THE " STJjVDAT. OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 20, 191& NE WS v. OF " . " v. AS SEEM BY CAMERA SYSTEMATIC destruction of the country' in Belgium occupied by the German army, which is being gradually driven back, is described in the nen'SDapers of the enemy country. ft i k r : : f fag mova.l Y . , . Underwood Y HI . King: Albert and Queen Elizabeth have been through all the tribulations of their land, the former at the head of his army and the Queen in activities for the welfare of the people. On a recent visit to the front they were shown a giant Gotha- that had been shot down by Belgian gunners. Clearing of the Arras-Cambria road opened the way into Cambria. It was accomplished by the guns of the Cana dian heavy artillery, which destroyed the Hun defenses. ' In the advance of General Mangln's army on the western front a German 88 - gun was struck amidships by a shot from one of the guns of tha ad vancing artillery. The shot broke the carriage in two, completely separating the gun from it. Cologne recently felt the effect of the bombs dropped from the powerful planes of the British army. The mag nitude of these great machines is bet ter understood when it is related that they are towed to position when ready for flight by giant caterpillar tractors- Participation on German industrial centers ami cities has created con sternation wherever their presence has been felt. The morale of the German people has been undermined by these appearances and hindrance in muni tion plants and factories resulted. Prompt aid by the American Red Cross. Army and Navy detachments re lieved much suffering following the de structive explosions at the Gillespie munition plant at Morgan, N. J. In addition to the loss of plant and mu nitions, many homes were destroyed. It is extraordinary that where so much property was destroyed the - casualty . list was not larger, numbering only about 100 persons. Ships of the Italian, British and American navies destroyed the Aus trian naval base of Durazzo in Albania, sinking a great part of the enemy fleet. Italian and British cruisers, protected by allied torpedo-boats and American submarines, succeeded in making their way through the mine fields and avoiding attacks by submarines, got into the harbor. - The stalwart Canadian forces, inces santly hammering at the Hun ranks, have fully avenged the former defeats administered by the enemy during the earlier periods of the great conflict. The annihilation of the Princess Pats, which stirred the British nation Into unremitting efforts to settle accounts with the enemy, as has surely been done, resulted in the intensity of the Canadians in battle to right the wrong. It is almost impossible for the civil ian who has never had an opportunity to behold the wreckage of war to realize the devastation wrought. Al bert, recently taken by the British, was an important railroad center, but a half hour after the Hun troops had gone it was nothing but a mass of debris. - - : - ; t ' . " .... A ' r '" : - . ". .. ' t Zf X'S' 1 Atm ;- w tt-,t l it li i i v mi i-i tifjaa nt irriin in nir Jin mi imn.ii.iiinirniltii r.wi i mi' liriniit U A r : . .... - Tfc. -:r.' v r. I I MP'S s. K v : fAi :ViSfi . ?A nl 1 wi :