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Show BRITISH VIEW HUNS li DIFFERENT WAYS Impression Given by Correspondents Corre-spondents of English Papers at Coblenz. LONDON". March 15. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) The emotions and impressions of British playing the part of conquerors in Germany appear to differ widely. "I find that I am getting the habit of not looking people straight in the face," writes a correspondent of the Manchester Guardian at Coblenz. "There is a kind of fear of something which is just behind their eyes. AYTien a man looks at me across the table in one of the cafes I have to look away, and the only reason T can think of for this is because be-cause I have won and he has lost. I am afraid of him because lie is helpless and cannot hurt mo. Many people would think that they would not feel like this, but they would." Another point of view is given by a correspondent of the Westminster Gazette Ga-zette at Cologne. "The Huns love us dearly," he writes, "because we save t hem from themselves. Also they think us wealthy because we tip waiters. Every Ev-ery time I go to the municipal baths there is a crowd of Huns waiting, and I always go in front of them. Makes them furious, but if they would give the attendant half a mark I dare say it wouldn't happen, unless I did as I saw a proper 'Bairnsfather gorblimey' do. As a Hun was going into a vacant bathroom he pushed in front with, indescribable contempt, and said: ' 'Ere, 'oo won the bloody war?' "It does them good occasionally to push them off the pavement, and what fills them wit h surprise more than anything else is to pull them up by the ear in a tram to let a woman have their seats." An Englishman who lias visited Bonn, Cologne and other Rhine points tells the Guardian that, although, fraternization between 'the English troops and the German Ger-man inhabitants is forbidden, the. is a good deal of friendly intercourse ivuveen them. The Germans sa y they were deceived concerning the war, but that they would have won if the United States had not been "forced into it." The visitor was impressed by hea ''ing fa ctory girls who were leaving work shout "Good night !" as they passed some English soldiers, and he adds: "The Hun is always as 'slim' as the Boer, and clearly sees now that geniality is better than poisoned gas." Arthur Follen, the naval writer, says: "It is in the suburbs of Bonn and Cologne, Co-logne, in Durcn aud in the villages, that one sees the real devastation of these peonle. The fat man is gono and all adults seem peaked and thin, but the children are really a horrible sight. Those who have been both here and in the occupied oc-cupied parts of France say the state of the French children is wurse. , "There seems to be plenty of children, i btit none under H years oid, and never once did I se a woman with a baby in1 her arms. The smallest children are the ! worst to look at pallid, hollow-eyed and, ' dreadfully feeble. The boys are far less j animated than the girls." i |