GERMANS HALT RETIREMENT. Turn on British and Erench With Strong Counterattacks on Whole Eront. Entente Advances Still Con tinuing. Allied Eorces, Despite Re sistance by Teutons, Keep Up Their Gains. Russians Report Eurther Successes Against the Turks. (Saturday's War Summary.) Temporarily, at least, the retire ment of the German forces in France appears to have halted, as both the British and French communications report counterattacks and stubborn resistance along the front. Notwithstanding thi| the British report progress southeast of Arras; and the French have moved forward between one and a quarter and two and one-half miles n the St. Quentin region. The French also have gained on the height overlooking the Oise val ley northeast of Pergnier and have repulsed German attacks before Thil, northeast of Rheims. Paris asserts the Germans are in undating the Oise region and that the city of La Fere, thought to have been one of the strong points in the German line, is under water. South of the Oise the French con tinue to cross the Ailette river and north of Soissons, Paris says, consid erable progress has been made toward Margival. Stubborn German resistance is said to have marked the French successes between the Somme asd the Oise, where much ground was gained. From Beaurains, about two miles south of Arras, to Etreillers, five miles west of St. Quentin, London re ports encounters between British and German forces. At Vraucourt and at two points in the center of the line German coun terattacks are said to have been re pulsed and the British positions main tained. Southeast of Arras, in the neighborhood of Ecoust and Crois silles, the British made further gains. The latest official statement from Berlin says the French were repulsed in the attacks along the Somme-Cro zat, canal, between the Somme and the Oise, and that 230 prisoners were taken by the Germans. Except for French activity near Monastir, in Servia, and Russian ad vances in Persia, there have been no important operations on the other battle fronts. North of Monastir, af ter a violent fight, Hill 1248 remained in the hands of the French. Paris says the German and Bul garian troops made repeated unsuc cessful attacks to gain possession of the hill. Berlin reports a "harassing fire" by the French near Monastir and says a partial attack took place between Lakes Ochrida and Presba. Southwest of Kermanshah, Persia, the Russians have progressed to with in 45 miles of the Mesopotamian bor der, according to Petrograd. This would bring the Russians to within 100 miles of the British force that has been advancing up the Diala river from Bagdad. In a 16 hour battle near Kerind, Petrograd asserts, the Turks were forced to retreat to Kerind. The Russians have attacked the Turks along the River Shirwan, a tributary of the Diala. It is reported unofficially that Ger many has notified Norway of the ex tension of the blockaded zone to the Arctic ocean. This extends the zone in which neutral vessels go at their own risk to include the waters ac cessible to the ports of northern Rus sia. Seven Americans are believed to have been lost when the American steamer Healdton was torpedoed by a submarine Wednesday in the North sea off the coast of Holland. The Healdton is said to have been well in side the so called "safe channel" when she was attacked. MOSCOW MAY BE CAPITAL. Transfer of Seat of Government to Ancient Capital Is Probable In Russia. It is highly probable, it is believed in Entente circles in Washington, that the capital of Russia may be transferred from Petrograd to the ancient capital city of Moscow. It is reported that Petrograd is swatming with German spies and that the city is strongly under the pro-German in fluence. Such a change in the capital, it is said, will meet with the approval of the masses of the people. EMPEROR MAY GIVE UP CROWN News From Paris Says That a Noted German Magistrate Predicts That Kaiser William Will Not Be Able to Hold on Much Longer. Emperor Feels That He Has Enemies at Home As Well as Abroad. A dispatch from Paris published in Sunday's paper says that a former German magistrate, the author of the famous book, "J'Accuse," has given an interview to the French paper, "Oeuvre" in which he forecasts the German Emperor's abdication, as fol lows: . "The Kaiser is obsessed by the thought that he is responsible for the war, a thought which po'isons his whole existence. He feels that he is menaced by three enemies at home without counting thpse abroad. First is the crown prince, the real author of the war; second is the junker pan Germanist ? you can not imagine the smoldering hatred of the emperor for those he believes to be maniacs who are driving him into an abyss ? third are the people, not the Socialist party but the people who are starving and who he feels are growing in number and rising little by little against those who organized the war. "The other day at the meeting of the parliamentary presidents and the ministers of the federal sovereigns at which the submarine war was decided upon, the struggle between the kai ser's party and that of von Tirpitz was moct bitter. The majority against the emperor was so great, however, that he was obliged to submit and pre tend he was convinced. Particularly he was personally opposed to a break with President Wilson but he was forced to consent. Docupnents will be published one day which will prove that secretly he did everything not to bring America