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g_____?..^___;..__>i__*l^ The thunder lizard?as large as a Pullman car Brontosaurus, whose mighty frame shook the earth upon which he tread, browsed amid the swamps and marshes of the western plains, three million years ago. He was perhaps one of the largest inhabitants of old mother earth. Think of his enormous size?between sixty and seventy feet long and ! fifteen feet high?a man just reached his knee and his food consisted of perhaps 700 pounds of foliage per day. I His head was so small and so poorly provided with teeth that it must have been quite a task, or a long continued pleasure, according to the state of his digestive apparatus, for the animal to eat his daily meal. Any day from ten to five and Sundays from one to five, you may see this marvellous relic of past ages, as well as thousands of other in? teresting remains of prehistoric animals free. I American Museum of Natural History Columbus Avenue, 77th Street, Central Park West Italy Expected Back in Farley This Wee Continued fr?in mure 1 solution by means of a formula rocog ni'/.ing Italian authority over the citj but leaving its ultimate control to ; plebiscite. Orlando Urged to Resign Some of Premier Orlando's friends according to advices reaching hero, ar urging him *o resign as the best mean of eliminating any personal elemen standing in ;he way of a resumptioi of the negotiations. The departure for Triest of Genera Diaz, the Italian commander in chic! followed the receipt of reporta tha the Jugo-Slavs might make a militar instration to hold Fiume, the gov ?iit desiring to have him near th scene. All the foregoing developments i Rome, the advices concerning whic come through the best informed chan neis, have not appeared to awaken her Built-in Style and Comfort Style in comfortable shoes is not impracticable ? Pediforme Scientific Shoes prove this. They are con stmcted to give comfort and to correct foot ailments, and their purpose is realized without any sacrifice of style. For men, women and children, at the price of ordinary shoes. SHOE Co 86 West Thirty-Sixth Stree TOOTH PASTE Whitens the teeth, heals the {rums and prevents pyorrhea. Prescribed bv den "Brine ?7//c> Best Antiseptic Mouth Wash any response favorable to the granting of Fiume to Italy. Luxemburg Is To Be Made Separate State ?. Allies Decide German Cables Shall Be Retained; Polish Affairs Also Are Discussed PARIS, May 3.- fn an effort to has ?- ten the remaining details of the peace ', ?treaty the council of three met an a ? iur earlier than usual to-day and re? sumed consideration of the question of the German cables. It was announced I, the council of foreign ministers and e foreign secretaries would join the s council of three later in the day. t During the discussion of the ques ii tion of the German cables the council planned to hear experts appointed to 11 study the question. :' The presentation of the peace terms to the German? will not take place be - fore Wednesday, May ?, according to 0 present indications, this morning's ? Paris newspapers say. n h Alsace Treaty Adopted Important progre - been made, e however, in solvin; iblems remain " ing before the final shaping of the treaty. The "Echo de Paris" says that J the council of three yesterday adopt? ed the section of the treaty dealing ?with Alsace and Lorraine, which are given to France, the ownership of the railways included. 1 The counc'l also fixed the status of Luxemburg, this newspaper adds, com? pletely severing the Grand Duchy from Germany. Now that the pracn terms are to be handed over to the Germans, the ni ws papers point out that the summoning of the Austro-Hungarian delegates seems probable, and they voice the expectation that an invitation of an amicable sort will be sent to Italy, requesting the presence of her delegates. The newspapers report there had been numerous conferences between former Premier Luzzatti of Italy and M. Bar? rer?, the French Ambassador, in an at? tempt to find a satisfactory solution of the situation. According to one report the signing of the peace treaty without Italy has been avoided. Ambassador Barrer? is said to be very optimistic. LONDON, May 3.- -The council of I as settled the question of the disposition of the German cables, ac? cording to a Router dispatch from Paris ? tiled last night. It adopted the view ? that the cables are spoils of war and belong to the captors by right, the Hies? ige states. the council of foreign ministry met - this afternoon i examine into the I st ion of revictualling the Baltic provinces and Finland. The council also discussed the procedure to lie , followed in connection with the prelim- ; i nary peace treaty. The pommission on Polish affairs of the peace conference this morning took under consideration the southeastern frontiers of Poland. Rome Press Calls Peace Without Italy Treason One Paper Charges F in me Crisis Was Precipitated by Finan I der s Seeking Monopoly ROME, May 3,?Newspapers favor : able to the government protest against Zi FOREIGN BORN MANIFESTATIONS Americans AH?America First Auspices of Foreign Language Bureau Government Loan Organization Second Federal Reserve District Sunday, May 4th Polish Manifestation Norwegian Meeting New York Hippodrome, Bklyn. Academy of Mu&ic, 6th Ave. & 43d St., Lafayette Ave., Bklyn., 2:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. Greek Rally French Concert Casino Theatre, Hotel Plaza, Broadway 8c 39th St., 59th St. & Fifth Ave., 2:30 P. M. 7 P. M. Ali of the Above Are Gala Performance*. Artists of world renown?singing?folk dancing?speakers. Am - and Navy Bands. ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. a i! ? ? ===== Groener May Succeed Hindenburg as Chief COBLENZ, May 3 (By The Asso? ciated Press).?"German mili? tarism has been broken forever," is a statement attributed to Field Mar? shal von Hindenburg, reports of whose resignation have been received here. General Groener, former head of the Department of Munitions and who has been the Field Marshal's chief of staff, is mentioned as his chief's successor, according to news received here from Kolberg. the continuation by the peace confer? ence of negotiations with the German delegates without the participation of Italy, because, they say, It violates the j treaty between the Allies forbidding a i r separate peace.' The "Tribuna" says: "The Allies are pledged to us by a I f sacred treaty. They cannot sign a c peace without us and they cannot make t a separate peace without treason. President Wilson may be an autocrat, but not to the point of imposing the shame of treason upon Great Britain and France." The "Idea Nazionale" asks how the peace conference could declare the league of nations approved unani? mously last Monday while Italy was absent, how the conference could as? sign Kiao-chau to Japan when Italy was not present and .how the confer? ence can present the preliminaries of peace to the German delegates with- ?* out Italy acting with them. The paper adds: 7 "The conference places itself outside the alliance of Italy. Italy must an? swer by the annexation of the terri- j l toi ies she claims." The "Epoca" yesterday printed a let-1 ;: tor from Professor George D. Herr?n ? . declaring that grave injustice is being done to Italy and that the people of' > the various, countries do not know what! t is happening behind the scenes in j t Paris. ) Professor Herr?n affirms positively ; ' that a settlement of the Adriatic ques- j i tion was about to be effected on two | a occasions, and that it only failed as a L result of the intrigues of a few inter- ? national financiers, diplomatically priv- , 0 ileged, who, he declares, are the real 1 cause of the existing crisis and of "all . the political and moral failures of the. peace conference," and on whom "will t fall the responsibility for the ruin r threatening the world." This group, Professor Herr?n de ciares, seeks concessions for the de? velopment of Finnic and the Dalmatian ports so as to monopolize shipping on the Adriatic. The scheme, he says, is one which contemplates the exploita? tion of the .Serbian people and entail? ing complete commercial ruin on Italy by driving her flag off the sens and de stroying her commercial and political relations with Rumania and the Bal? kans. When a conference with the various Russian factions was proposed in Paris early in February Professor Herron, formerly a college professor ^ in the United States and for some time 1 n iident in Switzerland, was appointed, together with William Allen While, of Kansas, to reprisent the United States in the proposed conference. Neither 1 i those delegates acted, however, as the conference was never held. German Envoys Number r 218; More Are Coming ' VERSAILLES, May 3 (By The Asso ciated Press).?The German delegation -, to the peace congress is rapidly assum- * ing a position of equality, in numbers at least, with the delegations of the various Allied and Associated Powers. Twenty more subordinates of the dele? gation arrived in Versailles Thursday evening and this morning, travelling on regular trains under tscort. Their arrival bring the roster of the delega? tion to a total of 21S, while still more arrivals are expected. - A brisk interchange of telegrams is in progress with Berlin, a courier also leaving for the German capital yester? day with official and press dispatches. Time is hanging rather heavily on the hands of theh greater part of the dele? gation, however, owing to the delay in ,, the opening of the actual peace nego? tiations, j * The billiard tables in the hotels oc- I t cupied by the Germans are in con- ! \ s.ant use, and card games frequently ? ? are in progress in the newspaper men's \ ' clubrooms and in a dozen other places. I So far as is known, the only thing t on the schedule for the enemy pleni- c potentiaries until next week's session, , at which the peace terms will be ; * handed over, is a further meeting of j u the delegates with the credentials * commit'ee of the peace conference Sun- , s day morning. ; v The tendency of the German dele- ? gation's subordinates, particularly tho ?.;irl stenographers, to break bounds has led Police Commissioner Cudail les to instruct the police posted at the three hotels to turn back any Teutons found wandering off the reservation, and to form a flying squad of detect? ives to round up any of them discov- . trod in unauthorized parts of Ver- 1 saules. S No Visits to Paris The commissioner has also issued . a warning that any attempt on their1 part to go to Paris to see the sights will lead to their instant banishment to Germany. The report that some of 1 the German journalists have actually ? been in Paris, however, is denied. It i appears to have originated in boasts ; by some of the writers that they in- j tended to make such a trip. A survey of the long roster of the German delegates reveals the presence of a fourth German Minister of State in addition to Count von Brockdorff Rantzau, Herr Landsberg and Herr Giesberg. He is Minister of Labor Schwartz, who is found among the thirty-three commissioners sent by the various ministcries and the armistice ? commission to support the principal delegates. Youths Lead Procession Also among these commissioners are. I Under-Secretary Schrooder of the Finance .Ministry, Herr von Braun, of the Food Ministry; Richard Merton, a member of the firm which controls the world-wide German metals trust, rep? resenting the Ministry of Economics,, and Carl Legien, head of the German ! Trades Union Confederation, repre? senting the Ministry of Labor. The first disturbance of the orderly routine around German headquarters : occurred this afternoon, when a pro- j cession of youths cheering for Pre- 1 mur Clemenceau and carrying placards j reading "Vive la France!" marched1 through the Rue den Reservoirs, yell- i int: loudly as they passed the Hotel des Reservoirs. The delegation, how- j ever, had the appearance of seeking to make a pro-Clemenceau rather than an ? an! i-German demonstration. Count von Brockdorfr-Rantiau, the I head of tho delegation, who has not ! the walking habit, took tho air this j afternoon in an automobile placed at ; his disposal by the French government. | lie rode about for an hour in tho en virons of Versailles. A group of newspaper men, of whom ? there are twenty-nine accredited to tho German delegation, visited the rooms of the Trianon, where the do liberations am to be held, walking through under the guidance of uj ITALIAN AND JUGO-SLAV MOVES / ' ? *^ ' ' IL. ?? i ? rl?IS map indicates the advance o and Klagenfurt against the Austr iccupying disputed territory in the pr if the River Drave by Italian forces, w erritory claimed both by them and th ''rench officer to acquaint themselves vith the arrangements. ?arley Snubs Labor, Complaint of Germans ittitude of French "?old, but Correct"; Peace ISot To Be Dictated, Thinks Brockdorff BERLIN, .May 3 (By The Associated ^ross).?First reports from the Ger nan newspapermen at Versailles ap icared at noon yesterday in the "Neue 'eitung am Mittag" and an extra edi ion of the "Lokal Anzeiger.'' The correspondent of the "Zeitung im Mittag'' criticises the make-up of he Allied delegations, bacause labor n the German Socialists sense is not ?epresented in the delegations of the Jnited States, Canada, South Africa, ndia or Japan. He says the British abor representative is not a Socialist nd has been repudiated by the British ?abor party. He says Premier Hughes ?f Australia, although originally a inion man, has the labor forces against lim. The correspondent adds that the ?erman labor representatives were de iresscd in reading the Allied list. Count von Brockdorf-Rantzau, the ?orrespondent says, evidently was latisfied with the meeting Thursday at he Trianon Palace Hotel, because "it ?emoved all doubl about negotiation ind exchange on a basis of mutual quality, proving that no dictated peaco s planned." The correspondent of the "Lokal Anzeiger" says the peace terms cannot >e shown to the Germans before Sat? urday, because the return of Premier )rlando and Foreign Minister Sonnino s expected andjthe Italian situation nust be cleared up first. PARIS, May 3.?In a German wire ess dispatch picked up in Paris the irst meeting of the Gorman delegates vith representatives of the Allies is lescribed at length. The attitude of he French officials is characterized as 'cold but correct." The message declares the French and ?ritish press treat the arrival of the ?ermans as a matter of minor im ?ortance, and adds that, according to .he Dutch papers, the American press las displayed similar indifference. June 1 is given as the probable date if the signing of the treaty. Sew German Frontier Will Protect Europe Marcel Hutin Says Treaty Terms Will Prevent Teuton Union With the Russian "-Reds'" PARIS, May 3. The territorial itatus of Germany as definitely settled iy the council of three yesterday, says .larcel Hutin in the "Echo de Paris," pill, in the view of the council, protect he general security of Europe. The haptcr in which these decisions are ncorporated, he adds, puts an effect lal veto on the "Drang Nach Osten" novement which the Germans desire o pursue, prevents an alliance with he Russian Bolsheviki and forbids the ncorporation in Germany of German Austria. As regards German Austria, M. Hu in says that its peace delegates will ertainly be called to Paris and Aus ria will be made a neutral republic tnder the aegis of the league of na ions, with tl.e prohibition that shci hall not, ally or incorporate herself ,'ith Germany. The council of three, M. Hutin de lares, also adopted a chapter defin ng the status of Alsace ami Lorraine, ."hich are given to France absolutely. The outline of the new frontiers of lermany were presented to the council il a report by the special commission omposed of Captain Andr? Tardieu, ('presenting France; Professor Charles I. Haskins, on behalf of the United tates, and Viscount Morley, for Great iritain. ?g? I ?M II 11 I f Jugo-Slav troops between Laibach ians, apparently with the intention of ovinco of Carinthia and the crossing ith the seeming purpose of seizing e inhabitants of the Tyrol. Austro-Hungarians Are Called to Versailles Told To Be There Next Week t? Receive Peace Terms Re? lating to Their Countries PARIS, May 3.?The council of three has invited the Austrian and Hun? garian peace delegates to come to Ver? sailles the week after next to receive the peace tenus relating to their re? spective countries. Router's correspond? ent is informed. One detail that has been made known is that the Austrain peace delegation, upon its arrival, will bo housed at St. Germain, a suburb of Paris. St. Ger? main is seven miles north of Versailles, and the Austrians will thus be separated from the Germans at Ver? sailles. The prefect of the Department of the Scine-et-0!se and Colonel Henry, of the French War Office, went to St. Germain to-day to look over the situa? tion and to arrange for quarters. Several hotels are available for the Austrians, while an old chateau, which has been rebuilt for use as a museum, offers suitable conference halls. The actual negotiations with the Austrian delegates will take place at Versailles, to which place they will be 1 transported in motor cars, a drive of ! about seven miles. The famous ter ! race of St. Germain, overlooking the Seine, will bo used by the delegates for ! exercise. -?? ? Germans Want Assembly to Plan Defence Against Poles WEIMAR, May 3.?A fraction of the ! German Peoples' party has proposed to Konstantin Fehrenback, president of I the National Assembly, that he con ! voke the Assembly on "Monday to dis j cuss measures to be taken "against the "attack planned by the Poles against I Posen and Upper Silesia."' Royal Hostages Shot in Munich ~ Princes Albert and Von Wrede Said to Have Been Slain by "Reds" BERLIN, May 3 (By The Associated ] Press).?Among the hostages said to j have been shot in Munich by the Com ? munists before they were overpowered i were Prince .Albert, of Thurn and ! Taxis; Prince von Wrede, Privy Coun | cillor Albert Doederlein and Professor | Franz von Stuck. [Prince Albert was head of the Ba I varian branch of the iamily of Thurn i and Taxis. He was married to Arch? duchess Marguerite, of Austria, and ! was one of the leading nobles of Ba? varia. The von Wrede family has beer. prominent in Bavaria for years. Dr. Doederlein was a professor in the Uni j versity of Munich, while Professor von Stuck was well known as a sculptor, painter and architect.] Severe lighting marked the entry of I Bavarian and German government ? troops into Munich, the Communist ! stronghold in Bavaria; and there were | heavy losses on both sides. The government forces entered the city after a Communist offer to nego? tiate had been refused. They met with desperate resistance, which made it necessary to fight for each position. The attack was carried out by com? bined Prussian, Bavarian and W?rt? temberg troops, who fought their way into the suburbs of Schwabing, Thal kirchen and Nymphenburg. New Revolutionary Coup Suppressed in Portugal The ?]/? York Tribune. rt'oshtnyiou Bureau WASHINGTON, May 3.--A futile at? tempt at another revolution in Portu? gal has just been put down, according to information secured here to-day from an authoritative source. Two regiments of soldiers were involved, but the government was strong enough ; to command the rest of the army and the revolt was quelled. Many civilians have been arrested. The government has announced that those found guilty, together with of ! fenders who were sentenced to prison ; alter the former revolution, will be ? sent forwith to Madeira,'where they will be held in exile until their terms have expired. It is pointed out in the dispatches that suppression of this revolt does not mean the end of the movement for re?stab?shment of the monarchy, as there are many adherents of the conservatives and the line of separa ? tion between them and the liberals is as distinct as ever. There is an intermediary group that counts itself conservative. It is not in favor of a monarchy, but is bitterly opposed to the liberals. Both conservative parties have many members willing to further any revolution against the liberals that may be started. 616 FIFTH AVENUE between 49th and 50th Sts. 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