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Show SAYS AMERICAN IDEAS ARE BEATEN IN PEACE PARLEYS BERLIN-, May 11. (By the Associated Press.) Frederick Stampfer, editor of Vorwaerts, in a talk with the correspondent correspond-ent today, complained bitterly of the treatment the German newspaper correspondents corre-spondents were receiving at Versailles, from which he had just arrived. Their status was that of prisontru of wax, he said. "Therefore," continued the editor, "my colleagues and myself were speedily convinced con-vinced t hat we were not In an environment environ-ment calculated to give us a peace In keeping with the exalted Ideas of your president, who of late has become fto strangely silent his pose so sphinx-like." sphinx-like." Horr Rtampfr takes a gloomy view oE the prospects Ht Versailles. "V- e miecht as well become an English, an American or a Frenrh colony,"' he said, in epcaklng of the peace terms de-mantled, de-mantled, and he added that he could not say wbelher his choice would t for tho Lnftrd states. "YS'o have becnir.e somewhat suspicious of hue," he added. "The two vanquished parties in this war are the German people and the American ideals." |