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Show HUNS HAVE FIFTEEN DAYS TO DECIDE GERMAN DELEGATES TOLD THAT ALLIES ARE IN NO MOOD FOR ARGUMENT. Victors Plan to Do Whatever Talking is Necessary in Fixing Terms and Expect That Peace Will Be Accomplished by May 25. Paris. When the treaty of peace goes to the German delegates', they will be told that they must put whatever what-ever complaints they have in writing. No long winded oral arguments witli sentences reaching from Berlin to Bagdad and tongue-breaking super-words super-words will be heard. The Teutons will' have fifteen days in which to decide whether they will sign. This includes submission of the treaty to the national assembly, though the latest report is the plenipotentiaries plenipotenti-aries have full authority to affix their signatures to the document "in the name of the republic of Germany." Optimists are sure that peace will be "fait accompli" by May 25. President Presi-dent Wilson told visiting members of the house military affairs committee he expects to return to America about June 1. |