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Show KAISER SHOWS TERROR Exiled Hun Wears De-j jected Appearance; Fears His End. COUSIN'S-OP I N 1 0 N King George Says Former For-mer Emperor Is World's Greatest Criminal. LONDON, Dec. 4 William Hohen- zollern wears a dejected appearance, according to the Telegraph's correspondent corres-pondent iat Amerongen, Holland, who says he has talked with "some one who has come much in contact with the exile." This person is quoted as follows: "The former emperor wore an air of relief when he arrived at Amerongen, Amer-ongen, but that 60on vanished. Even his cheery wife cannot now rouse him from moodiness. The distinguished fugitive has terror in his heart." Herr Hohenzollern keeps more and more to himself and Is constantly less Inclined to go about. The correspondent correspon-dent cays that his Informant took him to an unfrequented place from which an unshaded window in the castle was visible. Pointing to the window, the gentleman said: "The former emperor sits at that window writing as if against time, hour after hour." LONDON, Nov. 28. (Correspondence (Correspon-dence of The Associated Press) What does King George really think of his cousin, William Hohenzollern, former, German emperor? According to a' writer in the Dally News, which is' usually very careful as to the trust-' worthiness of what it prints, King George regards him as "the greatest criminal In the world today." The writer says that he was talking a few days ago vith a well known; statesman who has had many opportunities oppor-tunities of hearing the king express his views of the kaiser. And he thus summarizes what the "well known statesman," told him: "My informant says that the king's feelings and expressions are so strong that they could hardly be reproduced verbatim but that the substance of them is that the kaiser is the greatest criminal in the world today; that he Is directly responsible for the outrages on the Belgian and French civil populations; popu-lations; for the bombing and air raids; on the innocent inhabitants of unfor-1 tlfied towns; for the torpedoing of passenger and hospital ships and the sinking of survivors in their boas for the first use oL pslsoned- gas7 the poisoning of wells, that he has not only permitted these things to proceed but was In many cases a personal as-, sentor to and director of them and that for such a man no retributive penalty, however severe, would be undeserved." |