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Show oo BRIDGE DRAWS IHEJRIIK Where French Control Leaves j Off and Germany Again Begins. STRASSBURG. Saturday, Nov. 23. j (By The Associated Tress) The bridge over the Rhine between Strass-burg Strass-burg and Kehl has become a quasl-! quasl-! mysterious spot, such as attracts people peo-ple -who are curious to see where one thing ends and another begins. It is there now that the French occupation oc-cupation ends. On the othor side of It Germany begins. For tho moment the bridge is a sort of a "No Man's Land," although it is guarded with vigilance only on the French side. The French sentries here arc constantly con-stantly coining in contact with people from the French side who wish to get the closest glimpse they can, of the Rhine; with German soldiers and officers of-ficers who want lo get across to the other side, and with the steadily-'growing steadily-'growing line of people who want to ; get off of German and on to French soil. Most of those last aro inhabitants inhabit-ants of the Alsatian villages, the population pop-ulation of which had bmi removed by the Germans for military reasons and whoso people are coming back from years of exile with Avhat remains to i them of the belongings they were able I to tako away. The bridge and its surroundings givo I ij the impression of a general spring; j yj moving for this season. Many of the returning refugees are boys just re- HI leased from service in the German i W army. Along with them come consid- II erable numbers of French prisoners. Ij of war, for whom the returning Alsa- ' ! tian soldiers keep a sharp lookout ore If I their way to Germany and help them; jvl along all they can. Ill One special train that brought a few' f j hundred of the Alsatian soldiers from jflMj Koenigburg picked up 1,600 prisoners MnH on the way. On leaving the barracksl Wm in East Prussia, the Alsatians pro-( mll: cured a bugler with which they sound- I tiff ed French calls at every station. Tho fiji French soldiers turned back thelri jJ guards, followed the sound and ultl- Hi) mately packed the train. fijli Additional soldiers in field gray havo ill come across the bridge crying "Vlve ML la France!" Officers, too, are In the M line, but not all of them are allowed! ; jfl to pass. First, they raut'have good ffl reasons for desiring to cross to French! ; jjf soil, and next they must divest them- Wm solvos nr ho divested nf their shoulder! mm straps and of everything that Indicates; m their rank and of their decorations,! M if they have them. One officer wasj M turned back because he would not part H with his, iron cross. Another said It H was beneath the dignity of a German jiK officer to be "degraded" by a Frenchl Djj soldier. H A most picturesque aspect is giyeni y French side by the multi-colored unui- M forms of the French and Allied offi- m cers, including generals, who run down, sm from Strassburg to look over the re-. fjfl stored frontier. , |