-rt1tf- ' 'fi3T i;?t'g.',owyT"jrwiuaytgyn S..U4W - vasitKt VOL. XIX. PORTLAND. OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 29, 1900. NO. IT. fhtttwtg ) l PART THREE (5SS::::S:::::::;) W$ '1 1" 1 A I-11 il PAGES 25 TO 32 Three men won distinction In connection 'With the work done by Lawton's scouts, when that lamented General pushed his column Into the Interior of Luzon, a year ago, and captured San Isidro, the capital of the Filipino republic Two lost their lives while fighting des perately against great odds, and the third has returned home and Is living so quietly and modestly that few even know of the laurels he won for himself and the State of Oregon. The first was W. H. Young, a civilian, organizer and first leader of the scouts, who was killed at the capture of San Miguel. The second was James liar, rington, private, of Company G, Seco.-.d Oregon, the most daring and successful of the scouts, who was killed In the gallant charge at Tarbon Bridge. The third Is Second Lieutenant J. E. Thornton. Com pany B, Second Oregon, chief of scouts after the death of Young, and leader In he brilliant capture of the burning bridge at Tarbon. Until General Lawton arrived on the scene, there was little that could be called scouting on the part of the Ameri cans. "When they were ready to advance, they pushed ahead and b'.undercd up against the Filipino Intrenchments, much as the English have been doing In South Africa, and only the fact that the Ma'ay Is no such fighter as the Boer prevented the Americans meeting the fate of their English cousins. When a line started. It knew not what it was to stop until every obstacle had been overcome. The Filipinos knew this, and were ready to run as soon as the dreaded Americans came within good shooting distance, mean while shooting wildly and recklessly In the direction of the advancing line, generally without taking aim, and with the head well down under cover. Not one of them possessed the nerve to withstand a chars to the point of personal contact. The Filipino does not live who can stand up before an angry American and look him In the eye. This was why mere 'bulldog courage prevailed In the Philippines while It fails. In Africa. It was General Law ton who Infused common sense Into the American tactics and proved that the best way to fight guerrillas was to adopt guer rilla methods. Story of the Scout. "When Lawton's column started north, parallel with the railroad, in April, 1SS9, the advance being under the command of General O. Summer, with the Second Ore gon and Thirteenth Minnesota, the re. mainder of the column being composed of the First North Dakota and the Third and Twenty-second regulars, two troops of the Fourth Cavalry and four guns of the Sixth Artillery, he organized a body of volun teers to scout the country In advance ot the troops. An experienced hunter and Indian fighter. W. Hr-Young, who had come over as a civilian with the North Dakotas, was made chief of scouts, and he selected about 30 men to do the work. Nominally, the command ot the scouts was given to Captain TV. E. Blrcheimer, Third Artillery, on the staff of General Lawton. Easily the most experienced and best of the scouts was Harrington, but he did not possess the qualifications of a leader, pre ferring to operate alone, and It was for this reason he was not given command after the death of Young. He was a man of little more than medium height, strong, self-reliant and fearless. He had scouted on the plains and In the moun tains of America, and had led a life of ad venture In many lands. He made fre quent, excursions Into the enemy's coun try alone, trusting to his own Judgment, courage and skill with his rifle. He made his reports directly to the General, who often spoke of the value of his services. One of his favorite achievements was to work his way into a town which was being attacked and ring the bell In the church tower, and, as these towers were always used by Filipino sharpshooters, ho occasionally had to fight for their pos session. There was always a smiling and a nodding of heads along the firing lino outside the town when the bell began to ring with the sharp strokes of a fire alarm, and every thirsty, perspiring soldier out in the rice fields knew that the scouts were In the town, and the fight was practically over. . Scouting in the .P.hlllpptaes was per formed under peculiar conditions. Every minute spent outside the American lines was a .minute of danger. There was no possibility of disguise, so radically differ ent in appearance were the Americans and Filipinos. TVIth a country so densely pop ulated and every resident an informer, It was Impossible for a scouting party to get a mile away from camp without knowl edge of the fact being conveyed at once to the enemy. Occasional glimpses ot white figures among the bamboo clumps on the edge of the distant forest were had, denoting that the scouting party was under constant surveillance. Frequently a single shot, or a whole volley, would be fired from a distant ambush, but sel dom was an armed enemy seen. Contrary to Orders. To shoot at the white-robed observers was strictly contrary to orders, for posi tive Instructions had been Issued from headquarters not to molest In any way noncombatants, and an unarmed man in citizen's clothing must certainly be so classed. Thcso "amlgos" professed the greatest of friendship whenever encoun tered. It was no unusual thing for the ladles of a household to give water to scouts with courteous hospitality, while th men of the family were scurrying through the brush to give warning of the presence of Americans, or lying in ambush waiting to take a shot. All scouting that was really effective had to be done at night, and by the most s.calthy of Indian methods in the day time. This was the kind of work In v.hlch Harrington excelled, and by which he procured valuable Information. At one time, while out alone near Norza garay, he captured a buffato cart, loaded with cupp'.ics for the Filipinos, and com piled Its drivers to proceed In the direc tion of the town, but in a few minutes he discovered himself In the midst cf a crmp of Filipino soldiers. Giving th m a fe..- hots to unsettle their nerves, he o ik to his hwla, and mad:- goad '.lis "fc p gc nfi bak Into camp bou m'd l-h . it"r b'Ing Crcd upon by an Ame kan s i .r.t-l As to. the I"' .plnos. their s-outlr.g was easy. Prc-sid in whl'e clo h.ng, and with SCOCTIM out arms, they could go anywhere without molestation, even into the Amer.cm camps, ur.der the guise of amlgos or refu- gees. There was no one to gl"e warn- Ing, no one to ambush them, no one .to spy uijon .them. They came and went freely, and the Information they gained by friendly visits at American camps In the day time was used In annoying night at tacks, for which annoyance they often came into camp again the next day and offered profound sympathy. "Touch of High Life." .Half an hour before reveille on the morning of May 12 the officer of the guard at Maaslm passed the scouts through the lines at the outpost on the road leading to San Ildefonso, three miles distant, where some 1500 Filipinos were Intrenched, and with a parting Injunction to "give them a touch of high life." saw them dis appear in the darkness. Soon reveille was sounded. The camp had been astir but a few minutes when a. dozen shots were heard In the direction of the enemy, some of the men remark ing that the "goo-goos" were a trifle nerv ous that morning. TVhen Young left camp he proceeded a short distance and then halted. Taking a few men with him, he cautiously ad vanced upon the Filipino outpost and sud denly attacked it. This was the shooting first heard In camp. Then, assembling his men again, he moved off to the right across the summit of the hill, deployed at long Intervals, and advanced cautious ly against the trenches on th eleft of town, which were now filled with excited Fili pinos, warned by those who had escaped from the outpost attacked that the Amer icans were advancing. The scouts kept carefully concealed, and wormed their way to the fiont until within good shooting distance, their Im mediate presence being unknown to the enemy. They were all armed with Mau sers, a much longer-range gun than the Springfield, and used smokeless powder. The Mauser also deceives the enemy with its report, which Is different from that of the Springfield or Krag. For this reason, when Young opened the fight by shooting a Filipino In one of the trenches, only the few who saw him fall had any Idea that the gun was fired by an enemy. Even after the other scouts began firing, it was several minutes before the situation was realized, and with realization came al most a panic After firing a few times in this way. Young withdrew his men over toward the Filipino right and repeated his tactics. In a few minutes the Filipinos opened up along their entire line, firing to the front at random, while the scouts lay low and Indulged In sharpshootlng. For several hours this peculiar battle was main tained, the two supporting companies watching- It from the summit of the di vide, and the entire brigade at Maaslm enjoying it .as a huge Joke. At last the Filipinos could stand tha strain no longer. They withdrew from their defenses, abandoned San Ildefonso and retreated to San Miguel, five miles to the north. Young's men entered the town, and in a few minutes that fact was pro claimed to the entire brigade by the clang ing of the church bell. At San Mlffnel. The next day the scouts repeated the work of the day before. TVhen Young ap proached San Miguel, he found the enemy posted in a strong position on the edge of town: his flanks were covered, fully C00 men being In line Not waiting for help. and the supporting battalion of the two companies remaining strictly In support. Young advanced, with only 15 men. In the same'Indlan style as before, and soon 'the Filipinos retreated into the town. The scouts followed, gradually working their way Into the town along bamboo and hedge fences and up he brush-grown sides of a deep ravine, down which a stream flowed through the heart ot town. At U( Y,,n- r,ohi .h- t,H,i, r... ing the stream, which was covered by the head . signal for those In the rear to nls orders- to dcp,r and odvanc. wIll trenches from the road. The panic of tho flro of the Filipinos on the other side, espe- na,t. Thornton paused and looked to see hImscIf as S"" ,n & ccnt-r. sudden onslaught was transformed Into daily from the tower of the church, two the source from which the volley came. A fcw minutes later there was heard absolute terror by this flank attack, some blocks away, and here he was severely Ho Quickly descried a wooden bridge, the whip-like crack of a Mauser, and a thing Filipino troops have never be;n wounded In the knee. Crawling back to about- half a mile to his front, from which FllIP,ro standing on the crest of a trench, able to stand against. Instead of rushing the shelter of a bamboo fence, he contln- tiA tho flrh On. nf t.. . wormed his way up from the river to Young's position, and when he learned that his chief was wounded, wanted to bandage the Injured knee, but the bravt leader ordered him back to his former position and continued to shoot, he fear Ing that the enemy would make a rush across the bridge If the fire slackened. Thus the fight continued for a time, but finally several more of the scouts reached the bridge, and then a charge was made across the structure and the enemy put to flight. In this charge was Harrington, who rushed to the church, drove the sharpshooters from the tower, and a mln- ute later announced with the bell the cap- ture of the town to the supports waiting in the suburbs, as well as to the brigade farther back. Soon as an ambulance could be brought up Young, his leg temporarily dressed by the surgeon, was sent to the railroad at Malolos, 30 miles away, where o special train was waiting to take him to .Manila. He reached the hospital befcre daylight, but the loss of blood and the shock had been too much for him, and he died the next day. After the death of Young, General Sum mers was requested by General Lawton to recommend an officer to command the scouts, and he selected Lieutenant Thorn ton, under whose leadership the brave band of volunteers performed much dan gerous and Important service during tho remainder of the campaign, the moot con spicuous and gallant feat being the cap ture of the burning bridge at Tarbon. Aroused by the Corporal ot the Guard before reveille, Lawton's scouts had mado a hasty brrakfast and were already pass ing the farthest outpost when the bugles aroused the Army to another day of ac tion. Lieutenant Thornton, In command that day, possessed special qualifications for the dangerous and delicate work. Bold and resolute, and prompt in deciding upon his course in an emergency, he was also cautious and watchful, and seldom made a mistake In Judgment. There was In his dress little to distinguish him from the men he led. simply a gilt cagic on the col lar of his bluo flannel shirt, to Indicate FILIPINO that he was an oftccr. Like the others, ho carried a Mauser rifle, and, like them, wore brown canvas" trousers, leggings, blue flannel shirt and campaign hat, the rough-and-ready uniform of the volun teers in the Philippines. Pushing out with two men In advance along the road to form a "point." and sending two each to the right and le'ft as ". e maae nis way cautiously . the mainder of his command fol- 'owing In the road some 200 yards to the rear. Caution was necessary In a coun try where the enemy fights only from con cealment, and whose presence is generally first announced by a volley of Mauser bul- lets. A volley of Mausers whistled over the heads of the scouts, as the point rounded the base ot a hill and came out upon a low flat. Hastily throwlni- hl arm to Its full lerurth vertically nbov h!, curled a little column of smoke. He saw that the brldrn nu on flro- hnt th- rf.. bank on the opposite side of the stream was lined with earthworks, both- above and below the bridge, and that the trenches were filled with Filipino sol diers, numbering not less than 200. They all wore uniforms, and were therefore not the white-robed militia that constitute ed the bulk of the Filipino Army, but General Gregorio del Pllar's Manila bat- tallon. trained native soldiers of the for- mer Spanish Army. The river curved at the bridge, giving all of the trenches complete command of tha structure, and h road unnmarhintr it, and the flat to be croseed had tall swamp grass growing on the rice ridges GENERAL UUEUOUIO UKL I'lLAH , , . -rv . j.:. 'n fefsbLraiu-wiw "7 " ,n ; - -r . . - - . - v - '-"--" -"- " ? '.-'.... . x i .i - rfr r it .yjVt -- '(aivsiv :3MsK-ri.r.s-B- mm&zmsmmWm$-mmjmLiM,rr , vsg& ssrsa r v snmsopr . vTvSsasasaTBSSiiasaTB.". ii'l. ,. tasasasasar'H- X TKTt .T g J fh r-MgJrjr ' 1SU'iBfc. i fV M. 'Vr V'!iBaaV 2s&4r"i. ift UlArYjalfl VYX. iJ . " 'T-i3JL "mmk-' --r ' fj&am&jFxtmm 'M . -- . asrcu w3Bxsrx& &fr:t Av i:,&&2 r . -j r - . ... J my PRISONERS CAPTURED BY LAWTON'S SCOUTS. to the height of nearly six feet, offering splendid concealment for an advancing line of sharpshooters, using smokeless powder, although, of course, affording no protection against bullets. To send back to the advancing column, two miles In the rear, for help would cause a delay ttit waim tu ! n tiiA khiIk. omi destruction of the bridge would delay the Armj. EeVeral days. Thornton dcteTmln to attack. e Maoa .h,.,,. ,niw , k. hind the breastworks, with an unfordable river In Its front, and only a burning brld b3" whh:h to crcB t0 the attack, He must do this with his 30 men, and at oncc- He extended his right arm above n,s nead and move(1 "l rapidly In a clr- cIe Fcveral " times, 'to which signal tho scouts not with the point responded by coming up on tho run. Quickly he gave iookibr io see n ne coma aweover wnai had become of the "malo Americanos, fell back among hht comrades, dead. Crack, crack, went other Mausers, and In an Instant there was a panic In the trenches. Down went 'every Filipino out of sight, and there they remained during tho rest of the fight. But If they hid they did not fall to shoot, for they thrust the muzzles of their guns over the top of the trenches and pulled the triggers as fast as they could work the magazines. Most of then- bullets went far above the heads of their assailants, who steadily crawled forward through the grass until they reached good protection within U yards of tho river. Having gained thU position, the Lleu- AND MANILA BATTALION, DEFEATED 11 Y LAWTON'M SCOWS. tenant blew his whistle to attract atten. tion and then summoned the four msn nearest htm to his side. Shouting to the others to lire rapidly and cover his squad while they made a dash acrosa the bridge. he called to the four men to follow him. sprang to his feet and made a rush for th. hnmini tTniftur nn. nf thi mpn was Harrington, and before the brldgo was reached, he fell, with a bullet through his throat, nr. , ,h othor sllnoed" from the wooden stringers of the bridge, for the flooring of the structure had been burned away, and fell into tho river below, los- rng his gun. He Kept nis neau aoovo water by clinging to a foundation post with his left hand, while he continued the fight with his revolver. The other three men crossed In safety and lmme- dlately began firing Into the flanks of tho upon tneso tnree caring men. anu itr whelming them, the entire battalion do eerted the trenches nnd fled Into the tall grass toward San Isidro, followed by the shots of the scouts as long as any of them remained In sight. Pursuit was impossible, for the bridge had yet to be saved. Hastily assembling. the scouts procured earthen Jars from a - few nlpa huts by tho roadside, and with them they brought water up the steep bank, and with their campaign hats for buckets succeeded In extinguishing tho Are. The tired men then sat down to await the coming of the brigade, the first indication of which was a mounted order ly, who approached along the road nt the top, of his pony's speed. The officer noted -mr:ijjmmmF3 f M c W U iv' ' DeoiK of H Q r rintjfo the absence of Harrington, and asked where he was. "He's right over there, asleep, ans ls-SJ sZ&VF i.BH-' ;H!.v J:I wered one of the men. "Asleep?" replied the officer. In a que - tionmg tone, as he rose from the ground. "Where V "Bight over here, sir," and the man led the way to where Harrington lay upon his back, his hat over his face, to protect It from the sun. and his gun and unbuckled belt by his side. "Wake up. Dad!" the scout said, kicking' the prostrate man on the foot. "Tha Lieutenant wants to see you." There was no response. The Lieuten ant stooped over and lifted the hat from tho silent scout's face. It took but a glance to see that ho was dead. Tho body was tenderly lifted up, and borna Into a nlpa hut, and when the regiment arrived a little later, it was covered with a flag. That afternoon a new floor was lmpro vised for the bridge, and. In tho mornlraj. the command crossed over and attacked and captured tho rebel capital. The next day Harrington was given a military fu neral In San Isidro. his grave betas- left unmarked because of fear that It might be disturbed Chaplain Gilbert, of the Oregons, how evcr, tnc only Chaplain with the column, most of them finding It pieasanter to re main hi Manila than to go with their regiments Into the field, carefully regis tered tho exact location of the grave. From this description, the authorities found It a few weeks ago and took the, body up for transmission to the United States. Hero It was turned over to hla old comrades of the Second Oregon, who will today lay It finally to rest In th beautiful burial plot of the Spanish War Volunteers, in RIverview Cemetery. y V r