow banker, who was included in the last batch of prisoners reiurned to France, pays' that Trotsky's iron discipline is likely to prevent the collapse of Bolshevism. The army is unpopular and is hated, but' the peasants' indifference and fatalism, and the cringing servility of town populations, prevent an^ large scale opposition developing. Everyone is compelled to keep a work book, showing the hours laboured. If they are insufficient, they are compelled to work in the scavenging or woodchopping gangs or go without food.
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Evening Post, Volume C, Issue 112, 8 November 1920, Page 7
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121MOSCOW REVOLT Evening Post, Volume C, Issue 112, 8 November 1920, Page 7
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