- 4. - TWENTY PAGES AUTOMOBILES, ROADS SCHOOLS, FEATURES SECTION TWO PHOTOPLAYS, DRAMA. MUSIC, SOCIETY. CLUBS PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDA Y MORNING, APRIL 21, 1918. TEUTON i BARBARIANS 'VENT THEIR HATE ON POOR LOUVAIN University City ' Chamber of Horror Accounts of Wanton Ruthlessness Told by Priests and Civilians Who Escaped When City Was Destroyed Sound Like Stories of Cruelties of Yaqui Indians. By BRAND WH1TLOCK l' nlted Htatta Minister to Belgium M.'opyriglit. 11S. by Brand Whit lord, undr the title 'Memorien of Belgium L'ndsr the lierrnaa OceapaUon.", Ail nhu rwerwd. Copyrighted in Urat Britain, ('aiiada and Australia. AU nchU rner?d for Franca. Belgium. Holland, Italy, Hin. Hiuwia and the Scandinavian countries. Pub tlalicd by apecial arrangement with the McClure Newnjiajier Syndicate.) ON Wednesday, morning, August 26th, when Villalobar and I drove over to see General the Baron Arthur von Luttwitz, we found him at the foreign office. The Germans had established themselves in the Belgian ministeres nd shut off the Park and the rue.de la Lot; there were sentries everywhere and much explaining about der Spanischer Gesandter and der Gesandter der Vereinigton-Staaten and we waited a long while in the ante-room where we had sat so often waiting to see M. Davignon. German officers were coming and going, very much at home. Finally we were shown into the presence of General von Littwitz, who was most affable and courteous, and evidently a man of strength and will. We began, Villalobar and I, to talk about the ques tion of communication and to make suggestions about Brussels; the question of food, for Instance. But the general said: "Please graft me a truce for two days until I can install a civil adminis tration. After that has been done all will go beautifully. As we were about to go General von Luttwitz said: A AmAtwX thinir ha orcurred at I.ruvain. The ireneral in command - " " -rt O " --- . there was talking with the Burgomaster when the son of the Burgomaster J .shot the general, and the population began firing on the German troops." We did not at once grasp the whole significance of the remark. "And now, of course," he went on, "we have to destroy the city. The or ders are given and not one Btone will be left on another. I'm afraid that that beautiful Hotel de Vllle. which we saw aa we came through there the other day. Is now no more." When he said this he lifted up his hands In a gesture of regret. That evening Gibson and Blount re turned from Antwerp, full of news ; first, and best of all, a dispatch from Washington approving my course and leaving the question of the removal of the legation entirely to my judgment. Only those who have been at the end of a telegraph wire, 3000 miles away from home, and In the midst of difficul ties, can know the consolation that such words would afford. It bad been raining during the night but It cleared partly. Davis expected to leave at 1 o'clock with Gerald Mor gan and Mlaa Boyle O'Reilly on a troop train for Aix-la-Chapelle. X told them," be said, at parting, "that In four days the American min ister' would begin to inquire about. me; thai Is the way they always do It on the stage." He said this with his hu morous mouth twitching, fumbling with the broad black ribbon of his eye glass. bade Mm good-bye and watched him drive away in a fiacre. It was drawn by the sorriest pair of nags I ever saw. and yet he sat there as calm and dis tinguished as if he were driving up Fifth avenue. And I thought of Van Bibber, and of how the avenue looks In the late afternoon when the throngs are going up Murray hill. Ah me ! Did that gay Insouciance still exist anywhere in the world? I stood and watched him out of sight, regretting his departure. And I never saw him again. The horror of Louvain was on is like a nightmare, all the- more terrible be cause It was vague, undefined, a kind of nameless, formless thing, that sent a shudder through Brussels, as perhaps It was intended to do, where the like might happen at any hour. The city .was filled with foreboding and vague apprehension ; miserable refugees, with dumb expressions and eyes that had looked on horror, came plodding wearily Into town. the ministries and the sentinels were ugly i one of them impudently mounted on the footboard of the car. At the foreign office we were told that we could not see the general. We insisted on sending In our cards, and sat there waiting, sensible, in the movements of the officers who were constantly pass ing through, of an evil atmosphere. The windows were open and the marqula and X stood there looking out into the little place before the Palais de la Na tion.! There were groups of grey sol diers on the steps of the palace, their arms stacked on the pavement. Two ugly machine guns were mounted to sweep the parK. "They vomit death!" said Villalobar, as though speaking to himself. We turned away from the window. Finally Major Hans von Herwaerts, who had once been military attache at the Ger man i embassy at Washington, and was then; on the staff of General von Luttwitz, wearing a great pair of tor toise; shell reading glasses, came out to receive us. To him I made my pro tests about the treatment of the priests and 4 the - professors of the American college and indeed such treatment of priests in general, and Villalobar rnadd similar representations on behalf of the Spanish priests. Major von Her waertz understood, rushed into the room, where behind the closed door was General von Luttwits. He came out and assured us that the release of the priests would be immediately ordered, anu while he was telling U3 this two tall dark figures, priests, swept out in tl.eir long black soutanes. Then we all went with the general into; hisj or into Davignon's room. He ; was Rerlous, and Instantly in structed Major von lierwaertz tew give orders liberating the priests ; told him to give them by telegraph, by tele phone, and in addition to send out mounted orderlies to meet the col umns on the. road, and to liberate th-i priests at once. Nil': mmmmm: .fomm . miu& i fr ; - fwn- MH'- -a4.;-.i4iff - S.uyy- wl hi IB lit I jl ill 7l4 If If fliM wSlr3 r UilZLiJi - " X-:-; U I If iiC- ff'M I l-Tfr iTiyliif-) -ls , : . . r.r t v-4 z I V & JtTTT. 11 ' tt - "I Louvalntown hall, or Hotel de Vllle, before bombardment.. i a u rrH. I Mf HI. : . , 111 I EARLIER CHAPTERS IN BRIEF REVIEW In the earlier chapters of his nar ration of the occupation of Belgium. Brand Whitlook. the United States minister to Belgium, has painted a graphic picture of the happy life In Belgium in the summer of 1914, stating that even after Austria's summary ultimatum to Serbia, the Belgians refused to be alarmed, re lying upon the security guaranteed them by other powers. Their se curity was short lived, however, and with the clarity that characterizes his writing. Mr. Whitlock has told of the German demand for a free passage through Belgium, of King Albert's prompt and dignified re fusal and of the advance of the lit tle Belgian army to meet the in vader and of the arrival of the Ger mans In Brussels. Today's install ment tells the horrible story of the wanton destruction of Ixuvain and the mistreatment of its Innocent pop ulation. Subsequent installments will . relate other German atrocities in Belgium. , Tragic Story Is Told Hundreds Shot At Louvain Late In the afternoon It was reported at the legation that at Louvain the Germans at that moment -were massa crelng the people ; that the town was burning, and the tragedy complete ; hundreds had been shot down ; the ca thedral, the library, the Hotel de Vllle. were In flames. Forty priests, some of them from the American college, had been seised as hostages, and were even . then being driven in casts along the road to Brussels. wnat was to be done? As I was thinking. Villalobar came, he too with that face of horror; there were Spanish priests In that band of hostages as well. we decided to go at once to General Von Luttwits. Villalobar's car was at the door and we drove away. It was 7 o'clock. There was a heavy guard at 1 LEMONS BRING OUT THE HIDDEN BEAUTY Mak this lotion for very little, coat and Juat aea for youraelf. , An attractive skin wins admiration. 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It naturally should help to soften, freshen, bleach and; bring out the rosea and beauty of any skin. Adv. those who had so terribly suffered. I seldom heard any of them express hatred of the Germans or any desiro for revenge. They never even spoke of them as "Boches" and were by no means in such a fury of rage and de sire for revenge as I have observed in persons safe in luxurious drawing rooms thousands of miles away. Isone of them, so far as I could observe or learn, even acted in the tragic manner ; there were no heroics and no histrion ics ; they , did not demean themselves as do people in the cinema or in the romanticistic novels. I have read somewhere a psychological explana tion of this phenomenon by the late Professor William James, who observed It and made interesting notes of it at the time of the San Francisco earthquake. In moments of great dan ger, of great strain and tragedy, people are simple and natural ; they do not act, in the theatrical sense of the word. It was thus with the young woman who, on that Tuesday, about eight Louvain town hall after bombardment. o'clock In the evening, when' German soldiers suddenly beat on the door of her home in Louvain, and her father and brother ran to open it, heard shots and had not seen her father or brother since. She took her eight weeks old baby in her arms and, climbing the garden wall, found refuge in the home of a friend for a night and a day, while on all sides the houses were in There was ho more that we could do but; we sat and talked awhile with the general. He told us that the Germans everywhere were victorious and that they would soon be ir. Paris. And he said that Burgomaster Max had re ceived an official telegram from th. French government saying that it could give Belgium no further aid on the battlefield. He spoke of M. Max with admiration. t brave man," he said, "and patrl otic. I admire him ; he stands up and doesn't crawl when he comes into my presence." I did not know why anybody should do that. When I returned to the legation found Madame Poulet. the wife of the Belgian minister of arts and sciences, witn two of her children little girls with golden curls, their upturned faces filled with that distress and wonder and despair that children Know when their parents weep, for then the world tumbles in ruins about them, and there is nowhere to go. The world seemed very much like that, that evening, to all of us, who were as helpless as children. 'Madame Poulet's home was in Louvain, and that afternoon her mother, a woman 80 years old, had walked all the way from tne aoomed city, a distance of 24 kilo meters. s,ne told me- something of the awful tale as she knew it but it seemed better, ultimately, to talk of the two little girls standing by. and as she did so she gathered them into heif arms, folding them in an embrace like that of countlpsH nthr mrh,.-, in Belgium that night, and finally led theim away, their curls bobbing, down the long corridor, somewhat comforted. coma nope, for there was miracle in those davs! miio All the next day the nanta ntri-vn people continued to douV into th itv from Louvain, with their tales of hor ror. The mind was stunned; the event was too enormous to be grasped; It seemed to have the inevitable and fa talistic quality of some great catastro phe in nature; it had happened, that was all: it was not to be sranri it- was there before one, in the world, like an earthquake or a conflagration or! a tornado, all of which in its effect it s so much resembled. Those who came told their stories calmly, sitting there with blank impassive faces; only in: the eyes that had looked on thosa horrors the terror of it all was still reflected. One was struck by their lack of,' rancor; they seemed to have suf fered too deeply for that. 5 Arm v Marched While It Slept George W. Crile Tells of Nine-Day Retreat of Allied Armies 180 Miles From Mons to Marne After Being Overpow ered by the Enemy. flames, and finally, carrying her child, she dodged from street to street, hold ing up one arm and waving a white handkerchief, and so reached the vil lage of t Loefdael. and from there, Ter vueren and at last. Brussels. It was bo with the widow of 60 ; German soldiers at 5 o'clock on Wed nesday morning turned her and her niece, a young woman about to become a mother, out of her house and drove them from place to place, half clad the guardhouse at St. Martin' bar racks, the Place du Peuple, the Hotel de Vifle, and finally to the infantry barracks, rue de Tlrlemont. They were forced every now and then to kneel on the ground and to raise their arms above their heads, while the Ger mans pressed the muzzles of guns against their breasts or kicked them or Btruck them ; then, holding them as prisoners In the barracks until Thurs day, allowed them to return home to find their house burned to the ground and all that the widow had in the world shares of the value of 135.000 francs, contained in an iron box in a valise;' her jewelry and diamonds In a little hand satchel and diamonds In a little hand satchel, which she had buried In the garden gone. Priests Kicked r and Cuffed .It was so with a young Louvain priest I knew, one of the group in that tragic scene there in the square be fore the railway station. He had been seized with others, made to march in front of the troops, kicked and cuffed. and spat upon, struck with the butts of guns ; his hands were tied behind him with barbed wire and there at the Place de la Station he was forced to remain standing, not even allowed to lean against the wall ; and this for hours, with repeated Insults and per sonal outrage while his townsmen one by one were led out and shot, there at the side of the square, "near the house of Mr. Hemalde." I might go on Indefinitely, recount ing experiences such as these ; they would fill a volume. But of all those I heard, of all those that were written out for me, there is one that remains more vivid in my memory than all the rest. There was another priest, an old white-haired ecclesiastic, a scholar and an ' educator, whom one addressed as Monseigneur. He was one of those priests whose liberation I had secured on 'Thursday night, and in the morning he came with two others to thank me. He had left Louvain when the exodus was ordered on Thursday ; he had gone to Tervueren with other priests ; there he had witnessed the murder of Father ru pi erreux-.h---had - tie i awl' swa t filthy cart, as a hostage, and sent Into Brussels ; and seen thus, the story had been brought to our legation t lrus m'avez sauvp la vie!"' -("And you have saved my life.") He sat there at my table, a striking figure, the delicate face, dignified and sad. the silver hair, the long black sou tane and the scarlet sash ; in his whtte hand a well worn breviary. There were two other figures, dark, grave and sol emn two Jesuit fathers who had come with him. sitting by in silent sympathy. They had come to express their grati tude. Monseigneur described the events. He told it calmly, logically, connectedly. his trained mind unfolding the events In orderly sequence ; the sound of firing from Herent, the sudden uprising of the German soldiers, the murder, the lust, the loot, the fires, the pillage, the evac uation and the destruction of the City, and all that. Great Library Wantonly Burned The - home of his father had . been burned, and the home of his brother ; his friends and his colleagues had been murdered before his eyes and their bodies thrown Into a cistern ; long llnea of his townspeople, confined la the rail way station, had been taken out -and, r-aooin Ui i church of St. Peter's ; was destroyed, the Hotel de "Vllle. fha finest example of late Oothlo extant, was doomed, and the Hallea of the Unl verslty had been consumed ; and ha had told It all calmly. But there In the HaUes of the University was the li brary : its hundreds of thousands of volumes. Its rare and ancient manu scripls. its unique collection of incuna bula, had all been burned, deliberately, to the last scrap. Monseigneur had reached this point In his recital, ha had begun to pronounce the word '"blbllo theque" he had said, "la blblio." and he stopped auddenty, and bit bis Quiv ering lip. "La bib " he. went on- and then, spreading his arms on tho table before him. he bowed his head upon them and wept aloud. We sat there silent, the two priests and I le coeur gros. as the French say and our own eyes something mora than moist. They did not remain long after that.' and when they went away Monseigneur forgot his breviary and left it lying qa my table. And I let It He there. i i (To Be Continued Next Sunday.) - Lack of Passion li Noticeable Indeed. - alt through that experience, then and afterwards, I was struck by the lack of passion displayed by all DERHAPS one of the greatest re- treats in history," writes George W. Crile in his recent book. "A Mechan istic View of War and Peace," "was that of the allied armiey from Mons to the Marne, After a sustained and heavy action at Mons, being over powered by the enemy, the alliedY armies began a retirement which continued for nine days and ( nights 180 miles of marching without making camp Is the story of that great retreat in which the pace was set by the enemy. Only rarely were sufficiently long halts made for the men to catch a few moments of rest. Food and water were scarce and irregularly supplied." But "the paramount Interest in that retreat Is found In the sleep phenomena experienced by these men," says the writer. Sleep Is as necessary to the body as food and air. Animals cannot live longer than five to eight days without sleep. How then did these men endure for nine days, in addition to the, lack of sleep, the privations of war the scant supply of food and water, the making of forced marches, the fighting of one of the greatest battles of history? "They did an extraordinary thing- they slept whije they marched! Sheer fatigue 8 lowed down their pace to a rotA tVint wmiM- iwrmlf thMti tn slften while walking. When they halted they fell asleep. They slept in water, on. rough ground, when suffering the pangsr of hunger apd of thirst, and even when severely wounded. They cared not for capture, not even for death If they could only sleep." They marched through towns and villages asleep, soldier reeling against his companion in arms as they tramped with rifles across their shoulders. Ar tillerymen slept on horseback. Now and then a less sleepy: man wakened and aroused to further effort a com panion whose limbs were becoming so heavy with sleep that he was In danger of dropping by the wayside. Of those who lagged behind the ranks and were captured by the enemy all were found asleep. When the wounded of this sleeping army were taken to the hospital they continued to sleep on tnelr Bleep of ut ter exhaustion. In one hospital contain ing more than 500 men there was not a sound. "Not a groan, not a motion. not a complaint.." Nothing would rouse these men food, nor water of which they were sorely in need, nor the pros pect of being comfortably cared for. They slept even while their wounds were being dressed, a process which in many cases would ordinarily have been ex tremely painful. Yet the men were too exhausted even to feel pain. During this sleep oi exhaustion the dream of the soldier is always of bat tlenever of home and of quiet scenes in his past life. Sometimes a sleeper will spring up with a cry and reach for his rifle. Dreams of soldiers under the influ ence of anesthetics are the same. "One day a French soldier in the first stage of anesthesia broke the stillness of the operating room, transfixing every one. while in low, beautiful tones, and with intense feeling he sang the Marseil laise." TMM-h ANTISEPTIC POWDER A soothing cleansing; wash; t h o r o u g hly antiseptic. 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