OCR Text |
Show ALLIES TAKE IIP THE JOFFENSIVE I Paris, Nov. 3, 5:35 p m. The Ger-mans Ger-mans resumed their bombardment of the city of Rheims with great violence on Snnday and Monday according to a dlsp;ttch to the Temps trom Bordeaux. Bor-deaux. Washington. Nov 3 Foreign office dispatches to the French embassv today to-day supplemented the account of the German withdrawal from the south of Dlxmude With the itatt ment that "at the end of the day we look up the of-1 fensive on our side." To the war office accounts of the repulse of the German attacks in the Argonne district, the dispatches ! added : "Other attacks of the enemy attempted at-tempted against our forces holding I holding the right bank of the Aisne I before Bourg and Comin, were unsuccessful. unsuc-cessful. Washington. Nov 3. The German consul at Tabriz, Persia, was assault-, ed and took refuge in the American consulate with other panic-stricken German subjects, according to a message mes-sage to the American government late today from Minister Caldwell at Te-hei Te-hei an London, Nov. 8, It 35 p. m A dls-patch dls-patch from Moscow to Reuters Telegram Tele-gram company says that Emperor Nicholas, in telegraphing his greeting greet-ing to the Merchants' Association on the occasion of opening its session, says. "Peace only Is possible when Rus sia reaches the heart of German soil. This is the unanimous opinion of all Muscovites Any apprehension of peace being concluded before the enemy en-emy Is completely crushed is unfounded." un-founded." London. Nov 3, 3 4u p. m. The Star today publlshps a dispatch from its Petrograd correspondent, dated November No-vember 3. in which he says that the Russians are now securely established inside the East Prussian frontier. Emperor Em-peror William's thirty miles of barbed wire fence around his big game preserve pre-serve at Rominten, the correspondent goes on, Is now in the possession of bis enemies. Washington, Nov 3 The British embassy pointed out today that the American steamer Kroouland had not been seized at Gibraltar, but merely mere-ly detained, supposedly to afford time for the British government to receive some assurances from Italy and Greece, to which her copper cargo was consigned, that it would not be re-exported to Germany or Austria. |